On 10/4/17, Alex Rousskov wrote:
> On 09/30/2017 11:14 PM, Jeffrey Merkey wrote:
>>> After reviewing this problem and all of the great technical
>>> information folks provided, I have it working and I figured out the
>>> best way to deal with this transparently allowing squid to remotely
>>> spoof
On 09/30/2017 11:14 PM, Jeffrey Merkey wrote:
>> After reviewing this problem and all of the great technical
>> information folks provided, I have it working and I figured out the
>> best way to deal with this transparently allowing squid to remotely
>> spoof the server side with modified request h
Opera, AFAIK, now abandoned and can contain obsolete CA bundle (not sure
it uses system CA storage).
So, it seems this is quite different issue.
02.10.2017 5:46, L A Walsh пишет:
> Jeffrey Merkey wrote:
>>
>> One caveat about this I discovered that there are quite a few websites
>> which complet
Jeffrey Merkey wrote:
One caveat about this I discovered that there are quite a few websites
which completely ignore the Accept-Encoding request header and just go
ahead and send gzip html data even when you tell it not to. Oh well,
back to the drawing board.
---
But didn't your bump pro
On 9/30/17, Jeffrey Merkey wrote:
> On 9/30/17, Rafael Akchurin wrote:
>> Hello Jeff,
>>
>> Do not forget Google and YouTube are now using brotli encoding
>> extensively,
>> not only gzip.
>>
>> Best regards,
>> Rafael Akchurin
>>
>>> Op 30 sep. 2017 om 23:49 heeft Jeffrey Merkey het
>>> volgend
On 9/30/17, Rafael Akchurin wrote:
> Hello Jeff,
>
> Do not forget Google and YouTube are now using brotli encoding extensively,
> not only gzip.
>
> Best regards,
> Rafael Akchurin
>
>> Op 30 sep. 2017 om 23:49 heeft Jeffrey Merkey het
>> volgende geschreven:
>>
>>> On 9/30/17, Eliezer Croitoru