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Dir : /usr/lib/jvm/java-1.8.0-openjdk/jre/lib/ |
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Dir : //usr/lib/jvm/java-1.8.0-openjdk/jre/lib/net.properties |
############################################################ # Default Networking Configuration File # # This file may contain default values for the networking system properties. # These values are only used when the system properties are not specified # on the command line or set programatically. # For now, only the various proxy settings can be configured here. ############################################################ # Whether or not the DefaultProxySelector will default to System Proxy # settings when they do exist. # Set it to 'true' to enable this feature and check for platform # specific proxy settings # Note that the system properties that do explicitely set proxies # (like http.proxyHost) do take precedence over the system settings # even if java.net.useSystemProxies is set to true. java.net.useSystemProxies=false #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # Proxy configuration for the various protocol handlers. # DO NOT uncomment these lines if you have set java.net.useSystemProxies # to true as the protocol specific properties will take precedence over # system settings. #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # HTTP Proxy settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default # value is 80) and nonProxyHosts is a '|' separated list of hostnames which # should be accessed directly, ignoring the proxy server (default value is # localhost & 127.0.0.1). # # http.proxyHost= # http.proxyPort=80 http.nonProxyHosts=localhost|127.*|[::1] # # HTTPS Proxy Settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default # value is 443). The HTTPS protocol handlers uses the http nonProxyHosts list. # # https.proxyHost= # https.proxyPort=443 # # FTP Proxy settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default # value is 80) and nonProxyHosts is a '|' separated list of hostnames which # should be accessed directly, ignoring the proxy server (default value is # localhost & 127.0.0.1). # # ftp.proxyHost= # ftp.proxyPort=80 ftp.nonProxyHosts=localhost|127.*|[::1] # # Gopher Proxy settings. proxyHost is the name of the proxy server # (e.g. proxy.mydomain.com), proxyPort is the port number to use (default # value is 80) # # gopher.proxyHost= # gopher.proxyPort=80 # # Socks proxy settings. socksProxyHost is the name of the proxy server # (e.g. socks.domain.com), socksProxyPort is the port number to use # (default value is 1080) # # socksProxyHost= # socksProxyPort=1080 # # HTTP Keep Alive settings. remainingData is the maximum amount of data # in kilobytes that will be cleaned off the underlying socket so that it # can be reused (default value is 512K), queuedConnections is the maximum # number of Keep Alive connections to be on the queue for clean up (default # value is 10). # http.KeepAlive.remainingData=512 # http.KeepAlive.queuedConnections=10 # Authentication Scheme restrictions for HTTP and HTTPS. # # In some environments certain authentication schemes may be undesirable # when proxying HTTP or HTTPS. For example, "Basic" results in effectively the # cleartext transmission of the user's password over the physical network. # This section describes the mechanism for disabling authentication schemes # based on the scheme name. Disabled schemes will be treated as if they are not # supported by the implementation. # # The 'jdk.http.auth.tunneling.disabledSchemes' property lists the authentication # schemes that will be disabled when tunneling HTTPS over a proxy, HTTP CONNECT. # The 'jdk.http.auth.proxying.disabledSchemes' property lists the authentication # schemes that will be disabled when proxying HTTP. # # In both cases the property is a comma-separated list of, case-insensitive, # authentication scheme names, as defined by their relevant RFCs. An # implementation may, but is not required to, support common schemes whose names # include: 'Basic', 'Digest', 'NTLM', 'Kerberos', 'Negotiate'. A scheme that # is not known, or not supported, by the implementation is ignored. # # Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation. It # is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations. # #jdk.http.auth.proxying.disabledSchemes= jdk.http.auth.tunneling.disabledSchemes=Basic # # Transparent NTLM HTTP authentication mode on Windows. Transparent authentication # can be used for the NTLM scheme, where the security credentials based on the # currently logged in user's name and password can be obtained directly from the # operating system, without prompting the user. This property has three possible # values which regulate the behavior as shown below. Other unrecognized values # are handled the same as 'disabled'. Note, that NTLM is not considered to be a # strongly secure authentication scheme and care should be taken before enabling # this mechanism. # # Transparent authentication never used. #jdk.http.ntlm.transparentAuth=disabled # # Enabled for all hosts. #jdk.http.ntlm.transparentAuth=allHosts # # Enabled for hosts that are trusted in Windows Internet settings #jdk.http.ntlm.transparentAuth=trustedHosts # jdk.http.ntlm.transparentAuth=disabled # # Maximum HTTP field section size that a client is prepared to accept # # jdk.http.maxHeaderSize=393216 # # This is the maximum header field section size that a client is prepared to accept. # This is computed as the sum of the size of the uncompressed header name, plus # the size of the uncompressed header value, plus an overhead of 32 bytes for # each field section line. If a peer sends a field section that exceeds this # size a {@link java.net.ProtocolException ProtocolException} will be raised. # This applies to all versions of the HTTP protocol. A value of zero or a negative # value means no limit. If left unspecified, the default value is 393216 bytes # or 384kB. # # Note: This property is currently used by the JDK Reference implementation. It # is not guaranteed to be examined and used by other implementations.