hartz
March 28th, 2013, 10:20 AM
My work proxy server requires authentication with the Microsoft domain user credentials. Everybody knows how it works: If you log in on a Windows workstation, your "Internet Explorer" browser based internet access requests are automatically authenticated (and identified) using your domain login credentials.
I found that Firefox can also authenticate against these proxy servers and long assumed that they "do something special". Recently a colleague installed Linux Mint in a VM and to my surprise he was busy getting updates from the internet.
This prompted me to re-look at the proxy settings. I run Kubuntu (with a mix of G* and K* applications, but I only use the GTK applications when I'm convinced that they are much better than anythink K*)
I do still have a copy of Windows running in a VM, mainly for Printing and for accessing internal/corporate web sites (Which both requires authentication and identification via MS domain credentials) as well as for changing my domain password every so many days.
So it would be very helpfull if I could get [some/most/all] of my Linux applications to work via the proxy server. My most urgent needs are for Akregator and Muon to be able to work. Other applications that may benefit are some apps that auto-update (Virtual Box Extentions) or wrap themselves around a browser (Get More Themes/Wall Papers/etc comes to mind, and the occasional use of wget)
SSH/SCP clients manage to work via the firewall without authentication.
What is the right way (tool and process) to configure this, ideally in a single location because having to maintain my password in multiple locations is a recipe for getting locked out of my account :-/
Oh, and it would be a dream come true if I could have the equivalent to the Firefox Quick Proxy proxy disable/enable utility, eg one click to enable or disable it depending on what network I'm on. Actually thinking about it, a utility should be trainable to look at your IP address and know when you need to use the proxy! But I digress.
Thank you,
_Hartz
I found that Firefox can also authenticate against these proxy servers and long assumed that they "do something special". Recently a colleague installed Linux Mint in a VM and to my surprise he was busy getting updates from the internet.
This prompted me to re-look at the proxy settings. I run Kubuntu (with a mix of G* and K* applications, but I only use the GTK applications when I'm convinced that they are much better than anythink K*)
I do still have a copy of Windows running in a VM, mainly for Printing and for accessing internal/corporate web sites (Which both requires authentication and identification via MS domain credentials) as well as for changing my domain password every so many days.
So it would be very helpfull if I could get [some/most/all] of my Linux applications to work via the proxy server. My most urgent needs are for Akregator and Muon to be able to work. Other applications that may benefit are some apps that auto-update (Virtual Box Extentions) or wrap themselves around a browser (Get More Themes/Wall Papers/etc comes to mind, and the occasional use of wget)
SSH/SCP clients manage to work via the firewall without authentication.
What is the right way (tool and process) to configure this, ideally in a single location because having to maintain my password in multiple locations is a recipe for getting locked out of my account :-/
Oh, and it would be a dream come true if I could have the equivalent to the Firefox Quick Proxy proxy disable/enable utility, eg one click to enable or disable it depending on what network I'm on. Actually thinking about it, a utility should be trainable to look at your IP address and know when you need to use the proxy! But I digress.
Thank you,
_Hartz