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98 lines
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.. _passthrough:
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Ignore Domains
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==============
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There are two main reasons why you may want to exempt some traffic from mitmproxy's interception
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mechanism:
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- **Certificate pinning:** Some traffic is is protected using `Certificate Pinning`_ and
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mitmproxy's interception leads to errors. For example, the Twitter app, Windows Update or
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the Apple App Store fail to work if mitmproxy is active.
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- **Convenience:** You really don't care about some parts of the traffic and just want them to go
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away.
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If you want to peek into (SSL-protected) non-HTTP connections, check out the :ref:`tcpproxy`
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feature.
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If you want to ignore traffic from mitmproxy's processing because of large response bodies,
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take a look at the :ref:`responsestreaming` feature.
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How it works
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------------
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================== ======================
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command-line ``--ignore regex``
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mitmproxy shortcut :kbd:`o` then :kbd:`I`
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================== ======================
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mitmproxy allows you to specify a regex which is matched against a ``host:port`` string
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(e.g. "example.com:443") to determine hosts that should be excluded.
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There are two important quirks to consider:
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- **In transparent mode, the ignore pattern is matched against the IP and ClientHello SNI host.** While we usually infer the
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hostname from the Host header if the ``--host`` argument is passed to mitmproxy, we do not
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have access to this information before the SSL handshake. If the client uses SNI however, then we treat the SNI host as an ignore target.
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- In regular mode, explicit HTTP requests are never ignored. [#explicithttp]_ The ignore pattern is
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applied on CONNECT requests, which initiate HTTPS or clear-text WebSocket connections.
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Tutorial
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--------
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If you just want to ignore one specific domain, there's usually a bulletproof method to do so:
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1. Run mitmproxy or mitmdump in verbose mode (``-v``) and observe the ``host:port``
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information in the serverconnect messages. mitmproxy will filter on these.
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2. Take the ``host:port`` string, surround it with ^ and $, escape all dots (. becomes \\.)
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and use this as your ignore pattern:
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.. code-block:: none
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:emphasize-lines: 6,7,9
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>>> mitmdump -v
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127.0.0.1:50588: clientconnect
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127.0.0.1:50588: request
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-> CONNECT example.com:443 HTTP/1.1
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127.0.0.1:50588: Set new server address: example.com:443
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127.0.0.1:50588: serverconnect
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-> example.com:443
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^C
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>>> mitmproxy --ignore ^example\.com:443$
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Here are some other examples for ignore patterns:
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.. code-block:: none
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# Exempt traffic from the iOS App Store (the regex is lax, but usually just works):
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--ignore apple.com:443
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# "Correct" version without false-positives:
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--ignore '^(.+\.)?apple\.com:443$'
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# Ignore example.com, but not its subdomains:
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--ignore '^example.com:'
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# Ignore everything but example.com and mitmproxy.org:
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--ignore '^(?!example\.com)(?!mitmproxy\.org)'
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# Transparent mode:
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--ignore 17\.178\.96\.59:443
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# IP address range:
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--ignore 17\.178\.\d+\.\d+:443
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.. seealso::
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- :ref:`tcpproxy`
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- :ref:`responsestreaming`
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.. rubric:: Footnotes
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.. [#explicithttp] This stems from an limitation of explicit HTTP proxying:
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A single connection can be re-used for multiple target domains - a
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``GET http://example.com/`` request may be followed by a ``GET http://evil.com/`` request on the
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same connection. If we start to ignore the connection after the first request,
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we would miss the relevant second one.
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.. _Certificate Pinning: https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/29988/what-is-certificate-pinning
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