Thought I'd try getting this to work in Chrome too. NOTHING I try makes it work in Chrome. Isn't running this from the Windows command line supposed to work? chrome --proxy-server=https://mydomain:myport When I do this, it runs Chrome, but it's still not going through the proxy despite Firefox on the same computer working just fine!
From: Amos Jeffries <squ...@treenet.co.nz> To: j m <acctforj...@yahoo.com>; "squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org" <squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org> Sent: Wednesday, May 24, 2017 5:15 PM Subject: Re: [squid-users] SSL bump, SSL intercept, explicit, secure proxy, what is it called? On 25/05/17 09:01, j m wrote: > Some more info: I tried this on Firefox 53 and got more feedback, but > still doesn't work. Per the recommendation on bugzilla (bug 378637), > I put https://myaddress:myport <https://myaddress:myport/> into > firefox and it gives me a "Your connection is not secure". So I add > the exception, and it then displays the squid message "ERROR The > requested URL could not be retrieved", as expected. > > So I add the proxy to Firefox (in Advanced, Network, Settings) as the > HTTP Proxy....doesn't work, "The proxy server is refusing > connections". I then put https:// in front of the address, then it's > "Server not found". I then add it as SSL Proxy. It appears to be > working, but really it's simply not using the proxy at all because I > stopped squid and it made no difference. > The settings you enter via the Browser GUI are exclusively for setting up plain-text proxy connections. "SSL Proxy" in the Browser GUI means the proxy to send any SSL/TLS traffic *through* (using CONNECT tunnel). > The link you reference on getting Firefox to work with this refers to > Firefox 33, so by now I'd think I could directly add the proxy to the > normal place in Firefox options? Unfortunately that would be far too sensible. It only took ~20 years to get them to accept any kind of TLS/SSL security on the Browser<->proxy connection in the first place. I really wish that was a joke, but I've long ago given up on expecting sanity from Browser people. For the topic in question, the argument behind not adding a simple tick-box to that somewhat hidden GUI popup to enable TLS/SSL to a proxy ... is unwaveringly that "changing the UI would cause a lot of end users some confusion and pain" or words to that affect - and yet I've lost count of how many graphical redesigns have happened to the things those end-users are directly seeing and using on a daily basis. But one semi-hidden tick box, oh no! Amos
_______________________________________________ squid-users mailing list squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users