Hello,
Depending on how big your company is you could create a file containing domains that people are allowed to use over
HTTPS. Then apply a domain based access rule on the HTTPS traffic.
Michael.
On Mon, 27 Sep 2004 14:34:34 +0200 (CEST)
Henrik Nordstrom <hno@squid-cache.org> wrote:
> On Mon, 27 Sep 2004, Michael Renner wrote:
>
> > That means that there is no chance for this project? I have to open this port?
> > Every user have to configure his browser using the proxyserver, at least for
> > https?
>
> As long as you allow https access, proxied or not, will people with their
> own servers on port 443 (or other port allowed) be able to tunnel whatever
> they like on the allowed SSL ports.
>
> The main differences from using the proxy is where the traffic gets
> logged, and the fact that when the client is configured to use a proxy you
> can enforce authentication before the connection gets accepted.
>
> Regards
> Henrk
>
>
>
>
-- Michael Gale Network Administrator Utilitran CorporationReceived on Mon Sep 27 2004 - 09:24:04 MDT
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