Proxy handling (Mint 13 MATE)
Posted: Thu Nov 15, 2012 10:04 am
I just returned from a lengthy trial & error trying to set up a Mint 13 behind a corporate firewall / proxy, and unfortunately, I have to say that proxy handling in Mint 13 / MATE fails to impress.
The following issues were found:
But then I opened Control Center / Language Support, was told that there were missing language packs (as was expected)... and found that this dialog doesn't honor any of the aforementioned settings. It simply hangs trying to download the language packs. Since there is no way to enter proxy settings anywhere in the dialog, my attempts ended there. (No, I did not feel like copying the list of language packages into a terminal for manual apt-get'ing them. I gave up at that point.)
Perhaps this post can be put in the appropriate channels by people more involved with the Mint community: Currently proxy handling is a disgrace. I admit that some of the issues aren't strictly in the domain of the Mint maintainers, but I don't really care about the maintainer side of things. From a user perspective, it sucks, and royally so.
The following issues were found:
- Global proxy settings (Menu / Control Center / Network Proxy) are not honored by either the package manager, Firefox, or command line tools. (Actually I did not find any application that does honor these settings, and yes, I did reboot after setting them.)
- Environment variables set in /etc/bash.bashrc or ~/.bashrc are not honored by Firefox either, even when the latter is started from the command line.
- The Package Manager doesn't recognize system proxy settings, but you can set a proxy manually in the preferences. However, this does not affect e.g. command-line apt-get.
But then I opened Control Center / Language Support, was told that there were missing language packs (as was expected)... and found that this dialog doesn't honor any of the aforementioned settings. It simply hangs trying to download the language packs. Since there is no way to enter proxy settings anywhere in the dialog, my attempts ended there. (No, I did not feel like copying the list of language packages into a terminal for manual apt-get'ing them. I gave up at that point.)
Perhaps this post can be put in the appropriate channels by people more involved with the Mint community: Currently proxy handling is a disgrace. I admit that some of the issues aren't strictly in the domain of the Mint maintainers, but I don't really care about the maintainer side of things. From a user perspective, it sucks, and royally so.