Martin – thanks for the help.  I didn’t have luck with the wgetopt, but it’s 
possibly because there is an @ in my password.  I was able to edit he wgetproxy 
url and put wgetproxy=https://username:password@url and was able to encode the 
@ sign – all is working as expected now.

On 10/6/16, 3:22 AM, "pca on behalf of Martin Paul" 
<[email protected] on behalf of [email protected]> wrote:

    Hi,
    
    Am 05.10.2016 um 19:01 schrieb Timothy Hosfelt:
    > Small issue – my clients are communicating with the proxy cache server, 
but the
    > cache server is behind a firewall and I’m unable to successfully make an
    > outgoing call through the proxy as the authentication fails.  Running PCA 
from
    > the command line with .wgetrc setup with username and password works 
fine, but I
    > don’t see where I can set these option in the pca-proxy.conf file.
    
    There are two options:
    
    Put the proxy settings into the global /etc/wgetrc file. Maybe the best 
    idea, as they will then be used for every usage of wget, system-wide.
    
    Use PCA's "wgetopt" option in pca-proxy.conf. Something like this might 
    work:
    
       wgetopt="--proxy-user=user --proxy-password=passwd"
    
    Hope that helps,
    
    Martin.
    
    



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