On Mon, Dec 12, 2016 at 12:39 PM, aschappell <[email protected]> wrote: > Actually I know for a fact they are going through a proxy but there no way of > getting information about that proxy. Is there any way to turn off "ssl"
You don't want to turn SSL off - you want to turn it *on* (assuming it isn't already). There is documentation in the manual for doing this. We recommend using a reverse proxy like Apache or Nginx: http://guacamole.incubator.apache.org/doc/gug/proxying-guacamole.html > and just allow proxies since i do not have any information on it? > It's not that Guacamole doesn't "allow" proxies, or that there is some configuration setting which would make proxies suddenly work. The issue is that web proxies often assume that web traffic is non-interactive, and that it is thus safe to buffer the entire HTTP stream until the connection is closed. This assumption fails for Guacamole, because it is very much interactive, and buffering the connection in that manner means the data simply never reaches the user. If you set up SSL in front of Guacamole, then there is a good chance the proxy will pass that through untouched. Proxies generally have to pass SSL traffic through unbuffered and unmodified, as doing otherwise prevents SSL from working. Some corporate proxies are exceptions to this, but if you don't have SSL set up yet, it's really worth trying. You absolutely should be encrypting your Guacamole traffic, and if it happens to solve your issue with the proxy, so much the better. - Mike
