On Fri, Mar 10, 2017 at 01:30:02AM -0500, Steve Litt wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've just finished an extensive and complete document on installing,
> modifying and using the Surf browser, and judging from yesterday's
> biggest thread, not a moment too soon.
>
> You can see the doc here: http://troubleshooters.com/linux/surf.htm
>
Hi Steve,
great piece of doc. I just don't get why you say that surf does not
support SSL, or that you can't figure out how to enable it. Actually,
you don't have to enable anything: SSL/TLS support is enabled by
default in surf (well, in WebKit), and there is no easy way to disable
it.
You can easily tell whether a page is using SSL by looking at the "T"
flag in the indicator of web page (the two letters that you have after
the ":" in the surf status bar). It you see a "T", you are using SSL.
Another little thing that is missing altogether from your doc (which
is, again, very good for the beginner) is the usage of a proxy, which
can be very handful, and is as easy as launching surf with:
http_proxy="socks5://localhost:5000" tabbed surf -e
assuming that your socks5 proxy is on localhost:5000. It also works
with other sorts of proxies, but the socks5 one is somehow a special
case, since one can be created by using no more than:
ssh -D 5000 the.server.adress
Oh, and when surf is using a proxy, the second letter of the indicator
of the webpage (again, the two letters after the ":" in the status
bar) will be a P :)
My2Cents
KatolaZ
--
[ ~.,_ Enzo Nicosia aka KatolaZ - GLUGCT -- Freaknet Medialab ]
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