- Retain the specification from the Host header as a Request's description.
- Expand upstream proxy specifications to include the scheme. We now say https://hostname:port
- Move the "R" revert keybinding to "v" to make room for a reverse proxy
binding that matches the command-line flag.
We simplify things as follows:
- If we're in "pretty" view mode, we autodecode.
- Otherwise, we display raw data, and the user can manually encode/decode
with z shortcut.
Since OpenSSL doesn't let us set certificate start times in the past, the
client and proxy machine time must be synchronized, or the client might reject
the certificate. We can bodgy over small discrepancies by waiting a few seconds
after a new certificate is generated (i.e. the first time an SSL domain is contacted).
Make this a configurable option, and turn it off by default.
This option reads a set of flows from a file. I've also regularized the
mitmdump and mitmproxy command-line signatures by removing mitmproxy's old way
of specifying flow loads through naked arguments.
This allows us to replay an HTTP Authorization header, in the same way as we
replay cookies using stickycookies. This lets us conveniently get at HTTP Basic
Auth protected resources through the proxy, but is not enough to do the same
for HTTP Digest auth. We'll put that on the todo list.
We now create three different files in the .mitmproxy directory when a dummy CA
is made:
mitmproxy-ca.pem - the CA, including private key
mitmproxy-ca-cert.p12 - A pkcs12 version of the certificate, for distribution to Windows.
mitmproxy-ca-cert.pem - A PEM version of the certificate, for distribution to everyone else.
- Extract common options into cmdline.py
- Change mitmproxy keybindings to fit command line
Some cmdline options and keybindings aren't in operation yet - just stubs
where functionality will be added in the next few commits.