Hii
> The main problem I see with this approach (aside of the politics against
> using Linux) is that Squid authentication is normally unencrypted HTTP
> Basic Authentication, i.e. user ID and Passwords "in the clear" (well,
> Base64 encoded) *on every hit*. How plausible is it to force clients to
I am not sure which browsers support rfc2069.txt authentication...
it might be possible to build it into squid.
> authenticate to a Squid proxy via SSL (using SSLeay, perhaps) to avoid this
> problem? I don't mind doing some coding/hacking in my spare time, but a
> major development effort is out of the question.
It should be possible - you will have to kludge it rather seriously though.
You would have to send an occasional (every hour or what?) redirect
to a page that asks them to authenticate via SSL. Then you would
put their IP into a list of IP->user mappings and from then on authenticate
with IP.... good luck... it's ugly.
> The second approach is Novell BorderManager. I am very concerned about its
> scalability, and do not yet know if its authentication and session
> management meet our needs either, but it certainly sounds promising on the
It must surely also use cleartext stuff?
> surface. It supports ICP and is supposed to be "Squid-derived" (though I
> rather doubt that given Squid's GPL, perhaps it is really Harvest-derived).
> Has anyone compared its performance/scalability vs., say, Squid on Linux on
> the same hardware?
It's Novell - as far as I know it doesn't compete at the OS level
(Novell is a file-server at heart, not a program box)
-- "Haven't slept at all. I don't see why people insist on sleeping. You feel so much better if you don't. And how can anyone want to lose a minute - a single minute of being alive?" -- Think TwiceReceived on Thu Nov 27 1997 - 05:40:17 MST
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