- `proxy-ca.pem`: CA which is used for all connections to the client
- `proxy-ca-key.pem`: private key for the CA
+- `proxy-dh.pem`: Diffie-Hellman parameters for the proxy
- `proxy-key.pem`: private key for the proxy
- `proxy-invalid.pem`: special certificate used for invalid pages
certificate to secure the connection to the client (signed by `proxy-ca.pem`).
If an error occurs in the validation (missing `certificate-*.pem` files,
-fingerprint changed, etc.) it's logged by the proxy (stdout) and the special
+fingerprint changed, etc.) it's logged by the proxy (stderr) and the special
`proxy-invalid.pem` certificate is used to send a 500 error message to the
client. The connection to the server is closed so there's no chance that any
client data is sent to the (possible) evil server. The invalid certificate is
problem, but if you only check if it's a HTTPS connection then this attack is
possible.
+Another issue is embedded active content, like JavaScript. If the website
+includes data from a different host (e.g. a different sub-domain), for which
+tlsproxy has no certificate, then an attacker can MITM that connection and
+inject JavaScript with unknown consequences into the browser.
+
KNOWN ISSUES
------------
tlsproxy is licensed under GPL version 3 or later.
-Copyright (C) 2011-2013 Simon Ruderich
+Copyright (C) 2011-2014 Simon Ruderich
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by