but you still need to download the wrapper to the target webserver. once
that is done you are home free, but getting it there and installed can be
slowed by soemthing the truely enforces the full http spec
(request/response, no non-printable ascii characters, etc)
David Lang
On Fri, 2 Feb
2001, Jose Nazario wrote:
> Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 13:20:58 -0500 (EST)
> From: Jose Nazario <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: David Lang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: Paul Cardon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Kelly Slavens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Configuration Arguments... In House...
>
> On Fri, 2 Feb 2001, David Lang wrote:
>
> > for example if you have a raptor firewall the messages back and forth
> > must be valid http, it's extremely hard to type at a command prompt
> > and have valid http in both directions be the result.
>
> no, it's not. a simple wrapper program will append HTTP headers and can
> embed commands in "HTML". easy to do. and if i wasn't so damned busy this
> weekend i would do it. thanks for a project idea, though. :)
>
> see also: http://www.monkey.org/~dugsong/httpstunnel.c
>
> ____________________________
> jose nazario [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> PGP: 89 B0 81 DA 5B FD 7E 00 99 C3 B2 CD 48 A0 07 80
> PGP key ID 0xFD37F4E5 (pgp.mit.edu)
>
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