I just wanted to know how cookies are used for storing the username and
passwd. Bcos, i heard that cookies are domain dependent. So how cum it works
or am i wrong
-SenthilMurugan
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chin Kah Yi" <kahyi@kkipc.com>
To: "Henrik Nordstrom" <hno@squid-cache.org>; <squid-users@squid-cache.org>
Sent: Friday, October 28, 2005 7:12 PM
Subject: Re: [squid-users] transparent proxy with authentication
>I see. Do you think the design where cookies were used to keep track of
> per-user authentication details at client browser is a feasible and good
> design?
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> From: Henrik Nordstrom <hno@squid-cache.org>
> To: Chin Kah Yi <kahyi@kkipc.com>
> CC: Henrik Nordstrom <hno@squid-cache.org>, squid-users@squid-cache.org
> Subject: Re:[squid-users] transparent proxy with authentication
> Date: 28/10/2005 19:14
>
>>
>>
>> On Fri, 28 Oct 2005, Chin Kah Yi wrote:
>>
>>> I see. but if it is transparent proxy via wccp, how would the IP
>>> based access control scheme work on bluecoat as bluecoat wouldn't be
>>> inline to do access control and depending on cisco router?
>>
>>
>> It is inline for HTTP traffic. The proxy can do whatever it likes with
>> the HTTP traffic.
>>
>> What these schemes usually does is to redirect requests coming from an
>> address not known to the proxy to a local login page, where a
>> successful login registers the account for that IP and the user is
>> then redirected back to the page he originally requested.
>>
>> There is also another possible scheme using a combination of this and
>> cookies. This provides per-user authentication but basically floods
>> the browser with new cookies.
>>
>> Regards
>> Henrik
>>
>
Received on Fri Oct 28 2005 - 08:58:14 MDT
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