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Re: https_port



On Thu, Jun 08, 2017 at 08:41:14AM -0700, Adiel Plasencia Herrera wrote:
How to generate the certificate and the key to make a very
basic  configuration of the https connection.

NTP doesn't use HTTPS. It uses its own port, it's own protocol and
implements standard cryptography in a manner more suited to the
protocol.

See https://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp/html/autokey.html for more
details.


As
basic as possible.
regards






On 08/06/17 03:28, Adiel Plasencia Herrera wrote:
> > Hello, > > They would help me with a
configuration of my squid that I want to  > implement. >
> My proxy passes all traffic to a parent proxy and I want clients
to  > connect to my proxy via https. > > Can
you help me how to implement the connection to my proxy via https?
> > To better explain what I want attached 2 pictures. The
image with  > 1.jpg name shows my proxy configuration with type
HTTp that connects  > well to internet. > >
What I want is for the connection to my proxy to be by the form of the
> 2.jpg image that uses the HTTPS type. > > Or if
it is possible then leave the 2 forms.
What operating system are you using, and what applications are you
wanting to use this proxy connection?

The normal configuration is simply to add an https_port line with cert=
parameter to your squid.conf. More details on that below.


> > > This is my current configuration: >
 acl trabajadores src 10.5.7.3 10.5.7.5 > <snip>
> > http_access allow trabajadores > http_access
deny !Safe_ports > http_access deny CONNECT !SSL_ports
You custom http_access rules ("allow trabajadores") should be down
here
after the basic security checks.

> http_access deny all > > > http_port
3128

Date: Thu, 8 Jun 2017 01:04:31 +1200
From: Amos Jeffries <squid3@treenet.co.nz>
To: squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org
Subject: Re: [squid-users] https_port
Message-ID: <764ecd5f-6f6c-0eb5-90b4-5591ab5e1920@treenet.co.nz
>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
The above port is for receiving plain-text connections to the proxy.
Most software supports this, with a few exceptions (usually Java apps).


To accept TLS connections to the proxy (not HTTPS *over* the proxy),
what you do is add an https_port line here. That https_port line needs a
cert= parameter containing the proxy server certificate. You may need
other TLS/SSL parameters to fine tune what the TLS does, but just start
with getting that basic setup to work.
  <
[1]http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/config/https_port/>

For example:
   https_port 3129 cert=/etc/squid/proxy.pem

(the proxy.pem file here contains both the public server cert and
private server key for that cert).

Many GUI applications (most notably browsers) do not support this type
of connection to a proxy (or not well if they do). Which is where the
Q's about your OS and applications come in. You may need to setup
environment variables or PAC files to get the applications to work.


Note that this is *very* different situation to intercepting port 443
traffic. Much more different than port 3128 vs. intercepted port 80.
HTTPS traffic goes through these TLS proxy connections with
double-layered encryption, so this setup does *not* magically make the
proxy able to see inside HTTPS if that is what you are really after.

Amos

References

  Visible links
  1. http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/config/https_port/

--
For more information, please reread.

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