0.07
No release in over 3 years
Low commit activity in last 3 years
There's a lot of open issues
HTTP(S) Intercept Proxy
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 Dependencies

Development

~> 12.2
~> 3.7
~> 0.51
~> 0.15
~> 2.0
~> 1.7

Runtime

 Project Readme

Ruby In The Middle (HTTP/HTTPS interception proxy)

Ruby in the middle (RITM) is an HTTP/HTTPS interception proxy with on-the-fly certificate generation and signing, which leaves the user with the full power of the Ruby language to intercept and even modify requests and responses as she pleases.

Installation

gem install ritm

Basic usage

  1. Write your interception handlers
require 'ritm'

# A single answer for all your google searches
Ritm.on_request do |req|
  if req.request_uri.host.start_with? 'www.google.'
    new_query_string = req.request_uri.query.gsub(/(?<=^q=|&q=)(((?!&|$).)*)(?=&|$)/, 'RubyInTheMiddle')
    req.request_uri.query = new_query_string
  end
end

my_picture = File.read('i_am_famous.jpg')

# Replaces every picture on the web with my pretty face
Ritm.on_response do |_req, res|
  if res.header['content-type'] && res.header['content-type'].start_with?('image/')
    res.header['content-type'] = 'image/jpeg'
    res.body = my_picture
  end
end
  1. Start the proxy server
Ritm.start
 
puts 'Hit enter to finish'
gets

Ritm.shutdown
  1. Configure your browser

Or whatever HTTP client you want to intercept traffic from, to connect to the proxy in localhost:8080

  1. Browse the web!

For the examples above, search anything in google and also visit your favorite newspaper website.

Trusting self-signed certificates generated by RITM

With the previous example your client might have encountered issues when trying to access HTTPS resources. In some cases you can add an exception to your browser (or instruct your http client not to verify certificates) but in some other cases you won't be able to add exceptions. The reason for this is that in order to decrypt and to be able to modify SSL traffic, RITM will have to be the one doing the SSL negotiatiation with the client (using its own set of certificates) and then it will establish a separate SSL session towards the server. I.e.:

Client <--- SSL session ---> RITM <--- SSL session ---> Server

For every different server's hostname your client tries to communicate with, RITM will generate a certificate on the fly and sign it with a pre-configured Certificate Authority (CA). So, in order to be able to establish a secure connection you will need to configure your client (e.g. browser) to trust RITM's CA.

For security reasons, every time you start RITM's proxy with the default settings it will generate a new internal Certificate Authority. To use your own CA instead (so it can be loaded and trusted by your browser) perform the following steps:

  1. Generate a Certificate Authority PEM and Private Key files

You can use OpenSSL or RITM to generate these two files. With OpenSSL:

openssl req -new -nodes -x509 -days 365 -extensions v3_ca -keyout insecure_ca.key -out insecure_ca.crt

Or with RITM:

require 'ritm/certs/ca'

ca = Ritm::CA.create common_name: 'InsecureCA'

File.write('insecure_ca.crt', ca.pem)
File.write('insecure_ca.key', ca.private_key.to_s)
  1. Repeat step 2 from the previous example, this time indicating what CA should be used to sign certificates
Ritm.configure do
  ssl_reverse_proxy.ca[:pem] = 'path/to/insecure_ca.crt'
  ssl_reverse_proxy.ca[:key] = 'path/to/insecure_ca.key'
end

Ritm.start

puts 'Hit enter to finish'
gets

Ritm.shutdown
  1. Trust the CA certificate into your browser or client

I'll leave it to you to figure out how this is done in your browser or client. 4. Surf the web!

  1. When you are done Remove the CA from your trusted authorities!

Or take really good care of the CA private key since anyone in possession of that key will be capable of decrypting all your traffic! Also notice that when using the proxy every server will be automatically trusted even if the end server certificate is not valid.

Running multiple sessions with different settings

In the examples above we've been using the default global session. If you don't like using a statically configured global session, or you want to have multiple sessions coexisting (e.g. multiple proxies listening on different ports and using different interception handlers) you can create different session instances this way:

session = Ritm::Session.new

# Now you can use the same methods but on the session instance

session.configure { proxy[:bind_port] = 7777 }
session.on_request { |req| ...do something here ... }

another_session = Ritm::Session.new
another_session.configure { proxy[:bind_port] = 8888 }
another_session.on_request { |req| ...do something else ... }

session.start
another_session.start

puts 'Hit enter to finish'
gets

session.shutdown
another_session.shutdown

License

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.