>The browser has control of the dialogue, not squid. Also,
>the protocol is stateless.
>
>Your problem is poor user interface design in the browser;
>you should take this up with the browser supplier.
Aplogies for dragging this out. Please feel free to drop the thread, and
tell me to shut up at any time :-)
The reason I'm being so annoying about this is that I have a very large
number of users who do not know what to type into the dialog box that
appears. Further, a slightly unwanted feature of the external
authentication program is that if you mistype your password six times
(whatever NT is set to as a limit), your NT account is locked. This last
bit has of course nothing to do with Squid.
-- I can't see that this has anything to do with the dialogue or the browser, since it happens before the browser knows that this is a page that requires authentication. When the browser requests a page that Squid discovers needs authentication, all Squid needs to do is send out an instructions page, (let's call it ERR_AUTH_INSTRUCTIONS for instance), directly followed by the HTTP Authentication Required code. Seen from the browser, you will have the contents of ERR_AUTH_INSTRUCTIONS in the browser window slightly obsured by the authentication dialog box. Ie. the *only* difference is that just before Squid sends out the HTTP Auth.Req code, it sends out the ERR_AUTH_INSTRUCTIONS page. -- Espen Lyngaas, IT Consultant, Color Group ASA Espen.Lyngaas@colorline.no Espen.Lyngaas@c2i.net http://www.team17.com/~elyngaas/ Phone: +47-95063143 +47-22944315 ICQ: 43241796Received on Tue Nov 02 1999 - 03:54:06 MST
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