Yes, people have tried, there are working webdav stores out in onionland. For linux you can use the davfs2 filesystem. It can be used through a proxy, and work with Tor. It was very slow when I tried it though, slower than usable because proxies, tunnels and sockets keep timing out, so the filesystem just locks up and you have no idea what happens because you don't get any feedback.
You cold use the filesystem-way to upload, and then use for example wget for retrieving. I think I also tried fusedav. Can't remember why I didn't continue with that, might have been too unmaintained or broken. // pipe On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 10:38 PM, Kyle Williams <kyle.kwilli...@gmail.com> wrote: > Yes, you can use WebDAV as a hidden service. FYI, Windows also has it's > "Web Client", aka WebDAV, built into most newer windows OS's. > > Security Note: If you're using Windows and shitty browser like Internet > Explorer, then it's possible for your Username, Domain/Workgroup, and > various other little tidbits of information to be leaked out using WebDav. > > Best regards, > > Kyle > > startx wrote: >> hi. >> >> i was wondering if anybody has tried to set up a webdav >> directory as a hidden service? >> >> on the server site this should be relatively straight forward: >> webdav is technically nothing else then a http service >> and apache/mod_webdav would handle that probably the same way >> it would handle the vhost for a hidden service. >> >> however, is there any webdav client which could be used for that? >> firefox does afaik not support webdav (at least not on linux) >> and i would have no idea how to torify nautilus (gnome). *********************************************************************** To unsubscribe, send an e-mail to majord...@torproject.org with unsubscribe or-talk in the body. http://archives.seul.org/or/talk/