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Swiss Army knife Proxy tool for HTTP/HTTPS traffic capture, manipulation, and replay on the go.

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proxify

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Swiss Army Knife Proxy for rapid deployments. Supports multiple operations such as request/response dump, filtering and manipulation via DSL language, upstream HTTP/Socks5 proxy. Additionally a replay utility allows to import the dumped traffic (request/responses with correct domain name) into burp or any other proxy by simply setting the upstream proxy to proxify.

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Features

proxify

  • Simple and modular code base making it easy to contribute.
  • HTTP and SOCKS5 support for upstream proxy
  • Native MITM support
  • Full traffic dump (request/responses)
  • Traffic Match / Filter with DSL language
  • Traffic Match and Replace support
  • Traffic replay in Burp

Installation

From Binary

The installation is easy. You can download the pre-built binaries for your platform from the Releases page. Extract them using tar, move it to your $PATHand you're ready to go.

▶ tar -xvf proxify-linux-amd64.tar
▶ mv proxify-linux-amd64 /usr/local/bin/proxify
▶ proxify -version

proxify requires go1.14+ to install successfully. Run the following command to get the repo -

From Source

▶ GO111MODULE=on go get -v github.com/projectdiscovery/proxify/cmd/proxify

From Github

▶ git clone https://github.com/projectdiscovery/proxify.git; cd proxify/cmd/proxify; go build; cp proxify /usr/local/bin; proxify -version

Usage

▶ proxify -h

This will display help for the tool. Here are all the switches it supports.

Flag Description Example
addr Listen HTTP IP and Port proxify -addr 127.0.0.1:8080
config Config data path proxify -config certs
cert-cache-size Number of certificates to cache proxify -cert-cache-size 1024
dns-addr Listen DNS IP and Port proxify -dns-addr '127.0.0.1:80'
dns-mapping DNS A mapping proxify -dns-mapping test.com:80
dns-resolver Listen DNS IP and Port proxify -dns-resolver '127.0.0.1:5353'
http-proxy Upstream HTTP Proxy proxify -http-proxy hxxp://127.0.0.1:8080
no-color No Color in output proxify -no-color
output Output Folder proxify -output logs
request-dsl Request Filter DSL proxify -request-dsl "contains(request,'admim')"
request-match-replace-dsl Request Match-Replace DSL proxify -request-match-replace-dsl "replace(request,'false','true')"
response-dsl Response Filter DSL proxify -response-dsl "contains(response, md5('test'))"
response-match-replace-dsl Response Match-Replace DSL proxify -response-match-replace-dsl "regex(response, '^authentication failed$', 'authentication ok')"
silent Silent output proxify -silent
socks5-proxy Upstream socks5 proxy proxify -socks5-proxy socks5://proxy-ip:port
v Verbose output proxify -v
version Current version proxify -version

Use Upstream proxy

Open a local proxy on port 8081 and forward the traffic to burp on port 8080

▶ proxify -addr ":8081" -http-proxy http://127.0.0.1:8080

Open a local proxy on port 8080 and forward the traffic to the TOR network

▶ proxify -socks5-proxy socks5://127.0.0.1:9050

Dump all the HTTP/HTTPS traffic

Dump all the traffic into separate files with request followed by the response, as default proxify listen to http://127.0.0.0:8080. Custom address and port can be defined using addr flag.

As default, proxied request/resposed are stored in the logs folder.

▶ proxify -output db

Hostname mapping with Local DNS resolver

Proxify supports embedding DNS resolver to map hostnames to specific addresses and define an upstream dns server for any other domain name

start a local http proxy on port 8080 using an embedded dns server listening on port 53 and resolving www.google.it to 192.168.1.1, all other fqdn are forwarded upstream to 1.1.1.1

▶ proxify -dns-addr ":53" -dns-mapping "www.google.it:192.168.1.1" -dns-resolver "1.1.1.1:53"

This feature is used for example by the replay utility to hijack the connections and simulate responses. It may be useful during internal assessments with private dns servers. Using * as domain name matches all dns requests.

Match/Filter traffic with with DSL language.

If the request or response match the filters the dump is tagged with .match.txt suffix:

▶ proxify -request-dsl "contains(request,'firefox')" -response-dsl "contains(response, md5('test'))"

Match and Replace on the fly

Proxify supports modifying Request and Responses on the fly with DSL language.

▶ proxify -request-match-replace-dsl "replace(request,'firefox','chrome')" -response-match-replace-dsl "regex(response, '^authentication failed$', 'authentication ok')"

Replay all traffic into burp

Replay all the dumped requests/responses into the destination URL (http://127.0.0.1:8080) if not specified. For this to work it's necessary to configure burp to use proxify as upstream proxy, as it will take care to hijack the dns resolutions and simulate the remote server with the dumped request. This allows to have in the burp history exactly all requests/responses as if they were originally sent through it, allowing for example to perform a remote interception on cloud, and merge all results locally within burp.

▶ replay -output "logs/"

Installing SSL Certificate

A certificate authority is generated for proxify which is stored in the folder ~/.config/proxify/ as default, manually can be specified by -config flag. The generated certificate can be imported by visiting http://proxify/cacert.crt in a browser connected to proxify.

Installation steps for the Root Certificate is similar to other proxy tools which includes adding the cert to system trusted root store.

Applications of Proxify

Proxify can be used for multiple places, here are some common example where Proxify comes handy:-

Storing all the burp proxy history logs locally.

Start a proxify on port 8081 with HTTP Proxy pointing to burp suite port 8080

proxify -addr "127.0.0.1:8081" -http-proxy "http://127.0.0.1:8080"

From burp, set the Upstream Proxy to forward all the traffic back to proxify

User Options > Upstream Proxy > Proxy & Port > 127.0.0.1 & 8081

Now all the request/response history will be stored in logs folder that can be used later for post processing.

Store all your browse histroy locally.

While you browse the application, you can point the browser to proxify to store all the HTTP request / response to file.

Start proxify on default or any port you wish,

proxify -output chrome-logs -addr ":9999"

Start Chrome browser in Mac OS,

/Applications/Chromium.app/Contents/MacOS/Chromium --ignore-certificate-errors --proxy-server=http://127.0.0.1:9999 &
Store all the response of while you fuzz as per you config at run time.

Start proxify on default or any port you wish,

proxify -output ffuf-logs -addr ":9999"

Run FFuF with proxy pointing to proxify

ffuf -x http://127.0.0.1:9999 FFUF_CMD_HERE

Proxify is made with 🖤 by the projectdiscovery team. Community contributions have made the project what it is. See the Thanks.md file for more details.

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