Provided by: cntlm_0.92.3-1.2_amd64 bug

NAME

       cntlm - authenticating HTTP(S) proxy with TCP/IP tunneling and acceleration

SYNOPSIS

       cntlm [ -AaBcDdFfgHhILlMPprSsTUuvw ] [ host1 port1 | host1:port1 ] ... hostN portN

DESCRIPTION

       Cntlm  is  an  NTLM/NTLM  SR/NTLMv2  authenticating  HTTP  proxy.  It  stands between your
       applications and the corporate proxy,  adding  NTLM  authentication  on-the-fly.  You  can
       specify several "parent" proxies and Cntlm will try one after another until one works. All
       auth'd connections are cached and reused to achieve high efficiency. Just point your  apps
       proxy  settings  at  Cntlm, fill in cntlm.conf (cntlm.ini) and you're ready to do. This is
       useful on Windows, but essential  for  non-Microsoft  OS's.  Proxy  IP  addresses  can  be
       specified via CLI (host1:port1 to hostN:portN) or the configuration file.

       Another option is to have cntlm authenticate your local web connections without any parent
       proxies. It can work in a stand-alone mode, just  like  Squid  or  ISA.  By  default,  all
       requests are forwarded to parent proxies, but the user can set a "NoProxy" list, a list of
       URL matching wild-card patterns, that route between direct and forward  modes.  Cntlm  can
       also  recognize  when all your corporate proxies are unavailable and switch to stand-alone
       mode automatically (and then back again). Aside from WWW and PROXY  authentication,  cntlm
       provides  a  useful  feature  enabling  users  migrate their laptops between work and home
       without changing proxy settings in their applications (using cntlm all  the  time).  Cntlm
       also  integrates  transparent  TCP/IP port forwarding (tunneling). Each tunnel opens a new
       listening socket on local machine and and forwards all  connections  to  the  target  host
       behind the parent proxy. Instead of these SSH-like tunnels, user can also choose a limited
       SOCKS5 interface.

       Core cntlm function had been similar to the late NTLMAPS, but today, cntlm has evolved way
       beyond  anything  any  other  application  of  this type can offer. The feature list below
       speaks for itself. Cntlm has  many  security/privacy  features  like  NTLMv2  support  and
       password  protection - it is possible to substitute password hashes (which can be obtained
       using -H) in place of the actual password or  to  enter  the  password  interactively  (on
       start-up  or  via  "basic"  HTTP  auth  translation). If plaintext password is used, it is
       automatically hashed during the startup and all traces of it are removed from the  process
       memory.

       In  addition  to  minimal  use  of system resources, cntlm achieves higher throughput on a
       given link. By caching authenticated connections, it acts as  an  HTTP  accelerator;  This
       way,  the  5-way auth handshake for each connection is transparently eliminated, providing
       immediate access most of the time. Cntlm never caches a request/reply body in  memory,  in
       fact, no traffic is generated except for the exchange of auth headers until the client <->
       server connection is fully negotiated. Only then real data transfer takes place.  Cntlm is
       written in optimized C and easily achieves fifteen times faster responses than others.

       An  example  of  cntlm  compared to NTLMAPS: cntlm gave avg 76 kB/s with peak CPU usage of
       0.3% whereas with NTLMAPS it was avg 48 kB/s with peak CPU at 98% (Pentium M 1.8 GHz). The
       extreme  difference  in  resource  usage is one of many important benefits for laptop use.
       Peak memory consumption (several complex sites, 50  paralell  connections/threads;  values
       are in KiB):

              VSZ   RSS CMD
             3204  1436 ./cntlm -f -c ./cntlm.conf -P pid
           411604  6264 /usr/share/ntlmaps/main.py -c /etc/ntlmaps/server.cfg

       Inherent  part  of  the  development  is  profiling  and memory management screening using
       Valgrind. The source distribution contains a file called valgrind.txt, where you  can  see
       the  report  confirming  zero  leaks,  no  access  to  unallocated  memory,  no  usage  of
       uninitialized data - all traced down to each instruction emulated  in  Valgrind's  virtual
       CPU during a typical production lifetime of the proxy.

OPTIONS

       Most  options  can be pre-set in a configuration file. Specifying an option more than once
       is not an error, but cntlm ignores all occurences except the last one. This does not apply
       to  options  like -L,  each  of which creates a new instance of some feature. Cntlm can be
       built with a hardcoded configuration file (e.g. /etc/cntlm.conf), which is always  loaded,
       if possible. See -c option on how to override some or all of its settings.

       Use -h to see available options with short description.

       -A IP/mask    (Allow)
              Allow  ACL  rule.  Together  with  -D  (Deny) they are the two rules allowed in ACL
              policy. It is more usual to have this in a configuration file,  but  Cntlm  follows
              the  premise  that  you  can  do  the same on the command-line as you can using the
              config file. When Cntlm receives a connection request, it decides whether to  allow
              or  deny  it.  All  ACL  rules are stored in a list in the same order as specified.
              Cntlm then walks the list and the first  IP/mask  rule  that  matches  the  request
              source address is applied. The mask can be any number from 0 to 32, where 32 is the
              default (that is exact IP match). This notation is also known as CIDR. If you  want
              to  match  everything,  use  0/0  or  an  asterix.  ACLs  on  the command-line take
              precedence over those in the config file. In such case, you  will  see  info  about
              that in the log (among the list of unused options). There you can also see warnings
              about possibly incorrect subnet spec, that's when the IP part has  more  bits  than
              you declare by mask (e.g. 10.20.30.40/24 should be 10.20.30.0/24).

       -a NTLMv2 | NTLM2SR | NT | NTLM | LM    (Auth)
              Authentication  type.  NTLM(v2) comprises of one or two hashed responses, NT and LM
              or NTLM2SR or NTv2 and LMv2, which  are  computed  from  the  password  hash.  Each
              response  uses  a different hashing algorithm; as new response types were invented,
              stronger algorithms were used. When you first install cntlm, find the strongest one
              which  works for you (preferably using -M). Above they are listed from strongest to
              weakest. Very old servers or dedicated  HW  proxies  might  be  unable  to  process
              anything but LM. If none of those work, see compatibility flags option -F or submit
              a Support Request.

              IMPORTANT: Although NTLMv2 is not widely adopted (i.e. enforced), it  is  supported
              on  all  Windows  since NT 4.0 SP4. That's for a very long time! I strongly suggest
              you use it to protect your credentials on-line. You should also  replace  plaintext
              Password options with hashed Pass[NTLMv2|NT|LM] equivalents. NTLMv2 is the most and
              possibly the only secure authentication of the NTLM family.

       -B    (NTLMToBasic)
              This option enables "NTLM-to-basic", which allows you to use one cntlm for multiple
              users. Please note that all security of NTLM is lost this way. Basic auth uses just
              a simple encoding algorithm to "hide" your credentials and it is moderately easy to
              sniff them.

              IMPORTANT:  HTTP  protocol  obviously  has  means to negotiate authorization before
              letting you through, but TCP/IP doesn't (i.e. open port is open port). If  you  use
              NTLM-to-basic  and  DON'T specify some username/password in the configuration file,
              you are bound to loose tunneling features, because  cntlm  alone  won't  know  your
              credentials.

              Because  NTLM  identification has at least three parts (username, password, domain)
              and the basic authentication provides fields for only two (username, password), you
              have  to  smuggle the domain part somewhere. You can set the Domain config/cmd-line
              parameter, which will then be used for all users, who don't specify their domain as
              a part of the username. To do that and override the global domain setting, use this
              instead of plain username in the password dialog: "domain\username".

       -c <filename>
              Configuration file. Command-line options, if used, override its single  options  or
              are  added  at the top of the list for multi options (tunnels, parent proxies, etc)
              with the exception of ACLs, which  are  completely  overridden.  Use  /dev/null  to
              disable any config file.

       -D IP/mask    (Deny)
              Deny ACL rule. See option -A above.

       -d <domain>    (Domain)
              The domain or workgroup of the proxy account. This value can also be specified as a
              part of the username with -u.

       -F <flags>    (Flags)
              NTLM authentication flags. This option is rater delicate and I do not recommend  to
              change the default built-in values unless you had no success with parent proxy auth
              and tried magic autodetection (-M) and all possible  values  for  the  Auth  option
              (-a).  Remember  that  each  NT/LM  hash combination requires different flags. This
              option is sort of a complete "manual override" and you'll  have  to  deal  with  it
              yourself.

       -f     Run  in console as a foreground job, do not fork into background. In this mode, all
              syslog messages will be echoed to the console (on platforms  which  support  syslog
              LOG_PERROR  option).  Though  cntlm  is primarily designed as a classic UNIX daemon
              with syslogd logging, it provides detailed verbose mode without detaching from  the
              controlling  terminal;  see  -v. In any case, all error and diagnostic messages are
              always sent to the system logger.

       -G <pattern>    (ISAScannerAgent)
              User-Agent matching (case  insensitive)  for  trans-isa-scan  plugin  (see  -S  for
              explanation).  Positive  match  identifies  requests  (applications)  for which the
              plugin should be enabled without considering the size of the download (see -S). You
              can  use shell wildcard characters, namely "*", "?" and "[]". If used without -S or
              ISAScannerSize, the max_size_in_kb is internally set to  infinity,  so  the  plugin
              will be active ONLY for selected User-Agents, regardless of download size.

       -g    (Gateway)
              Gateway  mode,  cntlm  listens  on  all network interfaces. Default is to bind just
              loopback. That way, only local processes can connect to cntlm. In the gateway  mode
              though,  cntlm listens on all interfaces and is accessible to other machines on the
              network. Please note that with this option  the  command-line  order  matters  when
              specifying proxy or tunnel local (listening) ports. Those positioned before it will
              bind only loopback; those after will be public.
              IMPORTANT: All of the above applies only  to  local  ports  for  which  you  didn't
              specify  any source address. If you did, cntlm tries to bind the given port only on
              the specified interface (or rather IP address).

       -H     Use this option to get hashes for password-less configuration. In this mode,  cntlm
              prints the results and exits. You can just copy & paste right into the config file.
              You ought to use this option with explicit -u and -d, because some  hashes  include
              the  username  and  domain  name  in  the  calculation.  Do  see  -a  for  security
              recommendations.

       -h     Display help (available options with a short description) and exit.

       -I     Interactive password prompt. Any password settings from the command line or  config
              file is ignored and a password prompt is issued. Use this option only from shell.

       -L [<saddr>:]<lport>:<rhost>:<rport>    (Tunnel)
              Tunnel  definition.  The  syntax is the same as in OpenSSH's local forwarding (-L),
              with a new optional prefix, saddr - the source IP address to  bind  the  lport  to.
              Cntlm  will  listen  for  incoming  connections on the local port lport, forwarding
              every new connection through the parent proxy to the rhost:rport (authenticating on
              the  go).  This  option can be used multiple times for unlimited number of tunnels,
              with or without the saddr option. See -g for  the  details  concerning  local  port
              binding when saddr is not used.

              Please  note  that  many  corporate proxies do not allow connections to ports other
              than 443 (https), but if you run your target service on this port,  you  should  be
              safe.  Connect  to  HTTPS  is  "always"  allowed, otherwise nobody would be able to
              browse https:// sites. In any case, first try if you  can  establish  a  connection
              through  the tunnel, before you rely on it. This feature does the same job as tools
              like corkscrew(1), but instead of communicating over a  terminal,  cntlm  keeps  it
              TCP/IP.

       -l [<saddr>:]<lport>    (Listen)
              Local port for the cntlm proxy service. Use the number you have chosen here and the
              hostname of the machine running cntlm (possibly localhost)  as  proxy  settings  in
              your browser and/or the environment.  Most applications (including console) support
              the notion of proxy to  connect  to  other  hosts.  On  POSIX,  set  the  following
              variables  to  use  e.g. wget(1) without any trouble (fill in the actual address of
              cntlm):

                  $ export ftp_proxy=http://localhost:3128
                  $ export http_proxy=$ftp_proxy
                  $ export https_proxy=$ftp_proxy

              You can choose to run the proxy service on more than one port, in  such  case  just
              use  this  option  as  many times as necessary. But unlike tunnel definition, cntlm
              fails to start if it cannot bind all of the proxy service ports. Proxy service port
              can  also  be  bound  selectively.  Use saddr to pick source IP address to bind the
              lport to. This allows you, for example, to run the service on different  ports  for
              subnet  A  and  B  and  make  it  invisible  for  subnet  C. See -g for the details
              concerning local port binding when saddr is not used.

       -M <testurl>
              Run magic NTLM dialect detection. In this mode,  cntlm  tries  some  known  working
              presets against your proxy. Probe requests are made for the specified testurl, with
              the strongest hashes going first.  When finished,  settings  for  the  most  secure
              setup  are printed. Although the detection will tell you which and how to use Auth,
              Flags and password-hash options, you have to configure at  least  your  credentials
              and proxy address first. You can use -I to enter your password interactively.

       -N <pattern1>[,<patternN]    (NoProxy)
              Avoid  parent  proxy  for  these  host  names.  All  matching URL's will be proxied
              directly by cntlm as a stand-alone proxy. Cntlm supports WWW authentication in this
              mode,  thus  allowing  you  to  access  local  intranet  sites  with corporate NTLM
              authentication. Hopefully, you won't need that virtualized MSIE any more. :)

       -O [<saddr>:]<port_number>    (SOCKS5Proxy)
              Enable SOCKS5 proxy and make it listen on local port port_number (source IP spec is
              also  possible,  as with all options). By default, there will be no restrictions as
              to who can use this service. Some clients don't even support SOCKS5  authentication
              (e.g.  almost  all  browsers). If you wish to enforce authentication, use -R or its
              equivalent option, SOCKS5User. As with port tunneling, it is up to the parent proxy
              whether  it  will  allow connection to any requested host:port. This feature can be
              used with tsocks(1) to make most TCP/IP applications go thru the proxy rather  than
              directly  (only  outgoing  connections  will  work,  obviously).  To make apps work
              without DNS server, it is important that they don't resolve themselves,  but  using
              SOCKS.  E.g. Firefox has this option available through URI "about:config", key name
              network.proxy.socks_remote_dns,  which  must  be   set   to   true.   Proxy-unaware
              tsocksified  apps,  will  have  to be configured using IP addresses to prevent them
              from DNS resolving.

       -P <pidfile>
              Create a PID file pidfile upon  startup.  If  the  specified  file  exists,  it  is
              truncated  and  overwritten.   This  option  is  intended  for use with start-stop-
              daemon(8) and other servicing mechanisms. Please note that the PID file is  created
              AFTER the process drops its privileges and forks. When the daemon finishes cleanly,
              the file is removed.

       -p <password>    (Password, PassNT, ...)
              Proxy account password. Cntlm deletes the password from  the  memory,  to  make  it
              invisible  in  /proc or with inspection tools like ps(1), but the preferable way of
              setting password is the configuration file.  To that  end,  you  can  use  Password
              option  (for  plaintext,  human readable format), or "encrypt" your password via -H
              and then use PassNTLMv2, PassNT and/or PassLM.

       -R <username>:<password>    (SOCKS5User)
              If SOCKS5 proxy is enabled, this option can make it accessible only  to  those  who
              have  been  authorized.   It  can  be used several times, to create a whole list of
              accounts (allowed user:pass combinations).

       -S <max_size_in_kb>    (ISAScannerSize)
              Enables the plugin for transparent handling of the dreaded ISA  AV  scanner,  which
              returns  an interactive HTTP page (displaying the scanning progress) instead of the
              file/data you've requested, every time it feels like scanning  the  contents.  This
              presumptuous  behavior  breaks  every  automated  downloader, updater and basically
              EVERY application relying on downloads (e.g. wget, apt-get).

              The parameter max_size_in_kb allows you to choose maximum download size you wish to
              handle  by  the  plugin  (see  below  why you might want that). If the file size is
              bigger than this, cntlm forwards you the interactive  page,  effectively  disabling
              the  plugin  for  that  download.  Zero  means  no limit. Use -G/ISAScannerAgent to
              identify applications for which  max_size_in_kb  should  be  ignored  (forcing  the
              plugin).  It  works  by  matching User-Agent header and is necessary for e.g. wget,
              apt-get and yum, which would fail if the response is  some  HTTP  page  instead  of
              requested data.

              How it works: the client asks for a file, cntlm detects ISA's bullshit response and
              waits for the secret link to ISA's cache, which comes no sooner than  the  file  is
              downloaded  and scanned by ISA. Only then can cntlm make the second request for the
              real file and forward it along with correct headers  to  the  client.   The  client
              doesn't  timeout  while  waiting for it, b/c cntlm is periodically sending an extra
              "keepalive" header, but the user might get nervous  not  seeing  the  progress  bar
              move. It's of course purely psychological matter, there's no difference if cntlm or
              your browser requests the scanned file - you must wait for ISA to do it's  job  and
              download  then.  You  just expect to see some progress indicator move, which is all
              what the ISA's page does: it shows HTML countdown.

              If  the  plugin  cannot  parse  the  interactive  page  for  some  reason  (unknown
              formatting, etc.), it quits and the page is forwarded to you - it's never "lost".

              The keepalive header is called ISA-Scanner and shows ISA's progress, e.g.:

                  HTTP/1.1 200 OK
                  ISA-Scanner: 1000 of 10000
                  ISA-Scanner: 2000 of 10000
                  ...

       -r "<name>: <value>"    (Header)
              Header  substitution.  Every  client's  request  will  be processed and any headers
              defined using -r or in the configuration file will be added  to  it.  In  case  the
              header is already present, its value will be replaced.

       -s     Serializes  all requests by not using concurrent threads for proxy (tunneling still
              works in parallel). This has a horrible impact on performance and is available only
              for  debugging  purposes.  When  used with -v, it yields nice sequential debug log,
              where requests take turns.

       -T <filename>
              Used in combination with -v to save the debug output into a trace file.  It  should
              be  placed  as  the  first  parameter on the command line. To prevent data loss, it
              never overwrites an existing file. You have to  pick  a  unique  name  or  manually
              delete the old file.

       -U <uid>
              When  executed as root, do the stuff that needs such permissions (read config, bind
              ports, etc.) and then immediately drop privileges and change to uid. This parameter
              can  be either number or system username.  If you use a number, both uid and gid of
              the process will be set to this value; if you specify a username, uid and gid  will
              be  set according to that user's uid and primary gid as defined in /etc/passwd. You
              should use the latter, possibly using  a  dedicated  cntlm  account.  As  with  any
              daemon, you are strongly advised to run cntlm under a non-privileged account.

       -u <user>[@<domain>]    (Username)
              Proxy account/user name. Domain can be be entered as well.

       -v     Print debugging information. Automatically enables (-f).

       -w <workstation>    (Workstation)
              Workstation  NetBIOS  name. Do not use full qualified domain name (FQDN) here. Just
              the first part.  If not specified, cntlm tries to get the system  hostname  and  if
              that fails, uses "cntlm" - it's because some proxies require this field non-empty.

CONFIGURATION

       Configuration  file  is  basically  an  INI file, except there are no "=" between keys and
       values. It comprises of whitespace delimited keyword and value  pairs.  Apart  from  that,
       there  are  sections  as well, they have the usual "[section_name]" syntax. Comment begins
       with a hash "#" or a semicolon ";" and can be anywhere in the file.  Everything after  the
       mark  up  until EOL is a comment. Values can contain any characters, including whitespace.
       You can use double quotes around the value to set a string containing  special  characters
       like spaces, pound signs, etc. No escape sequences are allowed in quoted strings.

       There  are  two  types of keywords, local and global. Local options specify authentication
       details per domain (or location). Global keywords apply to all sections and proxies.  They
       should  be  placed  before  all  sections,  but it's not necessary. They are: Allow, Deny,
       Gateway, Listen, SOCKS5Proxy, SOCKS5User, NTLMToBasic, Tunnel.

       All available keywords are listed here, full descriptions are in the OPTIONS section:

       Allow <IP>[/<mask>]
              ACL allow rule, see -A.

       Auth NTLMv2 | NTLM2SR | NT | NTLM | LM
              Select any possible combination of NTLM hashes using a single parameter.

       Deny <IP>[/<mask>]
              ACL deny rule, see -A.

       Domain <domain_name>
              Proxy account domain/workgroup name.

       Flags <flags>
              NTLM authentication flags. See -F for details.

       Gateway yes|no
              Gateway mode. In the configuration file, order doesn't matter. Gateway mode applies
              the same to all tunnels.

       Header <headername: value>
              Header substitution. See -r for details and remember, no quoting.

       ISAScannerAgent <pattern>
              Wildcard-enabled  (*,  ?,  [])  case insensitive User-Agent string matching for the
              trans-isa-plugin. If you don't define  ISAScannerSize,  it  is  internally  set  to
              infinity,  i.e.  disabling  the plugin for all downloads except those agent-matched
              ones. See -G.

       ISAScannerSize <max_size_in_kb>
              Enable trans-isa-scan plugin. See -S for more.

       Listen [<saddr>:]<port_number>
              Local port number for the cntlm's proxy service. See -l for more.

       Password <password>
              Proxy account password. As with any other  option,  the  value  (password)  can  be
              enclosed  in  double quotes (") in case it contains special characters like spaces,
              pound signs, etc.

       PassNTLMv2, PassNT, PassLM <password>
              Hashes of the proxy account password (see -H and -a). When you want to  use  hashes
              in  the  config  (instead  of  plaintext  password),  each  Auth  settings requires
              different options:

                  Settings     |  Requires
                  -------------+-----------------
                  Auth NTLMv2  |  PassNTLMv2
                  Auth NTLM2SR |  PassNT
                  Auth NT      |  PassNT
                  Auth NTLM    |  PassNT + PassLM
                  Auth LM      |  PassLM

       Proxy <host:port>
              Parent proxy, which requires authentication. The same as proxy on the command-line,
              can  be  used  more than once to specify an arbitrary number of proxies. Should one
              proxy fail, cntlm automatically moves on to the next one. The connect request fails
              only if the whole list of proxies is scanned and (for each request) and found to be
              invalid. Command-line takes precedence over the configuration file.

       NoProxy <pattern1>, <pattern2>, ...
              Avoid parent proxy for these  host  names.  All  matching  URL's  will  be  proxied
              directly by cntlm as a stand-alone proxy. Cntlm supports WWW authentication in this
              mode, thus allowing  you  to  access  local  intranet  sites  with  corporate  NTLM
              authentication. Hopefully, you won't need that virtualized MSIE any more. :) See -N
              for more.

       SOCKS5Proxy [<saddr>:]<lport>
              Enable SOCKS5 proxy. See -O for more.

       SOCKS5User <username>:<password>
              Create a new SOCKS5 proxy account. See -R for more.

       NTLMToBasic yes|no
              Enable/disable NTLM-to-basic authenticatoin. See -B for more.

       Tunnel [<saddr>:]<lport>:<rhost>:<rport>
              Tunnel definition. See -L for more.

       Username
              Proxy account name, without the possibility to include domain name  ('at'  sign  is
              interpreted literally).

       Workstation <hostname>
              The hostname of your workstation.

FILES

       The  optional  location  of  the  configuration  file is defined in the Makefile, with the
       default for 1) deb/rpm package,  2)  traditional  "make;  make  install"  and  3)  Windows
       installer, respectively, being:

           1) /etc/cntlm.conf
           2) /usr/local/etc/cntlm.conf
           3) %PROGRAMFILES%\Cntlm\cntlm.ini

PORTING

       Cntlm is being used on many platforms, little and big endian machines, so users should not
       have any problems with compilation. Nowadays, cntlm is  a  standard  tool  in  most  Linux
       distributions  and there are various repositories for other UNIX-like systems. Personally,
       I release Debian Linux (deb), RedHat Linux (rpm) and  Windows  (exe)  binaries,  but  most
       people get cntlm from their OS distributor.

       For  compilation  details,  see  README  in  the source distribution. Porting to any POSIX
       conforming OS shouldn't be more than a matter of  a  Makefile  rearrangement.  Cntlm  uses
       strictly POSIX.1-2001 interfaces with ISO C99 libc and is also compliant with SUSv3. Since
       version 0.33, cntlm supports Windows using a POSIX emulation layer called Cygwin.

BUGS

       To report a bug, enable the debug output, save it to a file and submit on-line along  with
       a  detailed  description  of  the problem and how to reproduce it. Visit the home page for
       more.

           cntlm -T cntlmtrace.log -v -s ... the rest ...

AUTHOR

       Written by David Kubicek <dave (o) awk.cz>
       Homepage: http://cntlm.sourceforge.net/

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2007-2010 David Kubicek
       Cntlm uses DES, MD4, MD5 and HMAC-MD5  routines  from  gnulib  and  Base64  routines  from
       mutt(1).