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.
This removes all headers that might cause a server to return 304-not-modified.
For now, all the new features are going into mitmdump - everything will be
ported over to mitmproxy once I have the feature set locked down.
Also add the --rheader command-line option to mitmdump to let the user specify
an arbitrary number of significant headers. The default is to treat no headers
as significant.
If this option is passed all requests that are not part of a replayed
conversation are killed. If the option is not passed, such requests are passed
through to the server as usual.
We use a loose hash to match incoming requests with recorded flows. At the
moment, this hash is over the host, port, scheme, method, path and content of
the request. Note that headers are not included here - if we do want to include
headers, we would have to do some work to normalize them to remove variations
between user agents, header order, etc. etc.
This means that certificates don't accumulate in the conf directory, users
don't have to clear certificates if the CA is regenerated, and the user can
specify a custom CA without invalid certificates being loaded inadvertently.
This is a big patch removing the assumption that there's one connection per
Request/Response pair. It touches pretty much every part of mitmproxy, so
expect glitches until everything is ironed out.
External scripts can read a flow, modify it, and then return it to mitmproxy
using a simple API.
The "|" keyboard shortcut within mitmproxy prompts the user for a script.