2.6 KiB
extends: post.liquid title: fast and simple proxy server date: 02 Oct 2011 01:27:00 +0200 path: /:year/:month/:day/fast-and-simple-proxy-server route: blog
So you have this friend sitting somewhere else in the world and want to give him a simple proxy to access a geoip-protected site or something similar. But what tool to use?
When searching for a proxy I found dante, but found it just to hard to just configure in a few minutes.
I'm a ruby programmer and I knew Github once released a small open-source proxy programm. It's called proxymachine, made by @mojombo, one of the founders of github.
Get it with:
gem install proxymachine
and you're nearly done.
Pipe the following into a text file:
proxy do |data|
next if data.size < 9
v, c, port, o1, o2, o3, o4, user = data.unpack("CCnC4a*")
return { :close => "\x0\x5b\x0\x0\x0\x0\x0\x0" } if v != 4 or c != 1
next if ! idx = user.index("\x0")
{
:remote => "#{[o1,o2,o3,o4]*'.'}:#{port}",
:reply => "\x0\x5a\x0\x0\x0\x0\x0\x0",
:data => data[idx+9..-1]
}
end
and start it with
proxymachine -h 0.0.0.0 -p 1234 -c your_socks_config.rb
{:lang="text"}
Tada! You got your own SOCKS4 Proxy up and running.
@nerdsein got another solution: Mocks, "My Own soCKs Server." Download it over at Sourceforge, unpack it and compile the code with:
gcc -lnsl -o mocks child.c error.c misc.c socksd.c up_proxy.c
{:lang="text"}
You can configure a little bit more than with proxymachine, but you can stick with the default config for now:
PORT = 10080
MOCKS_ADDR = 0.0.0.0
LOG_FILE = mocks.log
PID_FILE = mocks.pid
BUFFER_SIZE = 65536
BACKLOG = 5
NEGOTIATION_TIMEOUT = 5
CONNECTION_IDLE_TIMEOUT = 300
BIND_TIMEOUT = 30
SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT = 3
MAX_CONNECTIONS = 50
FILTER_POLICY = ALLOW
{:lang="text"}
See the README and the config file in the archive for comments on it. Then start it with:
src/mocks -c mocks.config start
{:lang="text"}
and kill it with:
src/mocks -c mocks.config shutdown
{:lang="text"}
Oh, and in case you have the possibility to just ssh to the server, you can start up a SOCKS proxy on this connection, too:
ssh -D1234 example.com
{:lang="text"}