On Sat, Apr 15, 2017 at 08:11:13PM +0300, Reco wrote:
Hi,
> AFAIK jessie is the last Debian release that provides curl linked with
> openssl.
We've three flavour of libcurl in the archive and the current "default"
is the one linked against openssl.
libcurl3 - easy-to-use client-side URL transfer
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 09:04:01PM +0100, Darac Marjal wrote:
> It looks[1] like Squid can do SSL Interception. I imagine it should be
> possible, therefore, for squid to perform the HTTPS connection and
> either downgrade it to HTTP or to re-encrypt it with a lower grade. YMMV
Well automatic down
Hi.
On Sat, 15 Apr 2017 15:14:29 + (UTC)
david...@freevolt.org wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Apr 2017, Reco wrote:
>
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 01:01:24PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> >> On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
> >>> This started out
On Fri, 14 Apr 2017, Reco wrote:
Hi.
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 01:01:24PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
This started out a year or so ago with the occasional site in
which lynx would report that it was unable to establish a
Hi.
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 01:01:24PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
> > This started out a year or so ago with the occasional site in
> > which lynx would report that it was unable to establish a TLS
> > connection with thi
Greg Wooledge writes:
> Apparently all of the terminal-based browsers in wheezy and jessie are
> linked with libgnutls instead of libopenssl, and libgnutls (at least as
> provided by jessie) is completely incapable of forming an SSL connection
> with half of the Web.
>
> Every time someone in IRC
It looks[1] like Squid can do SSL Interception. I imagine it should be
possible, therefore, for squid to perform the HTTPS connection and
either downgrade it to HTTP or to re-encrypt it with a lower grade. YMMV
[1] http://wiki.squid-cache.org/Features/HTTPS
On 13/04/17 18:01, Greg Wooledge wrote
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 11:54:32AM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
> This started out a year or so ago with the occasional site in
> which lynx would report that it was unable to establish a TLS
> connection with this or that site. [...]
It's not just lynx. It's EVERY single terminal-based browser
This started out a year or so ago with the occasional site in
which lynx would report that it was unable to establish a TLS
connection with this or that site. The next step on the road to
train reck is that lynx says it's trying an insecure connection
without TLS. That's nice that it tries and on s
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