Hi, I am trying to help my friend on this ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Hi, I have an application deployed on tomcat 5.5 with java 1.6.0_07. Occasionally the application needs to connect through our proxy to the outside to collect patches. I've added the following options to the JAVA_OPTS and restarted tomcat. -Dhttp.proxyUser =username -Dhttp.proxyPassword =password -Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy.company.com.au <http://proxy.company.com.au> -Dhttp.proxyPort=3128 Using snoop on the squid proxy I can see the requests, but the username/password combinations are not being sent and the tomcat application receives a 407/DENIED message. Is there a reason the username/password are not being sent? Our squid proxy uses both NTLM and basic authentication. thanks Harry -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20080911/382e9d17/attachment-0002.html>
Hi, for the sake of the the CentOS email servers, would you please turn off attaching the additional copy of your email in HTML format? You are sending your email out in both plain text and HTML format, which more than doubles the size of your email, thereby doubling the amount of bandwidth the CentOS email server has to use to send it to the many many people on the list. This increases the cost of sending out your email by almost 100% but doesn't provide any more actual content. to see how to turn off HTML in many email clients look at this web page: http://expita.com/nomime.html#programs This is desired by the CentOS mailing list rules. per: 1. Please turn off HTML in your e-mail client for these mailing lists. We have several subscribers who read the list with text only readers and they can't easily read HTML formatted e-mails. There is a place (somewhere) for the flowery stationary and themes that some mail clients offer ... but this is not it. Again, please only post text e-mails to these mailing lists. Quoted from: http://www.centos.org/modules/tinycontent/index.php?id=16 (near the bottom) Thanks, Jeff Kinz
Harry Sukumar wrote:> Is there a reason the username/password are not being sent? Our squid > proxy uses both NTLM and basic authentication.The reason is your application code is not using the proxy, or the application code is calling http libraries that are not using the proxy. Really nothing to do with tomcat, the arguments you passed to the JVM are JAVA options not Tomcat options. nate
HI, If it is an squid proxy then you can bypass the tomcat server from the squid using two steps. 1) using url_regex in squid 2) you can masquerade that particular tomcat server ip using iptables on the squid box using iptables. Regards, Lingu On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 8:28 AM, Harry Sukumar <hsukumar at bond.edu.au> wrote:> Hi, > > > > I am trying to help my friend on this > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Hi, > > I have an application deployed on tomcat 5.5 with java 1.6.0_07. > > Occasionally the application needs to connect through our proxy to the > outside to collect patches. > > I've added the following options to the JAVA_OPTS and restarted tomcat. > > -Dhttp.proxyUser =username > -Dhttp.proxyPassword =password > -Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy.company.com.au > -Dhttp.proxyPort=3128 > > Using snoop on the squid proxy I can see the requests, but the > username/password combinations are not being sent and the tomcat > application receives a 407/DENIED message. > > Is there a reason the username/password are not being sent? Our squid > proxy uses both NTLM and basic authentication. > > thanks > > > > Harry > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20080921/82a4c1c5/attachment-0001.html>