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I updated the certutils.SSLCert reference from "libmproxy.certutils.SSLCert" to "netlib.certutils.SSLCert".
178 lines
6.3 KiB
HTML
178 lines
6.3 KiB
HTML
__mitmproxy__ has a powerful scripting API that allows you to modify flows
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on-the-fly or rewrite previously saved flows locally.
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The mitmproxy scripting API is event driven - a script is simply a Python
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module that exposes a set of event methods. Here's a complete mitmproxy script
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that adds a new header to every HTTP response before it is returned to the
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client:
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$!example("examples/add_header.py")!$
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The first argument to each event method is an instance of ScriptContext that
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lets the script interact with the global mitmproxy state. The __response__
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event also gets an instance of Flow, which we can use to manipulate the
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response itself.
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We can now run this script using mitmdump or mitmproxy as follows:
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<pre class="terminal">
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> mitmdump -s add_header.py
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</pre>
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The new header will be added to all responses passing through the proxy.
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## Example Scripts
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mitmproxy comes with a variety of example inline scripts, which demonstrate
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many basic tasks. We encourage you to either browse them locally or in our
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[GitHub repo](https://github.com/mitmproxy/mitmproxy/tree/master/examples).
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## Events
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### start(ScriptContext, argv)
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Called once on startup, before any other events.
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### clientconnect(ScriptContext, ConnectionHandler)
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Called when a client initiates a connection to the proxy. Note that
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a connection can correspond to multiple HTTP requests.
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### serverconnect(ScriptContext, ConnectionHandler)
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Called when the proxy initiates a connection to the target server. Note that
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a connection can correspond to multiple HTTP requests.
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### request(ScriptContext, HTTPFlow)
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Called when a client request has been received. The __HTTPFlow__ object is
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guaranteed to have a non-None __request__ attribute.
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### responseheaders(ScriptContext, HTTPFlow)
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Called when the headers of a server response have been received.
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This will always be called before the response hook.
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The __HTTPFlow__ object is guaranteed to have non-None __request__ and
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__response__ attributes. __response.content__ will be None,
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as the response body has not been read yet.
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### response(ScriptContext, HTTPFlow)
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Called when a server response has been received. The __HTTPFlow__ object is
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guaranteed to have non-None __request__ and __response__ attributes.
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Note that if response streaming is enabled for this response,
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__response.content__ will not contain the response body.
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### error(ScriptContext, HTTPFlow)
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Called when a flow error has occurred, e.g. invalid server responses, or
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interrupted connections. This is distinct from a valid server HTTP error
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response, which is simply a response with an HTTP error code. The __HTTPFlow__
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object is guaranteed to have non-None __request__ and __error__ attributes.
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### clientdisconnect(ScriptContext, ConnectionHandler)
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Called when a client disconnects from the proxy.
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### done(ScriptContext)
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Called once on script shutdown, after any other events.
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## API
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The main classes you will deal with in writing mitmproxy scripts are:
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<table class="table">
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.proxy.server.ConnectionHandler</th>
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<td>Describes a proxy client connection session. Always has a client_conn attribute, might have a server_conn
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attribute.
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.proxy.connection.ClientConnection</th>
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<td>Describes a client connection.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.proxy.connection.ServerConnection</th>
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<td>Describes a server connection.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.protocol.http.HTTPFlow</th>
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<td>A collection of objects representing a single HTTP transaction.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.protocol.http.HTTPResponse</th>
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<td>An HTTP response.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.protocol.http.HTTPRequest</th>
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<td>An HTTP request.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.protocol.primitives.Error</th>
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<td>A communications error.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.script.ScriptContext</th>
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<td> A handle for interacting with mitmproxy's from within scripts.</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>libmproxy.flow.ODict</th>
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<td>A dictionary-like object for managing sets of key/value data. There
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is also a variant called CaselessODict that ignores key case for some
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calls (used mainly for headers).
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</td>
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</tr>
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<tr>
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<th>netlib.certutils.SSLCert</th>
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<td>Exposes information SSL certificates.</td>
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</tr>
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</table>
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The canonical API documentation is the code, which you can browse locally or in our
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[GitHub repo](https://github.com/mitmproxy/mitmproxy).
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You can view the API documentation using pydoc (which is installed with Python by default), like this:
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<pre class="terminal">
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> pydoc libmproxy.protocol.http.HTTPRequest
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</pre>
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## Running scripts in parallel
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We have a single flow primitive, so when a script is handling something, other requests block.
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While that's a very desirable behaviour under some circumstances, scripts can be run threaded by using the <code>libmproxy.script.concurrent</code> decorator.
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$!example("examples/nonblocking.py")!$
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## Make scripts configurable with arguments
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Sometimes, you want to pass runtime arguments to the inline script. This can be simply done by surrounding the script call with quotes, e.g.
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<code>mitmdump -s "script.py --foo 42"</code>. The arguments are then exposed in the start event:
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$!example("examples/modify_response_body.py")!$
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## Running scripts on saved flows
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Sometimes, we want to run a script on __Flow__ objects that are already
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complete. This happens when you start a script, and then load a saved set of
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flows from a file (see the "scripted data transformation" example on the
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[mitmdump](@!urlTo("mitmdump.html")!@) page). It also happens when you run a
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one-shot script on a single flow through the _|_ (pipe) shortcut in mitmproxy.
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In this case, there are no client connections, and the events are run in the
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following order: __start__, __request__, __responseheaders__, __response__, __error__, __done__. If
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the flow doesn't have a __response__ or __error__ associated with it, the
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matching events will be skipped.
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## Spaces in the script path
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By default, spaces are interpreted as separator between the inline script and its arguments (e.g. <code>-s "foo.py
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42"</code>). Consequently, the script path needs to be wrapped in a separate pair of quotes if it contains spaces:
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<code>-s "'./foo bar/baz.py' 42"</code>.
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