I already use Charles, a nifty HTTPS proxy app similar to Fiddler and it is essentially what I want except that it's packaged up in an app. I want to write my own because I have specific needs for filtering and presentation.
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Having poked around, I understand the terminology a little better. I'm NOT after a full "Man in the Middle" SSL proxy. Instead, it will run locally on my machine and so I can honor whatever SSL cert it offers. However, I need to see the decrypted contents of packets of my requests and the decrypted contents of the responses.
Just for background information, a normal HTTP proxy handles HTTPS requests via the CONNECT method: it reads the host name and port, establishes a TCP connection to this target server on this port, returns 200 OK and then merely tunnels that TCP connection to the initial client (the fact that SSL/TLS is exchanged on top of that TCP connection is barely relevant).
from my experience HTTPS is nowhere near "simple". Do you need a proxy that would catch traffic from your own machine? There are several applications, like Fiddler. Or google for alternatives. Comes with everything you need to debug the web traffic.
That blog is no way to write a proxy. It's very easy: you just accept a connection, read one line which tells you what to connect to, attempt the upstream connection, if it fails send the appropriate response and close the socket, otherwise just start copying bytes in both directions, simultaneously, until EOS has occurred in both directions. The only difference HTTPS makes is that you have to speak SSL instead of plaintext.
EZproxy remotely connects your users to the e-resources they need for school and research using their existing single sign-on credentials. EZproxy connects on their behalf with an authorized IP address so content providers permit access. You can configure it to grant access by groups to meet licensing needs and use it to support diverse curriculum since it connects to most content providers.
EZproxy protects the identity of your users and puts you in control of their workflows to determine if and with whom any user data is shared. EZproxy also uses a robust and customizable set of security rules to detect and disable compromised single sign-on credentials before they can be used to exploit any systems or data, protecting your users and community from security threats.
EZproxy connects to most identity management systems and supports many different authentication schemes. EZproxy is also set up and managed by OCLC so IT teams can focus on other projects. We provide database stanza management, software and hardware management, SSL certificate management, and more. EZproxy's flexible service options meet both library and IT needs.
I just wanted to test a reverse proxy simple setup, redirecting every request just to google. Anyhow it does not work! Trying to browse on localhost, I just get the apache "it works" default page, but not proxying.
BlockAway is a free proxy site which allows to unblock any website and keep your personal information anonymous. It resolves all types of network restrictions, for instance you can watch YouTube videos which are not available in your region. Our mission is to make information a bit easier to access and share for everyone.
Proxy server is an intermediary between your device and the Internet and it is very easy to use: all you need is to enter a web address where you want to go. Your request passes through a proxy server to a website, then the web content returns back to you through the same proxy server. This is very helpful if you want to:
BlockAway provides everything needed for a safe and secure presence on the Internet. It solves the most of the existing proxy site typical issues to hide you perfectly. The basic list of the proxy browser features:
I'd like to set up a proxy service so that I can route all my http/https traffic from home through it. I know how to configure my browser to talk to the proxy, I just don't know how to set it up server side. I'd also like to have authentication so that only I can use it
If it is, then the answers here that use ssh to do port forwarding solve the authorization issue automatically. Set tinyproxy to bind to 127.0.0.1 and only users which have ssh access can connect to it.
If you have a dynamic address, you may be willing to accept connections from a sub-part of your home connection. E.g. your ISP sets your home connection to look like 192-192-192-192-area1-san-fran-cal-usa, you could set tinyproxy to accept connections only from area1-san-fran-cal-usa (thereby ignoring the IP part of the connection). The risk is that other area1 subscribers discover your proxy and start using it.
This is what I use for my VPS proxy and it works fine, especially since I am in a relatively small catchment area of my ISP. I've never had anyone else use the proxy, but I know it is a risk (one I'm willing to take -- I can always change tinyproxy if I discover someone else using it).
Maybe, but just maybe is good choice in this kind of situation to use a some sort of general solution. So I recommand squid as much as I can, when somebody needs a proxy service. The reasons are multiple: documentation is everywhere, it's general solution for basic and much more specific requests, and the most important, my experience showed that clients with simple requests became clients with very sophisticated requests regarding proxy service in no time.
Dynamic SSH tunneling is a feature present in many SSH clients - openssh and PuTTY among others, where the SSH clients sets up a "fake SOCKS proxy" on the machine the client is running on, which then translates those SOCKS requests into SSH tunneling, exiting onto the greater Internet from your server.
PuTTY will do this too, have a look under Connection -> SSH -> Tunnels and add a dynamic forwarded port (enter the Source port, but leave the Destination blank), and then configure your browser to point at localhost:3128 as a SOCKS proxy, just like with OpenSSH.
Wondering if anyone has used tinyproxy for netflix? I am in canada, and have tinyproxy running on an american VPS. The netflix website loads up all american content, but when clicking on the video, it seems to know that the request is coming form canada. Does the video in netflix not go thru the proxy? I have a suspicion that I might need sock proxy. Any ideas on somthing similar to tinyproxy that can route everything, including netflix video?
you could go to or get his manual and try to walk him through it.and exception in their firewall, entering your IP so making it secure, so either you have the burden of talking them through it, or you have a burden on you to set up a lot your end and make it simple for them.. So not so easy.
A few options come to mind. I'm assuming he's running windows, and as such tinyproxy is out of the question.A ssh server + an account would work, if he's capable of port forwarding if need be - you could then use an account on that system plus typical SSH tunneling.
Polipo might also be a good option - you can get the windows version here its a caching proxy server, and you can do the setup file for him, get him to open poliporc in his start menu, and paste in your new one if the default options don't suit you
I apologize in advance if i have broken any forum rules, I am rather new here. I have been scouring the internet to look for a mtg proxy website that sells very high quality proxy cards so that i no longer have to print off paper ones to glue later. However, due to a lot of back and forth, i seem to be having issues find a good provider that i can trust. Are there any websites you guys would highly recommend to visit? Or a reseller of proxies that proves to have a really great track record of quality, passable proxies? More so just the color and stuff. I dont mind if it doesnt pass the other tests. Just want to make putting copies of the same, original card i own into my other decks without proxies being glaringly bad.
Hey all, for those looking to find a good proxy site, I've tested quite a few options. Some of which have been around a long time and others who have been around more recently. Comparison of card stock, printing quality, price and reasonability, I've concluded that
www.PrintingProxies.com is my top winner. A rather newer business, I've found the overall quality of the product speaks better than words. Sleeved or not, the proxys tend to look similar to real copies. I've been happy with my first order since they first started to advertise, and still stand by my proxy provider of choice when I go on a shopping spree of the finer MTG cards and need a good few proxys in the decks that use the same card. Go check them out!
Disclaimer: Proxies should be used for the sole purpose of being just that, a proxy. I do not condone the attempt to sell proxies as legitimate cards and you should do the same too! The point of proxies is to provide a tangible representation of a card you desire, but without the needed benefit to buy multiple copies for multiple decks, or to save those flash RL cards you made as an investment. Please be considerate to all those who love MTG and utilize proxies in their correct manner!
But what actually happens when you browse the web? You might be using a proxy server at your office, on a Virtual Private Network (VPN) or you could be one of the more tech-savvy who always use a proxy server of some kind or another.
Modern proxy servers do much more than forwarding web requests, all in the name of data security and network performance. Proxy servers act as a firewall and web filter, provide shared network connections, and cache data to speed up common requests. A good proxy server keeps users and the internal network protected from the bad stuff that lives out in the wild internet. Lastly, proxy servers can provide a high level of privacy.
A proxy server is basically a computer on the internet with its own IP address that your computer knows. When you send a web request, your request goes to the proxy server first. The proxy server then makes your web request on your behalf, collects the response from the web server, and forwards you the web page data so you can see the page in your browser.
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