Agreed, WWWOFFLE a very flexible and powerful tool, with many uses. I don't know how to have separate configs, but I've just added the main HTTPS sites that I use in the "No Proxy" line in the Konq configuration of Proxies. This works and is an acceptable solution for now.
On Saturday 07 April 2001 6:10 pm, Jens Benecke wrote: > On Sat, Apr 07, 2001 at 06:24:32PM +0100, David Morgan wrote: > > Assuming you have got the OpenSSL package installed then I bet the > > problem is that you are running WWWOFFLE as a cacheing proxy. T.. > > > > .. tests show that Konq is OK with SSL, Netscape and WWWOFFLE are OK with > > SSL, but Konq and WWWOFFLE doesn't work on SSL sites. I've tried > > different permutations of SSL level but the result seems the sam.. > > > > ..sue doesn't seem to have caught peoples attention. Perhaps it is just > > newcomers who run WWWOFFLE? It is part of the Debian Potato standard > > installation set. > > No, many laptop users do as well. WWWOFFLE is _perfect_ for a laptop > environment. You can subscribe to web sites and visit them (or have your > whole network visit them) when you're offline. You can configure WWWOFFLE > to download the stuff regularly (I've done this with slashdot, misc. > documentation sites (php.net, zope docs, etc.). Plus, you can browse your > whole cache when offline. > > WWWOFFLE is a little bit strange when under load, i.e. it doesn't really > replace Squid (and it doesn't want to either) > > > Having said that, I'm having the same problems. I vote for giving Konqueror > seperate configs for HTTPS and HTTP. Or don't proxy HTTPS at all if that > doesn't work. ---------------------------------------- Content-Type: application/pgp-signature; charset="iso-8859-1"; name="Attachment: 1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Description: ----------------------------------------