HTTP Proxy Support deprecated

Introduction

Depending on the network infrastructure, it may be the case that middleware nodes do not have direct access to the internet. In those cases access is only possible via a proxy. It is now possible to configure such a proxy via well known Java system properties. The following protocols are supported with authentication:

  • http
  • https

Additionally the following protocols are supported without authentication:

  • imap
  • imaps
  • smtp
  • smtps

For each protocoll exists a host and port property. Additionally a user and a password property can be configured for each protocol with authentication support. There also exist a property per protocol group to configure a nonProxyHost list.

The complete list of proxy properties:

http & https

  • http.proxyHost
  • http.proxyPort
  • http.proxyUser
  • http.proxyPassword
  • http.nonProxyHosts
  • https.proxyHost
  • https.proxyPort
  • https.proxyUser
  • https.proxyPassword

imap & imaps

  • mail.imap.proxy.host
  • mail.imap.proxy.port
  • mail.imaps.proxy.host
  • mail.imaps.proxy.port
  • mail.imap.proxy.nonProxyHosts

smtp & smtps

  • mail.smtp.proxy.host
  • mail.smtp.proxy.port
  • mail.smtps.proxy.host
  • mail.smtps.proxy.port
  • mail.smtp.proxy.nonProxyHosts

Example

For example to configure the http proxy one can add the properties to the ox-scriptconf.sh script:

[...]
JAVA_OPTS_OTHER=" -Dhttp.proxyHost=proxy.my.domain -Dhttps.proxyHost=proxy.my.domain -Dhttp.proxyPort=proxyPort -Dhttps.proxyPort=proxyPort"
[...]

It is recommended to whitelist internal systems by adding them to the nonProxyHosts properties. E.g. to the http.nonProxyHosts property:

-Dhttp.nonProxyHosts=localhost|127.*|[::1]|my.internal.system