At this point, there are two possible solutions:
- Connect using a clear-text IRC session over the proxy (which was out of consideration in my case)
- Relay the server's SSL port to localhost over the proxy (yay)
Socat turned out to be the most easy to setup and worked flawlessly. Here is the setup for this particular example:
All connections to the local port 6666 would then be tunneled through the proxy, and forwarded to the destination server. So if the endpoint service is SSL-enabled, connect to your local port over SSL and the session gets encrypted end to end.
Here is a small Bash script for that purpose.
#!/bin/bash if [ -z $3 ]; then echo "usage: $0 <listenport> <desthost> <destport>" exit fi LOCALPORT=$1 PROXYHOST=10.0.0.1 PROXYPORT=3128 DESTHOST=$2 DESTPORT=$3 socat TCP4-LISTEN:$LOCALPORT,bind=127.0.0.1 PROXY:$PROXYHOST:$DESTHOST:$DESTPORT,proxyport=$PROXYPORT & echo SOCAT listening on 127.0.0.1:$LOCALPORT, forwarding to $DESTHOST:$DESTPORT
Note: Should your proxy require authentication, the socat command must be changed to:
socat TCP4-LISTEN:$LOCALPORT,bind=127.0.0.1 PROXY:$PROXYHOST:$DESTHOST:$DESTPORT,proxyport=$PROXYPORT,proxyauth=$PROXYUSER:$PROXYPASS
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