.NET Core C#
.NET Core C#
HTTPS Requests over Squid Proxy Direct TLS Connection
See more HTTP Examples
Demonstrates how to send HTTP requests through an HTTP proxy that supports Direct TLS Connections. (Chilkat tests with a squid 4.11 proxy.)A direct TLS connection to an HTTP proxy is where the initial connection to the proxy server is TLS.
Note: This example requires Chilkat v9.5.0.83 or greater.
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// This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
// See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
Chilkat.Http http = new Chilkat.Http();
// Set the HTTP proxy domain or IP address.
http.ProxyDomain = "172.16.16.46";
// The proxy port..
http.ProxyPort = 3128;
// Indicate that we are to use a direct TLS connection with the HTTP proxy
// (we use a Squid Cache: Version 4.11 for testing)
http.ProxyDirectTls = true;
// If the proxy requires a login or password, we can set it here.
// Otherwise comment out these lines.
http.ProxyLogin = "myProxyLogin";
http.ProxyPassword = "myProxyPassword";
// All requests sent on the http object will now go through the proxy.
// Give it a test:
string s = http.QuickGetStr("https://www.chilkatsoft.com/helloWorld.html");
if (http.LastMethodSuccess == false) {
Debug.WriteLine(http.LastErrorText);
return;
}
// The LastErrorText property also contains information when method call succeeds.
// Have a look to see that the request was sent through the proxy:
Debug.WriteLine(http.LastErrorText);
Debug.WriteLine("---");
Debug.WriteLine(s);
Debug.WriteLine("---");
Debug.WriteLine("Success for TLS destination over direct TLS HTTP proxy.");