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inserting " .. option::" tags create ugly markup, so we just ditch this entirely and continue using refs.
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2.8 KiB
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73 lines
2.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _replacements:
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Replacements
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============
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Mitmproxy lets you specify an arbitrary number of patterns that define text
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replacements within flows. Each pattern has 3 components: a filter that defines
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which flows a replacement applies to, a regular expression that defines what
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gets replaced, and a target value that defines what is substituted in.
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Replace hooks fire when either a client request or a server response is
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received. Only the matching flow component is affected: so, for example, if a
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replace hook is triggered on server response, the replacement is only run on
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the Response object leaving the Request intact. You control whether the hook
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triggers on the request, response or both using the filter pattern. If you need
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finer-grained control than this, it's simple to create a script using the
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replacement API on Flow components.
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Replacement hooks are extremely handy in interactive testing of applications.
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For instance you can use a replace hook to replace the text "XSS" with a
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complicated XSS exploit, and then "inject" the exploit simply by interacting
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with the application through the browser. When used with tools like Firebug and
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mitmproxy's own interception abilities, replacement hooks can be an amazingly
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flexible and powerful feature.
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On the command-line
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-------------------
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The replacement hook command-line options use a compact syntax to make it easy
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to specify all three components at once. The general form is as follows:
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.. code-block:: none
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/patt/regex/replacement
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Here, **patt** is a mitmproxy filter expression, **regex** is a valid Python
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regular expression, and **replacement** is a string literal. The first
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character in the expression (``/`` in this case) defines what the separation
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character is. Here's an example of a valid expression that replaces "foo" with
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"bar" in all requests:
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.. code-block:: none
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:~q:foo:bar
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In practice, it's pretty common for the replacement literal to be long and
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complex. For instance, it might be an XSS exploit that weighs in at hundreds or
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thousands of characters. To cope with this, there's a variation of the
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replacement hook specifier that lets you load the replacement text from a file.
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So, you might start **mitmdump** as follows:
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>>> mitmdump --replace-from-file :~q:foo:~/xss-exploit
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This will load the replacement text from the file ``~/xss-exploit``.
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Both the ``--replace`` and ``--replace-from-file`` flags can be passed multiple
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times.
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Interactively
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-------------
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The :kbd:`R` shortcut key in the mitmproxy options menu (:kbd:`o`) lets you add and edit
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replacement hooks using a built-in editor. The context-sensitive help (:kbd:`?`) has
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complete usage information.
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================== =======================
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command-line ``--replace``,
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``--replace-from-file``
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mitmproxy shortcut :kbd:`o` then :kbd:`R`
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================== =======================
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