I should clarify things a bit. I do realize SSH and squid are separate, but the problem I'm having is I cannot SSH into my home server from an organization that is apparently blocking SSH connections, for whatever reason, intentional or not. I am, however, able to use a squid proxy that I run from my home server. So the plan was to use SSH through the proxy. VPNs are out of the question as this does not work. I would only need to use my proxy from the desktop, so mobile is not required.
>Squid v3.5 supports secure connections to the proxy. See "TLS / SSL >Options" for the http_port directive (not the https_port directive!). This is helpful since I was trying to use https_port. From: Alex Rousskov <rouss...@measurement-factory.com> To: "squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org" <squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org> Cc: j m <acctforj...@yahoo.com> Sent: Wednesday, May 3, 2017 12:22 PM Subject: Re: [squid-users] HTTPS support On 05/03/2017 10:57 AM, j m wrote: > I wanted to set up a proxy on my home server for use from remote > locations to use as a web proxy (of course) and also to run SSH over. The "ssh" part is unrelated to Squid. Secure ssh separately from Squid. > This means that basic auth is undesirable due to the login being sent > in clear text. So, someone suggested digest auth, and I was happy. > But, now I'm finding that PuTTY and WinSCP do not support digest auth. > And consequently, I haven't found any other SSH clients that support > digest. (sigh) These problems will go away if you stop mixing Squid and ssh. Squid is HTTP while PuTTY/WinSCP is SSH. You gain very little by trying to use the same authentication mechanism for both protocols in your use case. > So, I'm back to plan b, and that is to have a secure proxy connection so > all browser-to-server communication is encrypted. That is a good idea if all of your browsers support it. Popular browsers support HTTPS-to-proxy on desktop, but I am not sure about their mobile versions. You may have to jump through some hoops. > So the question is, does > anyone know if squid 3.5 on Ubuntu 16.04 supports secure connections? Squid v3.5 supports secure connections to the proxy. See "TLS / SSL Options" for the http_port directive (not the https_port directive!). You can install Squid v3.5 on Ubuntu. I do not know whether the official Ubuntu Squid package is built with the required support. HTH, Alex.
_______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users