mitmproxy/libmproxy/protocol/tcp.py
2014-03-02 22:15:53 +13:00

60 lines
2.5 KiB
Python

from . import ProtocolHandler
import select, socket
from cStringIO import StringIO
class TCPHandler(ProtocolHandler):
"""
TCPHandler acts as a generic TCP forwarder.
Data will be .log()ed, but not stored any further.
"""
def handle_messages(self):
self.c.establish_server_connection()
conns = [self.c.client_conn.rfile, self.c.server_conn.rfile]
while not self.c.close:
r, _, _ = select.select(conns, [], [], 10)
for rfile in r:
if self.c.client_conn.rfile == rfile:
src, dst = self.c.client_conn, self.c.server_conn
direction = "-> tcp ->"
dst_str = "%s:%s" % self.c.server_conn.address()[:2]
else:
dst, src = self.c.client_conn, self.c.server_conn
direction = "<- tcp <-"
dst_str = "client"
data = StringIO()
while range(4096):
# Do non-blocking select() to see if there is further data on in the buffer.
r, _, _ = select.select([rfile], [], [], 0)
if len(r):
d = rfile.read(1)
if d == "": # connection closed
break
data.write(d)
# OpenSSL Connections have an internal buffer that might
# contain data altough everything is read from the socket.
# Thankfully, connection.pending() returns the amount of
# bytes in this buffer, so we can read it completely at
# once.
if src.ssl_established:
data.write(rfile.read(src.connection.pending()))
else: # no data left, but not closed yet
break
data = data.getvalue()
if data == "": # no data received, rfile is closed
self.c.log("Close writing connection to %s" % dst_str)
conns.remove(rfile)
if dst.ssl_established:
dst.connection.shutdown()
else:
dst.connection.shutdown(socket.SHUT_WR)
if len(conns) == 0:
self.c.close = True
break
self.c.log("%s %s\r\n%s" % (direction, dst_str,data))
dst.wfile.write(data)
dst.wfile.flush()