Provided by: desproxy_0.1.0~pre3-10_amd64 bug

NAME

       desproxy - a TCP tunnel for HTTP proxies

SYNOPSIS

         desproxy remote_host remote_port proxy_host proxy_port local_port

OPTIONS

       None.

DESCRIPTION

       HTTP proxies are network servers that are used to give HTTP (web) access to computers that are not
       connected to the Internet. This is a typical scenario in corporate networks and recently in home networks
       too. HTTP proxies connect to the Internet either directly or via a parent proxy (which in fact connects
       to the Internet directly or via another parent proxy, and so on...)

       HTTP clients (web browsers) use HTTP proxies to request web pages; the HTTP server just forwards those
       request to the destination server. All the negotiation is done via the HTTP protocol, which is designed
       just to carry HTTP requests and no generic (TCP/IP) traffic. That is why you can't (normally) use
       Internet applications beside your web server if you are behind a HTTP proxy.

       That is what desproxy is good for. Desproxy is a TCP tunnel, which means desproxy can forward TCP/IP
       traffic via a HTTP proxy. Desproxy uses a HTTP/1.1 method (CONNECT) to establish TCP/IP connections on
       demand. CONNECT is used for SSL connections when accessing to secure sites, so if you can access sites
       that support SSL (www.hotmail.com for example) you can use desproxy.

       Not all IP (Internet) traffic is just TCP/IP. In fact there are two more protocols widely used in the
       Internet not supported by desproxy: UDP and ICMP:

       •   ICMP is used to manage large IP networks. The only application using ICMP you may miss is ping.

       •   UDP is an unreliable connection-less fast transport protocol, mostly used in network games and other
           applications that need low latency network traffic. Notably DNS uses UDP packets for fast delivery.

   Will desproxy work with my HTTP proxy?
       Short answer: just give it a try

       Long answer: desproxy should work with every HTTP proxy, with the following exceptions:

       •   MS Proxies with NTLM authentication. NTLM is a proprietary authentication method from Microsoft, not
           a standard authentication method. Maybe in the future desproxy will support NTLM authentication, but
           currently it doesn't.

       •   HTTP/1.0 Proxies. Desproxy needs the CONNECT method, which is only available from HTTP/1.1 protocol
           version. It's very unlikely your proxy doesn't accept HTTP/1.1 requests.

       •   HTTP/1.1 Proxies without the CONNECT method. Maybe your network administrator deactivated CONNECT
           support in the proxy, or maybe CONNECT is restricted to the HTTPS port (443).

   Assumptions
       Let's assume the following:

       •   your HTTP proxy host name is "proxy" and its address is "192.0.0.1"

       •   your HTTP proxy port is "8080"

       •   your HTTP proxy doesn't need authentication. It case you need HTTP authentication, please read
           [2]this.

       •   your system console will be a terminal (xterm, the console or a virtual terminal) if you are running
           Linux, *BSD or other UN*X

   About connections
       Imagine you need a network application that uses only one TCP/IP connection with just one server. That's
       the case of IRC in which you connect to an IRC server or ssh where you typically connect just to one UNIX
       computer at a time. That's what I called a "static connection".

       Of course that's not the case of a web browser or a file sharing program, both of them doing several
       connections at a time to different computers. That's what I call "dynamic connections".

STATIC CONNECTIONS EXAMPLES

   item How to use desproxy to connect to IRC
       Suppose you want to connect to IRC using irc.undernet.org port 6667 as your IRC server. First you have to
       start a system console (see Assumptions above for details) and type

           desproxy irc.undernet.org 6667 proxy 8080 1080

       That should start desproxy, giving you the copyright notice along with some information. The following is
       a screen capture from desproxy 0.0.23

           -----------------------------------
           desproxy                     0.0.23

           (c) Miguelanxo Otero Salgueiro 2001

           This release brought to you patched
           by Rutger Nijlunsig.

           See RutgerWork.txt in documentation
           for details about new features.

           Great work guy!
           -----------------------------------
           TCP port 1080 Binded & Listening
           Press ENTER to Quit

       Desproxy reports it is listening in local port 1080 ready for a connection.

       Open your favourite IRC client (install it first ;D) and connect to 127.0.0.1 port 1080 as your irc
       server (127.0.0.1 is a virtual IP, always referencing to your local machine). Then, your IRC client
       should connect to desproxy. It looks like

           Connection request from 127.0.0.1, port 1220
           Connecting to http proxy (proxy:8080)
           Bidirectional connection established

       Then you should be able to use your IRC client as if you were directly connected to irc.undernet.org.

   How to use desproxy to log in a computer using ssh
       Suppose you have a shell account in a computer that supports secure connections via ssh. Let's assume
       it's called shell.corporate.com. SSH uses port number 22 by default. So start a new system console and
       type:

          desproxy shell.corporate.com 22 proxy 8080 1080

       Then, tell your ssh client to connect to localhost (127.0.0.1) port 1080 and you should get a ssh
       password prompt!

   How to use desproxy to use other static clients
       Let's assume you want to use network application X, which doesn't support HTTP proxies but use one TCP/IP
       connection (like IRC and SSH).  To make X work with desproxy, you just have to 1) Search for the default
       port of that application 2) Search for the default server of that application and 3) Start desproxy,
       passing that info as command line parameters. Format is

           desproxy remote_host remote_port proxy_host proxy_port local_port

       Just give a local_port of your desire, but always over 1023, cause lower ports may need administrator
       privileges.

   About HTTP Authentication
       Some HTTP proxies need for security reasons a method of checking client's identity. That's called HTTP
       authentication (or HTTP authorization).

       Despoxy now supports Basic HTTP authentication. If your proxy needs other kind of authentication (either
       Digest or NTLM) desproxy won't work.

       For desproxy to work with a HTTP proxy that needs authentication, you have to tell desproxy which
       username and password to use. Desproxy reads the environment variable PROXY_USER to get that info.

       Suppose your proxy username is "mayka" and your proxy password is "007sgotLTK". Then, before using any of
       the desproxy programs you should type this in your system console:

           set PROXY_USER=mayka:007sgotLTK

       Beware passwords can include some characters that should be escaped from the system console. For example,
       if your password is "moon!=sun", and you are running Linux, you should type

           export PROXY_USER=yourusername:moon\!\=sun

       Note characters "!" and "=" are escaped using the backslash "\". If you are running MS Windows, as long
       as I know, you don't have to escape any valid password character.

       head1 Troubleshooting

       A normal desproxy session looks like this:

           $ desproxy 127.0.0.1 21 127.0.0.1 4480 2222

           -----------------------------------
           desproxy                  <version>

           HTTP/1.1
           (c) Miguelanxo Otero Salgueiro 2001
           -----------------------------------

           Listening on port 2222
           Connection request from 127.0.0.1, port 1227
           Connecting to http proxy (127.0.0.1:4480)
           Bidirectional connection stablished
           (127.0.0.1:21) <-> (localhost)
           End of connection.

       Here, a connection to local ftp server (127.0.0.1:21) is made by using local proxy (127.0.0.1:4480). You
       can see how, after the connection is accepted, desproxy connected to the proxy, interchanged some bytes
       (a FTP session) and terminates the connection.

       Desproxy is quite self explanatory about errors. Desproxy-inetd is far more obscure, because the way
       inetd uses it (can't print error messages) to the console.

       Basically there are two kind of errors:

       •   Errors reported when connecting to the proxy: the http page showing the error is displayed.

       •   Every other error: a short error message is displayed.

       Some common HTTP errors (as reported by the proxy)

            * HTTP 400 Bad Request - Some versions of desproxy (0.0.21) cause
              this error (FATAL)
            * HTTP 403 Forbidden - Forbidden to do that (FATAL)
            * HTTP 404 Not Found - Page not found, or resource not found (MINOR)
            * HTTP 405 Method not Allowed - Can't do CONNECT method (FATAL)
            * HTTP 500 Internal Server Error - Maybe you're trying to connect to
              a remote closed port (remote site reported connection refused)
              (MINOR)
            * HTTP 503 Service Unavailable -> The proxy can't reach the site
              (MINOR)
            * HTTP 505 HTTP Version Not Supported - CONNECT method not available
              (FATAL)
            * HTTP 502 Bad Gateway - Stands for "DNS lookup error" (MINOR)

       (FATAL) - Forget about using desproxy, you can't surpass the proxy.  (TODO) - To do, not yet implemented.
       (MINOR) - Temporary fault or maybe your fault.

ENVIRONMENT

       PROXY_USER
           An example:

              PROXY_USER=mayka:007sgotLTK

           Beware passwords can include some characters that should be escaped from the system console. For
           example, if your password is "moon!=sun", and you are running Linux, you should type

       PROXY_USER
           An example:

               PROXY_USER=yourusername:moon\!\=sun

           Note characters "!" and "=" are escaped using the backslash "\".

FILES

       None.

SEE ALSO

       dnsproxy-dns(1), dnsproxy-inetd(1), dnsproxy-socksserver(1), connect(1)

AUTHORS

       This manual page was written by Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@cante.net>, for the Debian GNU system (but may be
       used by others). Released under license GPL v2 or, at your option, any later version.