1 ############################################################
   2 #       Default Networking Configuration File
   3 #
   4 # This file may contain default values for the networking system properties.
   5 # These values are only used when the system properties are not specified
   6 # on the command line or set programmatically.
   7 # For now, only the various proxy settings can be configured here.
   8 ############################################################
   9 
  10 # Whether or not the DefaultProxySelector will default to System Proxy
  11 # settings when they do exist.
  12 # Set it to 'true' to enable this feature and check for platform
  13 # specific proxy settings
  14 # Note that the system properties that do explicitly set proxies
  15 # (like http.proxyHost) do take precedence over the system settings
  16 # even if java.net.useSystemProxies is set to true.
  17  
  18 java.net.useSystemProxies=false
  19 
  20 #------------------------------------------------------------------------
  21 # Proxy configuration for the various protocol handlers.
  22 # DO NOT uncomment these lines if you have set java.net.useSystemProxies
  23 # to true as the protocol specific properties will take precedence over
  24 # system settings.
  25 #------------------------------------------------------------------------
  26 
  27 # HTTP Proxy settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server
  28 # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default
  29 # value is 80) and nonProxyHosts is a '|' separated list of hostnames which
  30 # should be accessed directly, ignoring the proxy server (default value is
  31 # localhost & 127.0.0.1).
  32 #
  33 # http.proxyHost=
  34 # http.proxyPort=80
  35 http.nonProxyHosts=localhost|127.*|[::1]
  36 #
  37 # HTTPS Proxy Settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server
  38 # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default
  39 # value is 443). The HTTPS protocol handlers uses the http nonProxyHosts list.
  40 #
  41 # https.proxyHost=
  42 # https.proxyPort=443
  43 #
  44 # FTP Proxy settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server
  45 # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default
  46 # value is 80) and nonProxyHosts is a '|' separated list of hostnames which
  47 # should be accessed directly, ignoring the proxy server (default value is
  48 # localhost & 127.0.0.1).
  49 #
  50 # ftp.proxyHost=
  51 # ftp.proxyPort=80
  52 ftp.nonProxyHosts=localhost|127.*|[::1]
  53 #
  54 # Gopher Proxy settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server
  55 # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default
  56 # value is 80)
  57 #
  58 # gopher.proxyHost=
  59 # gopher.proxyPort=80
  60 #
  61 # Socks proxy settings. socksProxyHost is the name of the proxy server
  62 # (e.g. socks.domain.com), socksProxyPort is the port number to use
  63 # (default value is 1080)
  64 #
  65 # socksProxyHost=
  66 # socksProxyPort=1080
  67 #
  68 # HTTP Keep Alive settings. remainingData is the maximum amount of data
  69 # in kilobytes that will be cleaned off the underlying socket so that it 
  70 # can be reused (default value is 512K), queuedConnections is the maximum 
  71 # number of Keep Alive connections to be on the queue for clean up (default
  72 # value is 10).
  73 # http.KeepAlive.remainingData=512
  74 # http.KeepAlive.queuedConnections=10
  75 
  76 # Authentication Scheme restrictions for HTTP and HTTPS.
  77 #
  78 # In some environments certain authentication schemes may be undesirable
  79 # when proxying HTTP or HTTPS.  For example, "Basic" results in effectively the
  80 # cleartext transmission of the user's password over the physical network.
  81 # This section describes the mechanism for disabling authentication schemes
  82 # based on the scheme name. Disabled schemes will be treated as if they are not
  83 # supported by the implementation.
  84 #
  85 # The 'jdk.http.auth.tunneling.disabledSchemes' property lists the authentication
  86 # schemes that will be disabled when tunneling HTTPS over a proxy, HTTP CONNECT.
  87 # The 'jdk.http.auth.proxying.disabledSchemes' property lists the authentication
  88 # schemes that will be disabled when proxying HTTP.
  89 #
  90 # In both cases the property is a comma-separated list of, case-insensitive,
  91 # authentication scheme names, as defined by their relevant RFCs. An
  92 # implementation may, but is not required to, support common schemes whose names
  93 # include: 'Basic', 'Digest', 'NTLM', 'Kerberos', 'Negotiate'.  A scheme that
  94 # is not known, or not supported, by the implementation is ignored.
  95 #
  96 # Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation. It
  97 # is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.
  98 #
  99 #jdk.http.auth.proxying.disabledSchemes=
 100 jdk.http.auth.tunneling.disabledSchemes=Basic
 101 
 102 #
 103 # Allow restricted HTTP request headers
 104 #
 105 # By default, the following request headers are not allowed to be set by user code
 106 # in HttpRequests: "connection", "content-length", "expect", "host" and "upgrade".
 107 # The 'jdk.httpclient.allowRestrictedHeaders' property allows one or more of these
 108 # headers to be specified as a comma separated list to override the default restriction. 
 109 # The names are case-insensitive and white-space is ignored (removed before processing 
 110 # the list). Note, this capability is mostly intended for testing and isn't expected 
 111 # to be used in real deployments. Protocol errors or other undefined behavior is likely 
 112 # to occur when using them. The property is not set by default.
 113 # Note also, that there may be other headers that are restricted from being set
 114 # depending on the context. This includes the "Authorization" header when the
 115 # relevant HttpClient has an authenticator set. These restrictions cannot be
 116 # overridden by this property.
 117 #
 118 # jdk.httpclient.allowRestrictedHeaders=host
 119 #