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Current File : //../../usr/share/pam/../glib-2.0/schemas/org.gnome.system.proxy.gschema.xml |
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<schemalist gettext-domain="gsettings-desktop-schemas">
<schema id="org.gnome.system.proxy" path="/system/proxy/">
<child name="http" schema="org.gnome.system.proxy.http"/>
<child name="https" schema="org.gnome.system.proxy.https"/>
<child name="ftp" schema="org.gnome.system.proxy.ftp"/>
<child name="socks" schema="org.gnome.system.proxy.socks"/>
<key name="mode" enum="org.gnome.desktop.GDesktopProxyMode">
<default>'none'</default>
<summary>Proxy configuration mode</summary>
<description>
Select the proxy configuration mode. Supported values are “none”,
“manual”, “auto”.
If this is “none”, then proxies are not used.
If it is “auto”, the autoconfiguration URL described by the
“autoconfig-url” key is used.
If it is “manual”, then the proxies described by
“/system/proxy/http”, “/system/proxy/https”,
“/system/proxy/ftp” and “/system/proxy/socks” will be used.
Each of the 4 proxy types is enabled if its “host” key is
non-empty and its “port” key is non-0.
If an http proxy is configured, but an https proxy is not,
then the http proxy is also used for https.
If a SOCKS proxy is configured, it is used for all protocols,
except that the http, https, and ftp proxy settings override
it for those protocols only.
</description>
</key>
<key name="autoconfig-url" type="s">
<default>''</default>
<summary>Automatic proxy configuration URL</summary>
<description>
URL that provides proxy configuration values. When mode is
“auto”, this URL is used to look up proxy information for all
protocols.
</description>
</key>
<key name="ignore-hosts" type="as">
<default>[ 'localhost', '127.0.0.0/8', '::1' ]</default>
<summary>Non-proxy hosts</summary>
<description>
This key contains a list of hosts which are connected to directly,
rather than via the proxy (if it is active). The values can be
hostnames, domains (using an initial wildcard like *.foo.com), IP host
addresses (both IPv4 and IPv6) and network addresses with a netmask
(something like 192.168.0.0/24).
</description>
</key>
<key name="use-same-proxy" type="b">
<default>true</default>
<summary>Unused; ignore</summary>
<description>
This key is not used, and should not be read or modified.
</description>
</key>
</schema>
<schema id="org.gnome.system.proxy.http" path="/system/proxy/http/">
<key name="enabled" type="b">
<default>false</default>
<summary>Unused; ignore</summary>
<description>
This key is not used; HTTP proxying is enabled when the host
key is non-empty and the port is non-0.
</description>
</key>
<key name="host" type="s">
<default>''</default>
<summary>HTTP proxy host name</summary>
<description>
The machine name to proxy HTTP through.
</description>
</key>
<key name="port" type="i">
<range min="0" max="65535"/>
<default>8080</default>
<summary>HTTP proxy port</summary>
<description>
The port on the machine defined by “/system/proxy/http/host” that you
proxy through.
</description>
</key>
<key name="use-authentication" type="b">
<default>false</default>
<summary>Authenticate proxy server connections</summary>
<description>
If true, then connections to the proxy server require authentication.
The username/password combo is defined by
“/system/proxy/http/authentication-user” and
“/system/proxy/http/authentication-password”.
This applies only to the http proxy; when using a separate
https proxy, there is currently no way to specify that it
should use authentication.
</description>
</key>
<key name="authentication-user" type="s">
<default>''</default>
<summary>HTTP proxy username</summary>
<description>
User name to pass as authentication when doing HTTP proxying.
</description>
</key>
<key name="authentication-password" type="s">
<default>''</default>
<summary>HTTP proxy password</summary>
<description>
Password to pass as authentication when doing HTTP proxying.
</description>
</key>
</schema>
<schema id="org.gnome.system.proxy.https" path="/system/proxy/https/">
<key name="host" type="s">
<default>''</default>
<summary>Secure HTTP proxy host name</summary>
<description>
The machine name to proxy secure HTTP through.
</description>
</key>
<key name="port" type="i">
<range min="0" max="65535"/>
<default>0</default>
<summary>Secure HTTP proxy port</summary>
<description>
The port on the machine defined by “/system/proxy/https/host” that you
proxy through.
</description>
</key>
</schema>
<schema id="org.gnome.system.proxy.ftp" path="/system/proxy/ftp/">
<key name="host" type="s">
<default>''</default>
<summary>FTP proxy host name</summary>
<description>
The machine name to proxy FTP through.
</description>
</key>
<key name="port" type="i">
<range min="0" max="65535"/>
<default>0</default>
<summary>FTP proxy port</summary>
<description>
The port on the machine defined by “/system/proxy/ftp/host” that you
proxy through.
</description>
</key>
</schema>
<schema id="org.gnome.system.proxy.socks" path="/system/proxy/socks/">
<key name="host" type="s">
<default>''</default>
<summary>SOCKS proxy host name</summary>
<description>
The machine name to use as a SOCKS proxy.
</description>
</key>
<key name="port" type="i">
<range min="0" max="65535"/>
<default>0</default>
<summary>SOCKS proxy port</summary>
<description>
The port on the machine defined by “/system/proxy/socks/host” that you
proxy through.
</description>
</key>
</schema>
</schemalist>
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