Peter Clark wrote:
Well, let me knwo if you come up with something else. I would be interetsed in this solution as well. I know that there are services that do this for people in, say China, so it is definately do-able.On Friday 14 January 2005 19:59, MB [c] wrote:I have the capability, but would prefer to use something less complex and heavyweight. No one else has mentioned an alternate solution, however. I was investigating Apache's mod_proxy, but there doesn't seem to be anything that does what I'm thinking.You should be able to do this with a JSP. You should also be able to get SSL pages as well. I don't have an example handy, but this is not a trivial task. If there has not been answer from someone else, I'll try to get you an example soon. Do you have the ability to run JSP's?:Peter
however, I did find this: http://www.jmarshall.com/tools/cgiproxy/ -M -- ---------------------[ Ciphire Signature ]---------------------- From: sparkynine@yahoo.com signed email body (742 characters) Date: on 16 January 2005 at 04:49:27 GMT To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org ---------------------------------------------------------------- : Ciphire has secured this email against identity theft. : Free download at www.ciphire.com. The garbled lines : below are the sender's verifiable digital signature. ---------------------------------------------------------------- 00fAAAAAEAAABX8ulB5gIAANgDAAIAAgACACBsINy7Olj+bcYGxMCGl7XDas3zqV eEJMhFXrTaT/SmPgEAXAh4M4ibDEN1DXxpEPylL1yzRiltlYsm6D5k/BoAPhKOr3 kjFItgGGwDZ1vfrv28u+SJX7oXQTyuuNYMXrD4ig== ------------------[ End Ciphire Signed Message ]----------------