On Wednesday 12 February 2003 10:51 am, Tesla 13 wrote: > If the connection is to port 443, I don't think so. > Tesla
There's always a way, it's just unlikely to be very elegant. For example, here 'a solution' would be to search the squid logs for any CONNECT methods on port 443, and try to establish an SSL connection and "GET /". If it really is a webserver, then it will at least reply with an HTTP message. If not, then you know you can add a firewall rule or squid ACL against that host :) gdh
