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HTTP/S Proxy with extensions for Lantern

Go Actions Status

These are Lantern-specific middleware components for the HTTP Proxy in Go:

  • A filter for access tokens

  • A filter for devices, based on their IDs

  • A filter for Pro users

  • A connection preprocessor to intercept bad requests and send custom responses

  • Custom responses for mimicking Apache in certain cases

Deploying

All pushes to the main branch are automatically deployed to production via CI in GitHub Actions.

All pushes to the canary branch are automatically deployed to the canary binary distribution URL for any proxies running the canary version.

See .github/workflows/go.yml, which uses the make build Makefile target NOT THE LEGACY make dist-on-docker.

Rolling back a Deployment

The http-proxy binary is distributed through S3 as this object. This object is versioned in S3, so if you need to roll back to a prior deployed version, you can simply delete the currently deployed version from here.

Usage

Build it with go build or with make build.

To get list of the command line options, please run http-proxy-lantern -help.

config.ini.default also has the list of options, make a copy (say, config.ini) and tweak it as you wish, then run the proxy with

http-proxy-lantern -config config.ini

To regenerate config.ini.default just run http-proxy-lantern -dumpflags.

Testing with Lantern extensions and configuration

Run tests

go test

Use this for verbose output:

TRACE=1 go test

Manual testing

Keep in mind that cURL doesn't support tunneling through an HTTPS proxy, so if you use the -https option you have to use other tools for testing.

You can run a local server with a set configuration (just a default ReflectToSite proxy as of this writing) with

make local-proxy

Note that make local-proxy is really just an alias for make local-rts -- i.e. a ReflectToSite local proxy.

You can then copy the rts-proxies.yaml file to your Lantern config directory, as in:

cp ./rts/rts-proxies.yaml ~/Library/Application\ Support/Lantern/proxies.yaml

Run a Lantern client accordingly from lantern-desktop, as in:

./lantern -readableconfig -stickyconfig

If you're developing a new transport, you can also add new versions of those files for that transport as you're testing.

You have two options to test it: the Lantern client or checkfallbacks.

Keep in mind that they will need to send some headers in order to avoid receiving 404 messages (the chained server response if you aren't providing them).

Currently, the only header you need to add is X-Lantern-Device-Id.

If you are using checkfallbacks, make sure that both the certificate and the token are correct. A 404 will be the reply otherwise. Running the server with -debug may help you troubleshooting those scenarios.

Handle requests config server specially

To prevent spoofers from fetching Lantern config with fake client IP, we need to attach auth tokens to such requests. Both below options should be supplied. Once http-proxy-lantern receives GET request to one of the cfgsvrdomains, it sets X-Lantern-Config-Auth-Token header with supplied cfgsvrauthtoken, and X-Lantern-Config-Client-IP header with the IP address it sees.

  -cfgsvrauthtoken string
        Token attached to config-server requests, not attaching if empty
  -cfgsvrdomains string
        Config-server domains on which to attach auth token, separated by comma

When something bad happens

With option -pprofaddr=localhost:6060, you can always access lots of debug information from http://localhost:6060/debug/pprof. Ref https://golang.org/pkg/net/http/pprof/.

Be sure to only listen on localhost or private addresses for security reason.

Temporarily Deploying a Preview Binary to a Single Server

Sometimes it's useful to deploy a preview binary to a single server. This can be done using either deployTo.bash or onlyDeployTo.bash. They do the same thing but deployTo.bash first runs make dist whereas onlyDeployTo.bash copies the existing binary at dist/http-proxy.

Deploying a Custom Binary

Sometimes it's useful to deploy a custom binary to one or more tracks. This can be done by running make deploy-custom and setting the environment variable BINARY_NAME to the desired binary name, e.g. http-proxy-custom-hwh33-tlsmasq999.

To deploy a track running the custom binary, add the custom_proxy_binary key to the track's pillar data, mapped to the name specified above. At the time of writing, track pillar data is specified in the track_pillars structure in lantern-infrastructure/etc/current_production_track_config.py

For example:

    'etc-teleport': {
        'custom_proxy_binary': 'http-proxy-custom-teleport-1',
    },

ssh config

Most of our proxies have servermasq enabled on them. This means that you cannot ssh directly into them. Instead you have to use a cloudmaster as a bastion jump host. You can do this relatively straightforwardly by adding this to your ~/.ssh/config file:

Host bastion
  HostName CM_IP
  ProxyCommand none
Host *
  User lantern
  ProxyJump bastion

where you'd replace CM_IP with an actual cloudmaster ip (probably the one closest to you).

Deploy Preview

./onlyDeployTo.bash <ip address>

Revert to Production Binary

Once you're done checking out the preview, revert back to the production binary with:

./revertToProductionBinary.bash <ip addres>

Logs on Server

To view proxy logs on a given machine, run:

journalctl -e -u http-proxy