+1 for flagging this as an IT infrastructure issue and also for
recommending a workaround which runs a local proxy server that can redirect
traffic as needed. Just want to note as well that you should be able to run
a proxy service like privoxy easily on windows by running it inside a
docker container on your local machine.

On Thu, 3 Sep 2020 at 16:53, Greg Troxel <g...@lexort.com> wrote:

>
> Christoph Jung <jagodki...@gmail.com> writes:
>
>
> > The internet traffic in my organisation is behind a proxy. I inserted
> > this proxy into the QGIS settings to get access to WMS outside of our
> > organisation. This works fine. But we have an additional it
> > infrastructure inside our organisation beside that one, where the
> > users are working with QGIS. Services from the second infrastructure
> > have to be used with a second proxy. Is it possible to tell QGIS, that
> > a WMS has to be requested with another proxy than the proxy provided
> > in the QGIS settings? Or do I have to change the proxy in the network
> > settings Manually?
>
> I would suggest installing privoxy, a web proxy that has a config
> language for routing various URLs to various places, configure that, and
> point QGIS to privoxy.   I know privoxy runs fine on POSIX systems.
>
>
> Really, your organization should provide something like squid that has
> these rules that can be a single proxy destination for users.  (I don't
> think each user program should have to have more than a single proxy
> config.)
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