Programmable HTTP proxy server for Node.js
Node.js implementation of a proxy server (think Squid) with support for SSL, authentication, upstream proxy chaining,
custom HTTP responses and measuring traffic statistics.
The authentication and proxy chaining configuration is defined in code and can be dynamic.
Note that the proxy server only supports Basic authentication
(see Proxy-Authorization for details).
For example, this package is useful if you need to use proxies with authentication
in the headless Chrome web browser, because it doesn't accept proxy URLs such as http://username:password@proxy.example.com:8080
.
With this library, you can set up a local proxy server without any password
that will forward requests to the upstream proxy with password.
The package is used for this exact purpose by the Apify web scraping platform.
To learn more about the rationale behind this package,
read How to make headless Chrome and Puppeteer use a proxy server with authentication.
Run a simple HTTP/HTTPS proxy server
const ProxyChain = require('proxy-chain');
const server = new ProxyChain.Server({ port: 8000 });
server.listen(() => {
console.log(`Proxy server is listening on port ${8000}`);
});
Run a HTTP/HTTPS proxy server with credentials and upstream proxy
const ProxyChain = require('proxy-chain');
const server = new ProxyChain.Server({
port: 8000,
verbose: true,
prepareRequestFunction: ({ request, username, password, hostname, port, isHttp, connectionId }) => {
return {
requestAuthentication: username !== 'bob' || password !== 'TopSecret',
upstreamProxyUrl: `http://username:password@proxy.example.com:3128`,
failMsg: 'Bad username or password, please try again.',
};
},
});
server.listen(() => {
console.log(`Proxy server is listening on port ${server.port}`);
});
server.on('connectionClosed', ({ connectionId, stats }) => {
console.log(`Connection ${connectionId} closed`);
console.dir(stats);
});
server.on('requestFailed', ({ request, error }) => {
console.log(`Request ${request.url} failed`);
console.error(error);
});
Custom error responses
To return a custom HTTP response to indicate an error to the client,
you can throw the RequestError
from inside of the prepareRequestFunction
function.
The class constructor has the following parameters: RequestError(body, statusCode, headers)
.
By default, the response will have Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
.
const ProxyChain = require('proxy-chain');
const server = new ProxyChain.Server({
prepareRequestFunction: ({ request, username, password, hostname, port, isHttp, connectionId }) => {
if (username !== 'bob') {
throw new ProxyChain.RequestError('Only Bob can use this proxy!', 400);
}
},
});
Measuring traffic statistics
To get traffic statistics for a certain HTTP connection, you can use:
const stats = server.getConnectionStats(connectionId);
console.dir(stats);
The resulting object looks like:
{
srcTxBytes: Number,
srcRxBytes: Number,
trgTxBytes: Number,
trgRxBytes: Number,
}
If the underlying sockets were closed, the corresponding values will be null
,
rather than 0
.
Custom responses
Custom responses allow you to override the response to a HTTP requests to the proxy, without contacting any target host.
For example, this is useful if you want to provide a HTTP proxy-style interface
to an external API or respond with some custom page to certain requests.
Note that this feature is only available for HTTP connections. That's because HTTPS
connections cannot be intercepted without access to the target host's private key.
To provide a custom response, the result of the prepareRequestFunction
function must
define the customResponseFunction
property, which contains a function that generates the custom response.
The function is passed no parameters and it must return an object (or a promise resolving to an object)
with the following properties:
{
statusCode: 200,
headers: {
'X-My-Header': 'bla bla',
}
body: 'My custom response',
encoding: 'UTF-8',
}
Here is a simple example:
const ProxyChain = require('proxy-chain');
const server = new ProxyChain.Server({
port: 8000,
prepareRequestFunction: ({ request, username, password, hostname, port, isHttp }) => {
return {
customResponseFunction: () => {
return {
statusCode: 200,
body: `My custom response to ${request.url}`,
};
},
};
},
});
server.listen(() => {
console.log(`Proxy server is listening on port ${server.port}`);
});
Closing the server
To shut down the proxy server, call the close([destroyConnections], [callback])
function. For example:
server.close(true, () => {
console.log('Proxy server was closed.');
});
The closeConnections
parameter indicates whether pending proxy connections should be forcibly closed.
If it's false
, the function will wait until all connections are closed, which can take a long time.
If the callback
parameter is omitted, the function returns a promise.
Some upstream proxy providers might include valuable debugging information in the CONNECT response
headers when establishing the proxy tunnel, for they may not modify future data in the tunneled
connection.
The proxy server would emit a tunnelConnectResponded
event for exposing such information, where
the parameter types of the event callback are described in Node.js's documentation. Example:
server.on('tunnelConnectResponded', ({ proxyChainId, response, socket, head }) => {
console.log(`CONNECT response headers received: ${response.headers}`);
});
Alternatively a helper function may be used:
listenConnectAnonymizedProxy(anonymizedProxyUrl, ({ response, socket, head }) => {
console.log(`CONNECT response headers received: ${response.headers}`);
});
Helper functions
The package also provides several utility functions.
anonymizeProxy({ url, port }, callback)
Parses and validates a HTTP proxy URL. If the proxy requires authentication,
then the function starts an open local proxy server that forwards to the proxy.
The port is chosen randomly.
The function takes an optional callback that receives the anonymous proxy URL.
If no callback is supplied, the function returns a promise that resolves to a String with
anonymous proxy URL or the original URL if it was already anonymous.
The following example shows how you can use a proxy with authentication
from headless Chrome and Puppeteer.
For details, read this blog post.
const puppeteer = require('puppeteer');
const proxyChain = require('proxy-chain');
(async() => {
const oldProxyUrl = 'http://bob:password123@proxy.example.com:8000';
const newProxyUrl = await proxyChain.anonymizeProxy({ url: oldProxyUrl });
console.log(newProxyUrl);
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({
args: [`--proxy-server=${newProxyUrl}`],
});
const page = await browser.newPage();
await page.goto('https://www.example.com');
await page.screenshot({ path: 'example.png' });
await browser.close();
await proxyChain.closeAnonymizedProxy(newProxyUrl, true);
})();
closeAnonymizedProxy(anonymizedProxyUrl, closeConnections, callback)
Closes anonymous proxy previously started by anonymizeProxy()
.
If proxy was not found or was already closed, the function has no effect
and its result is false
. Otherwise the result is true
.
The closeConnections
parameter indicates whether pending proxy connections are forcibly closed.
If it's false
, the function will wait until all connections are closed, which can take a long time.
The function takes an optional callback that receives the result Boolean from the function.
If callback is not provided, the function returns a promise instead.
createTunnel(proxyUrl, targetHost, options, callback)
Creates a TCP tunnel to targetHost
that goes through a HTTP proxy server
specified by the proxyUrl
parameter.
The optional options
parameter is an object with the following properties:
port: Number
- Enables specifying the local port to listen at. By default 0
,
which means a random port will be selected.hostname: String
- Local hostname to listen at. By default localhost
.verbose: Boolean
- If true
, the functions logs a lot. By default false
.
The result of the function is a local endpoint in a form of hostname:port
.
All TCP connections made to the local endpoint will be tunneled through the proxy to the target host and port.
For example, this is useful if you want to access a certain service from a specific IP address.
The tunnel should be eventually closed by calling the closeTunnel()
function.
The createTunnel()
function accepts an optional Node.js-style callback that receives the path to the local endpoint.
If no callback is supplied, the function returns a promise that resolves to a String with
the path to the local endpoint.
For more information, read this blog post.
Example:
const host = await createTunnel('http://bob:pass123@proxy.example.com:8000', 'service.example.com:356');
console.log(host);
closeTunnel(tunnelString, closeConnections, callback)
Closes tunnel previously started by createTunnel()
.
The result value is false
if the tunnel was not found or was already closed, otherwise it is true
.
The closeConnections
parameter indicates whether pending connections are forcibly closed.
If it's false
, the function will wait until all connections are closed, which can take a long time.
The function takes an optional callback that receives the result of the function.
If the callback is not provided, the function returns a promise instead.
listenConnectAnonymizedProxy(anonymizedProxyUrl, tunnelConnectRespondedCallback)
Allows to configure a callback on the anonymized proxy URL for the CONNECT response headers. See the
above section Accessing the CONNECT response headers for proxy tunneling
for details.
redactUrl(url, passwordReplacement)
Takes a URL and hides the password from it. For example:
console.log(redactUrl('http://bob:pass123@example.com'));