Ricardo,

You cannot do it with a transparent proxy.
If you want Squid to handle https traffic, you must
use Squid in a non-transparent setup.

-Marcus


Ricardo Augusto de Souza wrote:
I am still not able to block https sites.
I tested all you sugested here.
I am using transparent proxy. I am redirecting all outgoing traffic to
port 80 to squid port 3128. If i redirect 443 port to squid i wont be
able to access ANY https site.

I just wanna block *FEW* https sites like i AM ALREADY doing using


Acl bleh dstdomain "/some/file/"
http_access deny bleh




-----Mensagem original-----
De: Matus UHLAR - fantomas [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Enviada em: quinta-feira, 23 de outubro de 2008 08:20
Para: squid-users@squid-cache.org
Assunto: Re: [squid-users] How can I block a https site?

Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
On 21.10.08 16:23, Alejandro Bednarik wrote:
You can also use url_regex -i

acl bad_sites url_regex -i "/etc/squid/bad_sites.txt"
http_access deny bad_sites
using regexes is very ineffective and may lead to problems if you
don't
count with:
- dot matching ANY character
- regex matching the middle of string, not just the end of it (like
 dstdomain does)

On 22.10.08 23:45, Amos Jeffries wrote:
 - URL parts often included in regex not occuring in CONNECT requests.
 - neither the http(s):// part.

no, but it can match different hosts it should not mach.

.imo.im

will block e.g. www.limolimo.com

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