Hello Mike,

May be it is time to take a look at ICAP/eCAP protocol implementations which 
target specifically this problem - filtering within the *contents* of the 
stream on Squid?

Best regards,
Rafael

-----Original Message-----
From: squid-users [mailto:squid-users-boun...@lists.squid-cache.org] On Behalf 
Of Mike
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2015 10:49 PM
To: squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org
Subject: Re: [squid-users] acl for redirect

Scratch that (my previous email to this list), google disabled their insecure 
sites when used as part of a redirect. We as individual users can use that url 
directly in the browser (
http://www.google.com/webhp?nord=1 ) but any google page load starts with 
secure page causing that redirect to fail... The newer 3.1.2 e2guardian SSL 
MITM requires options (like a der certificate file) that cannot be used with 
thousands of existing users on our system, so squid may be our only option.

Another issue right now is google is using a "VPN-style" internal redirect on 
their server, so e2guardian (shown in log) sees
https://www.google.com:443  CONNECT, passes along TCP_TUNNEL/200
www.google.com:443 to squid (shown in squid log), and after that it is directly 
between google and the browser, not allowing e2guardian nor squid to see 
further urls from google (such as search terms) for the rest of that specific 
session. Can click news, maps, images, videos, and NONE of these are passed 
along to the proxy.

So my original question still stands, how to set an acl for google urls that 
references a file with blocked terms/words/phrases, and denies it if those 
terms are found (like a black list)?

Another option I thought of is since the meta content in the code including 
title is passed along, so is there a way to have it can the header or title 
content as part of the acl "content scan" process?


Thanks
Mike


On 6/26/2015 13:29 PM, Mike wrote:
> Nevermind... I found another fix within e2guardian:
>
> etc/e2guardian/lists/urlregexplist
>
> Added this entry:
> # Disable Google SSL Search
> # allows e2g to filter searches properly 
> "^https://www.google.[a-z]{2,6}(.*)"->"http://www.google.com/webhp?nord=1";
>
>
> This means whenever google.com or www.google.com is typed in the 
> address bar, it loads the insecure page and allows e2guardian to 
> properly filter whatever search terms they type in. This does break 
> other aspects such as google toolbars, using the search bar at upper 
> right of many browsers with google as the set search engine, and other 
> ways, but that is an issue we can live with.
>
> On 26/06/2015 2:36 a.m., Mike wrote:
>> Amos, thanks for info.
>>
>> The primary settings being used in squid.conf:
>>
>> http_port 8080
>> # this port is what will be used for SSL Proxy on client browser 
>> http_port 8081 intercept
>>
>> https_port 8082 intercept ssl-bump connection-auth=off 
>> generate-host-certificates=on dynamic_cert_mem_cache_size=16MB 
>> cert=/etc/squid/ssl/squid.pem key=/etc/squid/ssl/squid.key 
>> cipher=ECDHE-RSA-RC4-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:DHE-
>> RSA-CAMELLIA128-SHA:AES128-SHA:RC4-SHA:HIGH:!aNULL:!MD5:!ADH
>>
>>
>> sslcrtd_program /usr/lib64/squid/ssl_crtd -s /var/lib/squid_ssl_db -M 
>> 16MB sslcrtd_children 50 startup=5 idle=1 ssl_bump server-first all 
>> ssl_bump none localhost
>>
>>
>> Then e2guardian uses 10101 for the browsers, and uses 8080 for 
>> connecting to squid on the same server.
> Doesn;t matter. Due to TLS security requirements Squid ensures the TLS 
> connection in re-encrypted on outgoing.
>
>
> I am doubtful eth nord works anymore since Googles own documentation 
> for schools states that one must install a MITM proxy that does the 
> traffic filtering - e2guardian is not one of those. IMO you should 
> convert your e2guardian config into Squid ACL rules that can be 
> applied to the bumped traffic without forcinghttp://
>
> But if nord does work, so should the deny_info in Squid. Something 
> like this probably:
>
>   acl google dstdomain .google.com
>   deny_info 301:http://%H%R?nord=1  google
>
>   acl GwithQuery urlpath_regex ?
>   deny_info 301:http://%H%R&nord=1  GwithQuery
>
>   http_access deny google Gquery
>   http_access deny google
>
>
> Amos
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> squid-users@lists.squid-cache.org
>> http://lists.squid-cache.org/listinfo/squid-users
>>
>
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>

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