Spin Doctor <nil.bitbucket@xxxxxxxxx> top posted again: > On Oct 3, 2006, at 10:11 AM, Fabian Keil wrote: > > > Spin Doctor <nil.bitbucket@xxxxxxxxx> top posted (please don't): > > > >> Firefox displays the 503 error page, saying " This is Privoxy 3.0.3 > >> on localhost (127.0.0.1), port 8118, enabled" > >> > >> "Connect failed > >> > >> Your request for http://foo@xxxxxxxxxxx could not be fulfilled, > >> because the connection to foo@xxxxxxxxxxx (127.0.0.1) could not be > >> established. > >> > >> This is often a temporary failure, so you might just try again." > > > > The easiest way to get this error message is not to start Tor, > > or have it listening on another address than Privoxy is expecting. > > > > Make sure that Tor is running and that its local address > > is the one Privoxy is configured to use: > > > > fk@TP51 ~ $lynx -dump http://config.privoxy.org/show-status | grep > > socks4 > > [46]forward-socks4a / 10.0.0.2:9050 . > > > > fk@TP51 ~ $sockstat -4l -p 9050 > > USER COMMAND PID FD PROTO LOCAL ADDRESS FOREIGN > > ADDRESS > > 256 tor 862 5 tcp4 10.0.0.2:9050 *:* > No, it's running, as I made sure to use the startprivoxy.command file > in Terminal. I've checked the config file and it's as it should be; > no changes have been made. Torbutton is configured correctly, too. If Tor was running and Privoxy was configured to use it, you wouldn't see the error message for every request. I also doubt that you are using a vanilla Privoxy configuration. If you didn't change the configuration file, someone else did it for you or your DNS settings are seriously broken. I don't know what the "startprivoxy.command file" is supposed to do, but from the name I would guess that it starts Privoxy but not Tor. Privoxy and Tor can operate on their own and it makes little sense to control both with the same script. Did you verify that you have a Tor process running? Did you check Tor's log file as suggested by Roger and others? Fabian -- http://www.fabiankeil.de/
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