Erwin
The right thing to do is to allow requests from your "child" proxy to
not require authorisation from the "parent". That means that the parent
sysadmin will have to change his (hopefully Squid) config so that
requests from your IP address are passed through without the
authentication challenge.
Otherwise anyone with a packet-sniffer could just listen in and figure
your username and password in a jiffy.
Regards
Jason
> ----------
> From: InterBox Internet[SMTP:box@box.nl]
> Sent: Monday, 22 December 1997 20:09
> To: squid-users@nlanr.net
> Subject: browser authorization on parent
>
> Hi,
>
> I want to use Squid on my local Linux machine (no problem so far). But
> it
> must forward all requests to another proxy server which requires
> webbrowser
> authorization. How can I configure Squid that it always sends
> authorization
> information with the requests?
>
> Regards,
> Erwin
>
>
Received on Mon Dec 22 1997 - 13:58:24 MST
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