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42 lines
1.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
42 lines
1.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _sticky:
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Sticky cookies and auth
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=======================
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Sticky cookies
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--------------
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When the sticky cookie option is set, __mitmproxy__ will add the cookie most
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recently set by the server to any cookie-less request. Consider a service that
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sets a cookie to track the session after authentication. Using sticky cookies,
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you can fire up mitmproxy, and authenticate to a service as you usually would
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using a browser. After authentication, you can request authenticated resources
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through mitmproxy as if they were unauthenticated, because mitmproxy will
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automatically add the session tracking cookie to requests. Among other things,
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this lets you script interactions with authenticated resources (using tools
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like wget or curl) without having to worry about authentication.
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Sticky cookies are especially powerful when used in conjunction with :ref:`clientreplay` - you can
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record the authentication process once, and simply replay it on startup every time you need
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to interact with the secured resources.
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================== ======================
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command-line ``-t FILTER``
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mitmproxy shortcut :kbd:`O` then :kbd:`t`
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================== ======================
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Sticky auth
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-----------
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The sticky auth option is analogous to the sticky cookie option, in that HTTP
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**Authorization** headers are simply replayed to the server once they have been
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seen. This is enough to allow you to access a server resource using HTTP Basic
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authentication through the proxy. Note that :program:`mitmproxy` doesn't (yet) support
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replay of HTTP Digest authentication.
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================== ======================
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command-line ``-u FILTER``
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mitmproxy shortcut :kbd:`O` then :kbd:`A`
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================== ======================
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