Posts Tagged: 网络


5
Jul 09

在 Linux 下使用你的网站主机作为加密代理服务器

曾经介绍过如何使用 Amazon EC2 建立自己的代理服务器来“翻墙“。用这个方法翻墙虽然网速很快,但还是有些缺点。Amazon EC2 是收费的,而且按小时算,所以不能随时都开着我的代理服务器。另外,每次想用代理的时候还得先等一两分钟,让服务器启动。

然而我今天看到了这个贴子,这才发现还可以使用一个普通的网站主机作为我的代理服务器。与 Amazon EC2 不同,普通的网站主机是 24/7 运行的,而且你本来就要用它做你的网站,不用额外花钱。以上帖子是专门写给使用 Dreamhost 的 Windows 用户。不过,凡是有支持 SSH 服务网站主机的 Linux 用户也可以享受翻墙的自由感。我为 Linux 用户编了一个小的 BASH 脚本,其主要功能为:

  • 与网站主机创建一个 SSH 隧道连接
  • SSH 隧道用完之后,安全地关闭 SSH 隧道连接

用这个脚本,我试了一下上平时被 GFW 封杀的 youtube.com… 结果 Firefox 差点让我晕倒了! 用这个代理,网速快极了… 感觉好像我还在英国上网似的 (那边一般都用 8M 以上的宽带) – 你可以看一下视频:

介绍一下脚本的内容

export SSH_HOST=admin@yoursite.com # username@host

这个需要你自己改一下… 就是你的 webhost 给你的 SSH 用户名和主机地址。 格式为 用户名@地址 (凡是用过 SSH 的人都应该知道写什么)

if [ ! -f /tmp/.tunnel ]

看看是否已经有 SSH 隧道开着。有的话就将其关闭。没有就创建新的 SSH 隧道。

ssh -f -D 9999 $SSH_HOST "if [ -f ~/.tunnel ]; then rm ~/.tunnel; fi; while [ ! -f ~/.tunnel ]; do echo > /dev/null; done" &

创建新的 SSH 隧道,设定本地 SOCKS 端口为 9999。隧道将会开着直到远程目录 “~/” 里有人创建 .tunnel 此文件为止。

touch /tmp/.tunnel

在你的电脑上创建 .tunnel 这个文件。这样脚本就知道正开着一个 SSH 隧道。

ssh $SSH_HOST "touch ~/.tunnel"

在远程目录 “~/” 里创建 .tunnel 此文件,这将会断开你电脑与代理服务器的连接

rm /tmp/.tunnel

删除 .tunnel 这个文件。这样脚本就知道 SSH 隧道已关闭。

下载并执行脚本
可以在此下载脚本

下载后放在你的首目录,比如在 ~/bin/。用一个文字编辑器修改脚本里的 ssh 变量并用 chmod 改一下文件权限

chmod u+x tunnel.sh

创建连接
在终端中执行脚本,执行后可以关闭终端。

open_tunnel.png

关闭连接
再次在终端中执行脚本并关闭 Firefox (如果 Firefox 还在用隧道的话,连接暂时无法关闭)

close_tunnel.png

用 SSH 密钥进行授权
你或许注意到了… 以上脚本里没有任何地方可以写下你的 SSH 密码。这就是因为我在用 SSH 密钥来进行电脑与服务器的授权工作,这样更自动化而且比将密码直接写入文本的文件里要安全多了。先打开一个终端,根据一下步骤进行密钥配置:

[jonolumb@jonoxps .ssh]# ssh-keygen -t rsa
Generating public/private rsa key pair.
Enter file in which to save the key (/home/jonolumb/.ssh/id_rsa):
Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase):
Enter same passphrase again:
Your identification has been saved in /home/jonolumb/.ssh/id_rsa
Your public key has been saved in /home/jonolumb/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
The key fingerprint is:
h7:10:49:46:ab:2t:3b:a3:36:2z:15:56:d4:f2:b7:3d jonolumb@jonoxps

请注意,配置时密码要留为空白。

将生成的 /home/jonolumb/.ssh/id_rsa.pub 的内容复制到远程服务器目录下,具体位置是:
~/.ssh/authorized_keys
要保证远程的 authorized_keys 和 本地的 id_rsa 文件的权限均为 700。
这样就可以自动登录到远程服务器了。

配置 Firefox 使用代理
创建了 SSH 隧道之后,就进入 Firefox 并打开:

首选项 --> 高级 --> 连接设置

选择“手动配置代理”并将其设定为:
HTTP 代理: localhost 端口: 9999

firefox_proxy.png

如果你用这个脚本遇到什么问题,请跟我取得联系。我很想听你们的意见。谢谢!


28
Jun 09

Shell script for automated Amazon EC2 personal proxy server

Scenario
I am currently living in China and as many of you know, access to the web here is filtered, meaning sites such as YouTube, Flickr, Blogger, Wordpress are often unavailable. Whilst previously I overcame this problem by using TOR and FoxyProxy and setting up rules telling Firefox which URLs should be redirected through the proxy, TOR is not exactly speedy and so although this setup was free, it was not really suitable for smooth viewing of any blocked multimedia websites.

Solutions
I started to look around for other possible proxy solutions but most pay-for proxies are charged on a monthly basis and are fairly expensive. Furthermore, there is always the possibility that the authorities here are already aware of the IP ranges of some commercial proxy servers and so you run the risk of being blocked out yet again. What I really needed was a pay as you go proxy server where you would only be charged when you actually use the server and for the amount of bandwidth used. I then came accross a post on Duane Storey’s blog which described how he created an Amazon EC2 instance which could be used to make a proxy server available that was only to Iranian web users. Duane’s solution involves his own custom Fedora image which has Apache setup to run as a web proxy. This setup was pretty much exactly what I needed – except that I would need to make sure the Proxy server only allowed my own computer to connect rather than making it a public proxy server accessible to Iranians. After a bit of testing, I managed to get something going and was pleased to see that the proxy was very speedy indeed!

Cheap Proxy Server
Amazon EC2 Instances currently cost $0.10 USD per hour to run plus bandwidth charges (which for standard web browsing will be negligent). This gives Amazon EC2 the potential to be an incredibly cheap on-demand proxy server. Finally you only pay for what you use rather than paying an extortionate monthly rate.

Automation
The next thing to do was to automate the server setup process as entering all the necessary commands into a terminal can be cumbersome and time consuming. I used a unix shell script to accomplish the following steps:

  1. Create an Amazon EC2 Fedora instance which is configured to run Apache as a proxy server.
  2. Connect to Amazon EC2 instance via SSH and modify the Apache configuration file to only allow the client’s computer to connect to the server.
  3. Restart Apache to apply changes.
  4. (Optional) Assign an Amazon Elastic IP Address to the Instance which can be used to access the HTTP Proxy. The script prints the IP address assigned to the proxy server in the terminal – this IP address can then be pasted into your web browsers proxy configuration settings.
  5. (Optional) Create a secure SSH HTTP Tunnel to the proxy server on port 9999. Clients can connect by changing browser network settings to a SOCKS 5 proxy on localhost:9999.
  6. The script then waits for keyboard input “stop” upon which the SSH HTTP tunnel will be closed, the Amazon EC2 Instance shutdown and any Amazon Elastic IP addresses released.

The script is designed to work on Ubuntu (Jaunty 9.04) but should also work on other Linux Operating Systems and possibly on Mac OS X too. Before you can get it up and running there is some preliminary preparation which is necessary.

Step 1: Sign up for an account and setup AWS
Before you can use Amazon Web Services, you need to sign up for an account at http://aws.amazon.com/.

This will give you two keys that you will need for accessing your Amazon Web Services: your “access key” and your “secret access key”. Once complete, you then need to sign up for Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) service. As part of signing up for EC2, you will create an X.509 certificate. You will need to save your private and public keys in ~/.ec2 on your local machine. All this is described in more detail in the AWS “Getting Started Guide” under Setting up an account.

Step 2: Download and install EC2 command line tools
The process of setting up the tools is described under Setting up the Tools in AWS “Getting Started Guide“. Just do what that page says and note down the location of the tools directory.

Step 3: Generate an SSH keypair, disable strict key checking
Follow the instructions here to generate an SSH keypair to be used in combination with your Amazon EC2 Instance. The RSA private key generated needs to be placed in your ~/.ssh folder and should be given 600 permissions.

chmod 600 your_rsa_key

Another important thing for the script to work is to set OpenSSH to disable Strict Host Key Checking for amazon domains only. This has only minor security implications and is vital if you want the whole server setup process to be automated.

In ~/.ssh/ create a file called config and put the following text inside:

Host *.amazonaws.com
StrictHostKeyChecking false

Give the file the right permissions

chmod 600 ~/.ssh/config

Step 4: Install Curl
The shell script uses a command line utility called curl to determine the external IP address of your computer – hence allowing you exclusively to connect to the proxy server. On Ubuntu, curl can be installed using apt-get.

sudo apt-get install curl

Step 6: Download the script and configure variables
First download the autoproxy archive to somewhere in your home folder and uncompress it. You then need to make the shell script executable

chmod u+x autoproxy.sh

Open the file in a text editor and make changes to the below variables to fit your own setup:

export EC2_HOME=/home/username/folder/ec2

This is the location of the EC2 command line tools which were installed during Step 2.

export EC2_PRIVATE_KEY=~/.ec2/pk-LSOEEFCT2IYW74BHFUIHHSBE63H4GM77.pem

This is the location of your Amazon EC2 Private Key file which you generated when creating your AWS account.

export EC2_CERT=~/.ec2/cert-LSOEEFCT2IYW74BHFUIHHSBE63H4GM77.pem

This is the location of your Amazon EC2 Certificate file which you generated when creating your AWS account.

export JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun/jre

Location of Java on your computer.

If you don’t know where Java is installed on your computer you can follow symbolic links in a terminal to find it:

ls -l /usr/bin/java

/usr/bin/java -> /etc/alternatives/java

ls -l /etc/alternatives/java

/etc/alternatives/java -> /usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun/jre/bin/java

export ssh_key=~/.ssh/id_rsa-gsg-keypair

Location of your Amazon EC2 SSH private RSA key (created in Step 3). This should be located in ~/.ssh and needs 600 permissions.

export autoproxy=/home/username/autoproxy

Location of the autoproxy folder that you downloaded.

Running the script
To run the script, open up a terminal and type the following:

cd /home/*username*/autoproxy/
./autoproxy.sh

autoproxy.png

Browser Config
If you chose to use an Amazon Elastic IP Address to access your proxy server, the script should output the address in the terminal once the proxy server is setup. In your browser you simply need to enter the proxy setup section and choose “HTTP Proxy” using the Amazon Elastic IP Address and port 80.

If you chose to use an SSH HTTP Tunnel to connect to access your proxy server, in your browser enter the proxy setup section and choose “SOCKS 5″ with the address as localhost on port 9999.

Disclaimer
Whilst using an Amazon EC2 Instance as a personal proxy server should not be a problem, it appears that Amazon do not approve of use of EC2 instances as public proxy servers available to the masses. For this reason please make sure you limit access to the proxy to your computer only as configured in the script. Use this script at your own risk. I cannot be held responsible for any undesired consequences that result from its use.

Anyway, have a try and see how you get on. Don’t hesitate to get in touch if you have any questions. I’ve spent quite a bit of time on this and I hope that it can help some other people out. I would appreciate any feedback or suggestions :-)