I googled a lot and many answers are Yes. For example: Is GET data also encrypted in HTTPS? But the senior security engineer in our company told me the URL would not be encrypted.
Image that, if the URL was encrypted, how does the DNS server find the host and connect?
I think is this is very strong point although it's against most of the answers. So I'm really confused and my questions are:
- Does https encrypt the everything in the request? (including the URL, host, path, parameters, headers)
- If yes, how the DNS server decrypt the request and send it to the host server?
I tried to access https://www.amazon.com/gp/css/homepage.html/ref=ya_surl_youracct and my IE sent two requests to the server:
First:
CONNECT www.amazon.com:443 HTTP/1.0
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; Trident/7.0; rv:11.0) like Gecko
Host: www.amazon.com
Content-Length: 0
DNT: 1
Connection: Keep-Alive
Pragma: no-cache
Second:
GET /gp/css/homepage.html/ref=ya_surl_youracct HTTP/1.1
Accept: text/html, application/xhtml+xml, */*
Accept-Language: en-US,zh-CN;q=0.5
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; Trident/7.0; rv:11.0) like Gecko
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
Host: www.amazon.com
DNT: 1
Connection: Keep-Alive
It seems my browser has requested twice: the first time is to establish the connection with host (without encryption) and the second time send an encrypted request over https? Am I right? If I am understanding this correctly, when a client call the RESTFUL API using https, it sends the requests (connection and get/post) twice every time?