go-mitmproxy
is a Golang implementation of mitmproxy that supports man-in-the-middle attacks and parsing, monitoring, and tampering with HTTP/HTTPS traffic.
- Parses HTTP/HTTPS traffic and displays traffic details via a web interface.
- Supports a plugin mechanism for easily extending functionality. Various event hooks can be found in the examples directory.
- HTTPS certificate handling is compatible with mitmproxy and stored in the
~/.mitmproxy
folder. If the root certificate is already trusted from a previous use ofmitmproxy
,go-mitmproxy
can use it directly. - Map Remote and Map Local support.
- HTTP/2 support.
- Refer to the configuration documentation for more features.
- Only supports setting the proxy manually in the client, not transparent proxy mode.
- Currently does not support WebSocket protocol parsing.
For more information on the difference between manually setting a proxy and transparent proxy mode, please refer to the mitmproxy documentation for the Python version: How mitmproxy works. go-mitmproxy currently supports "Explicit HTTP" and "Explicit HTTPS" as mentioned in the article.
go install github.com/lqqyt2423/go-mitmproxy/cmd/go-mitmproxy@latest
Use the following command to start the go-mitmproxy proxy server:
go-mitmproxy
After starting, the HTTP proxy address is set to port 9080 by default, and the web interface is set to port 9081 by default.
The certificate needs to be installed after the first startup to parse HTTPS traffic. The certificate will be automatically generated after the first startup command and stored in ~/.mitmproxy/mitmproxy-ca-cert.pem
. Installation steps can be found in the Python mitmproxy documentation: About Certificates.
ou can use the following command to view more parameters of go-mitmproxy:
go-mitmproxy -h
Usage of go-mitmproxy:
-addr string
proxy listen addr (default ":9080")
-allow_hosts value
a list of allow hosts
-cert_path string
path of generate cert files
-debug int
debug mode: 1 - print debug log, 2 - show debug from
-f string
Read configuration from file by passing in the file path of a JSON configuration file.
-ignore_hosts value
a list of ignore hosts
-map_local string
map local config filename
-map_remote string
map remote config filename
-ssl_insecure
not verify upstream server SSL/TLS certificates.
-upstream string
upstream proxy
-upstream_cert
connect to upstream server to look up certificate details (default true)
-version
show go-mitmproxy version
-web_addr string
web interface listen addr (default ":9081")
package main
import (
"log"
"github.com/lqqyt2423/go-mitmproxy/proxy"
)
func main() {
opts := &proxy.Options{
Addr: ":9080",
StreamLargeBodies: 1024 * 1024 * 5,
}
p, err := proxy.NewProxy(opts)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
log.Fatal(p.Start())
}
Refer to the examples for adding your own plugins by implementing the AddAddon
method.
The following are the currently supported event nodes:
type Addon interface {
// A client has connected to mitmproxy. Note that a connection can correspond to multiple HTTP requests.
ClientConnected(*ClientConn)
// A client connection has been closed (either by us or the client).
ClientDisconnected(*ClientConn)
// Mitmproxy has connected to a server.
ServerConnected(*ConnContext)
// A server connection has been closed (either by us or the server).
ServerDisconnected(*ConnContext)
// The TLS handshake with the server has been completed successfully.
TlsEstablishedServer(*ConnContext)
// HTTP request headers were successfully read. At this point, the body is empty.
Requestheaders(*Flow)
// The full HTTP request has been read.
Request(*Flow)
// HTTP response headers were successfully read. At this point, the body is empty.
Responseheaders(*Flow)
// The full HTTP response has been read.
Response(*Flow)
// Stream request body modifier
StreamRequestModifier(*Flow, io.Reader) io.Reader
// Stream response body modifier
StreamResponseModifier(*Flow, io.Reader) io.Reader
}
You can access the web interface at https://localhost:9081/ using a web browser.
- View detailed information of HTTP/HTTPS requests
- Supports formatted preview of JSON requests/responses
- Supports binary mode to view response body
- Supports advanced filtering rules
- Supports request breakpoint function
If you find this project helpful, consider buying me a cup of coffee. Feel free to reach out for any technical inquiries.
The author is currently unemployed. If you have any full-time or part-time job opportunities, feel free to scan the QR code to add me on WeChat for further discussion.