139 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
139 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
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#! /bin/sh
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## Web proxy, following the grand tradition of Web things being handled by
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## gross scripts. Uses netcat to listen on a high port [default 8000],
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## picks apart requests and sends them on to the right place. Point this
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## at the browser client machine you'll be coming from [to limit access to
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## only it], and point the browser's concept of an HTTP proxy to the
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## machine running this. Takes a single argument of the client that will
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## be using it, and rejects connections from elsewhere. LOGS the queries
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## to a configurable logfile, which can be an interesting read later on!
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## If the argument is "reset", the listener and logfile are cleaned up.
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##
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## This works surprisingly fast and well, for a shell script, although may
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## randomly fail when hammered by a browser that tries to open several
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## connections at once. Drop the "maximum connections" in your browser if
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## this is a problem.
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##
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## A more degenerate case of this, or preferably a small C program that
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## does the same thing under inetd, could handle a small site's worth of
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## proxy queries. Given the way browsers are evolving, proxies like this
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## can play an important role in protecting your own privacy.
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##
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## If you grabbed this in ASCII mode, search down for "eew" and make sure
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## the embedded-CR check is intact, or requests might hang.
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##
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## Doesn't handle POST forms. Who cares, if you're just watching HTTV?
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## Dumbness here has a highly desirable side effect: it only sends the first
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## GET line, since that's all you really ever need to send, and suppresses
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## the other somewhat revealing trash that most browsers insist on sending.
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# set these as you wish: proxy port...
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PORT=8000
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# logfile spec: a real file or /dev/null if you don't care
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LFILE=${0}.log
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# optional: where to dump connect info, so you can see if anything went wrong
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# CFILE=${0}.conn
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# optional extra args to the listener "nc", for instance "-s inside-net-addr"
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# XNC=''
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# functionality switch has to be done fast, so the next listener can start
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# prelaunch check: if no current client and no args, bail.
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case "${1}${CLIENT}" in
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"")
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echo needs client hostname
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exit 1
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;;
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esac
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case "${1}" in
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"")
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# Make like inetd, and run the next relayer process NOW. All the redirection
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# is necessary so this shell has NO remaining channel open to the net.
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# This will hang around for 10 minutes, and exit if no new connections arrive.
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# Using -n for speed, avoiding any DNS/port lookups.
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nc -w 600 -n -l -p $PORT -e "$0" $XNC "$CLIENT" < /dev/null > /dev/null \
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2> $CFILE &
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;;
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esac
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# no client yet and had an arg, this checking can be much slower now
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umask 077
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if test "$1" ; then
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# if magic arg, just clean up and then hit our own port to cause server exit
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if test "$1" = "reset" ; then
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rm -f $LFILE
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test -f "$CFILE" && rm -f $CFILE
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nc -w 1 -n 127.0.0.1 $PORT < /dev/null > /dev/null 2>&1
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exit 0
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fi
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# find our ass with both hands
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test ! -f "$0" && echo "Oops, cannot find my own corporeal being" && exit 1
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# correct launch: set up client access control, passed along thru environment.
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CLIENT="$1"
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export CLIENT
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test "$CFILE" || CFILE=/dev/null
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export CFILE
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touch "$CFILE"
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# tell us what happened during the last run, if possible
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if test -f "$CFILE" ; then
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echo "Last connection results:"
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cat $CFILE
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fi
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# ping client machine and get its bare IP address
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CLIENT=`nc -z -v -w 8 "$1" 22000 2>&1 | sed 's/.*\[\(..*\)\].*/\1/'`
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test ! "$CLIENT" && echo "Can't find address of $1" && exit 1
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# if this was an initial launch, be informative about it
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echo "=== Launch: $CLIENT" >> $LFILE
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echo "Proxy running -- will accept connections on $PORT from $CLIENT"
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echo " Logging queries to $LFILE"
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test -f "$CFILE" && echo " and connection fuckups to $CFILE"
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# and run the first listener, showing us output just for the first hit
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nc -v -w 600 -n -l -p $PORT -e "$0" $XNC "$CLIENT" &
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exit 0
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fi
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# Fall here to handle a page.
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# GET type://host.name:80/file/path HTTP/1.0
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# Additional: trash
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# More: trash
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# <newline>
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read x1 x2 x3 x4
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echo "=== query: $x1 $x2 $x3 $x4" >> $LFILE
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test "$x4" && echo "extra junk after request: $x4" && exit 0
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# nuke questionable characters and split up the request
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hurl=`echo "$x2" | sed -e "s+.*//++" -e 's+[\`'\''|$;<>{}\\!*()"]++g'`
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# echo massaged hurl: $hurl >> $LFILE
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hh=`echo "$hurl" | sed -e "s+/.*++" -e "s+:.*++"`
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hp=`echo "$hurl" | sed -e "s+.*:++" -e "s+/.*++"`
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test "$hp" = "$hh" && hp=80
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hf=`echo "$hurl" | sed -e "s+[^/]*++"`
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# echo total split: $hh : $hp : $hf >> $LFILE
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# suck in and log the entire request, because we're curious
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# Fails on multipart stuff like forms; oh well...
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if test "$x3" ; then
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while read xx ; do
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echo "${xx}" >> $LFILE
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test "${xx}" || break
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# eew, buried returns, gross but necessary for DOS stupidity:
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test "${xx}" = "
" && break
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done
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fi
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# check for non-GET *after* we log the query...
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test "$x1" != "GET" && echo "sorry, this proxy only does GETs" && exit 0
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# no, you can *not* phone home, you miserable piece of shit
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test "`echo $hh | fgrep -i netscap`" && \
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echo "access to Netscam's servers <b>DENIED.</b>" && exit 0
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# Do it. 30 sec net-wait time oughta be *plenty*...
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# Some braindead servers have forgotten how to handle the simple-query syntax.
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# If necessary, replace below with (echo "$x1 $hf" ; echo '') | nc...
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echo "$x1 $hf" | nc -w 30 "$hh" "$hp" 2> /dev/null || \
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echo "oops, can't get to $hh : $hp".
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echo "sent \"$x1 $hf\" to $hh : $hp" >> $LFILE
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exit 0
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