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TINYPROXY.CONF(5)
=================
:man source: Version @VERSION@
:man manual: Tinyproxy manual
NAME
----
tinyproxy.conf - Tinyproxy HTTP proxy daemon configuration file
SYNOPSIS
--------
*tinyproxy.conf*
DESCRIPTION
-----------
`tinyproxy(8)` reads its configuration file, typically stored in
`/etc/tinyproxy/tinyproxy.conf` (or passed to Tinyproxy with -c on the
command line). This manpage describes the syntax and contents of the
configuration file.
The Tinyproxy configuration file contains key-value pairs, one per
line. Lines starting with `#` and empty lines are comments and are
ignored. Keywords are case-insensitive, whereas values are
case-sensitive. Values may be enclosed in double-quotes (") if they
contain spaces.
The possible keywords and their descriptions are as follows:
*User*::
The user which the Tinyproxy process should run as, after the
initial port-binding has been done as the `root` user. Either the
user name or the UID may be specified.
*Group*::
The group which the Tinyproxy process should run as, after the
initial port-binding has been done as the `root` user. Either the
group name or the GID may be specified.
*Port*::
The port which the Tinyproxy service will listen on. If the port is
less than 1024, you will need to start the Tinyproxy process as the
`root` user.
*Listen*::
By default, Tinyproxy listens for connections on all available
interfaces (i.e. it listens on the wildcard address `0.0.0.0`).
With this configuration parameter, Tinyproxy can be told to listen
only on one specific address.
*Bind*::
This allows you to specify which address Tinyproxy will bind
to for outgoing connections to web servers or upstream proxies.
*BindSame*::
If this boolean parameter is set to `yes`, then Tinyproxy will
bind the outgoing connection to the IP address of the incoming
connection that triggered the outgoing request.
*Timeout*::
The maximum number of seconds of inactivity a connection is
allowed to have before it is closed by Tinyproxy.
*ErrorFile*::
This parameter controls which HTML file Tinyproxy returns when a
given HTTP error occurs. It takes two arguments, the error number
and the location of the HTML error file.
*DefaultErrorFile*::
This parameter controls the HTML template file returned when an
error occurs for which no specific error file has been set.
*StatFile*::
This configures the HTML file that Tinyproxy sends when
a request for the stathost is received. If this parameter is
not set, Tinyproxy returns a hardcoded basic statistics page.
See the STATHOST section in the `tinyproxy(8)` manual page
for details.
Note that the StatFile and the error files configured with ErrorFile
and DefaultErrorFile are template files that can contain a few
template variables that Tinyproxy expands prior to delivery.
Examples are "\{cause}" for an abbreviated error description and
"\{detail}" for a datiled error message. The `tinyproxy(8)`
manual page contains a description of all template variables.
*LogFile*::
This controls the location of the file to which Tinyproxy
writes its debug output. Alternatively, Tinyproxy can log
to syslog -- see the Syslog option.
*Syslog*::
When set to `On`, this option tells Tinyproxy to write its
debug messages to syslog instead of to a log file configured
with `LogFile`. These two options are mutually exclusive.
*LogLevel*::
This sets the log level. Allowed values are:
* Critical (least verbose)
* Error
* Warning
* Notice
* Connect (log connections without Info's noise)
* Info (most verbose)
The LogLevel logs from the set level and above. For example, if
the LogLevel was set to Warning, than all log messages from
Warning to Critical would be output, but Notice and below would be
suppressed.
*PidFile*::
This option controls the location of the file where the main
Tinyproxy process stores its process ID for signalling purposes.
*XTinyproxy*::
Setting this option to `Yes` tells Tinyproxy to add a header
`X-Tinyproxy` containing the client's IP address to the request.
*[No] Upstream*::
This option allows you to set up a set of rules for deciding
whether an upstream a proxy server is to be used, based on the
host or domain of the site being accessed. The rules are stored
in the order encountered in the configuration file and the
LAST matching rule wins. There are three possible forms for
spcifying upstream rules:
* 'upstream host:port' turns proxy upstream support on generally.
* 'upstream host:port "site_spec"' turns on the upstream proxy for
the sites matching `site_spec`.
* 'no upstream "site_spec"' turns off upstream support for sites
matching `site_spec`.
The site can be specified in various forms as a hostname, domain
name or as an IP range:
* 'name' matches host exactly
* '.name' matches any host in domain "name"
* '.' matches any host with no domain (in 'empty' domain)
* 'IP/bits' matches network/mask
* 'IP/mask' matches network/mask
*MaxClients*::
Tinyproxy creates one child process for each connected client.
This options specifies the absolute highest number processes that
will be created. With other words, only MaxClients clients can be
connected to Tinyproxy simultaneously.
*MinSpareServers*::
*MaxSpareServers*::
Tinyproxy always keeps a certain number of idle child processes
so that it can handle new incoming client requests quickly.
`MinSpareServer` and `MaxSpareServers` control the lower and upper
limits for the number of spare processes. I.e. when the number of
spare servers drops below `MinSpareServers` then Tinyproxy will
start forking new spare processes in the background and when the
number of spare processes exceeds `MaxSpareServers` then Tinyproxy
will kill off extra processes.
*StartServers*::
The number of servers to start initially. This should usually be
set to a value between MinSpareServers and MaxSpareServers.
*MaxRequestsPerChild*::
This limits the number of connections that a child process
will handle before it is killed. The default value is `0`
which disables this feature. This option is meant as an
emergency measure in the case of problems with memory leakage.
In that case, setting `MaxRequestsPerChild` to a value of e.g.
1000, or 10000 can be useful.
*Allow*::
*Deny*::
The `Allow` and `Deny` options provide a means to customize
which clients are allowed to access Tinyproxy. `Allow` and `Deny`
lines can be specified multiple times to build the access control
list for Tinyproxy. The order in the config file is important.
If there are no `Access` or `Deny` lines, then all clients are
allowed. Otherwise, the default action is to deny access.
The argument to `Access` or `Deny` can ba a single IP address
of a client host, like `127.0.0.1`, an IP address range, like
`192.168.0.1/24` or a string that will be matched against the
end of the client host name, i.e, this can be a full host name
like `host.example.com` or a domain name like `.example.com` or
even a top level domain name like `.com`.
*ViaProxyName*::
RFC 2616 requires proxies to add a `Via` header to the HTTP
requests, but using the real host name can be a security
concern. If the `ViaProxyname` option is present, than its
string value will be used as the host name in the Via header.
Otherwise, the server's host name will be used.
*Filter*::
Tinyproxy supports filtering of web sites based on URLs or
domains. This option specifies the location of the file
containing the filter rules, one rule per line.
*FilterURLs*::
If this boolean option is set to `Yes` or `On`, filtering is
performed for URLs rather than for domains. The default is to
filter based on domains.
*FilterExtended*::
If this boolean option is set to `Yes`, then extended POSIX
regular expressions are used for matching the filter rules.
The default is to use basic POSIX regular expressions.
*FilterCaseSensitive*::
If this boolean option is set to `Yes`, then the filter rules
are matched in a case sensitive manner. The default is to
match case-insensitively.
*FilterDefaultDeny*::
The default filtering policy is to allow everything that is
not matched by a filtering rule. Setting `FilterDefaultDeny`
to `Yes` changes the policy do deny everything but the domains
or URLs matched by the filtering rules.
*Anonymous*::
If an `Anonymous` keyword is present, then anonymous proxying
is enabled. The headers listed with `Anonymous` are allowed
through, while all others are denied. If no Anonymous keyword
is present, then all headers are allowed through. You must
include quotes around the headers.
Most sites require cookies to be enabled for them to work correctly, so
you will need to allow Cookies through if you access those sites.
Example:
Anonymous "Host"
Anonymous "Authorization"
Anonymous "Cookie"
BUGS
----
To report bugs in Tinyproxy, please visit
<https://www.banu.com/tinyproxy/support/[https://www.banu.com/tinyproxy/support/]>.
COPYRIGHT
---------
Copyright (c) 1998-2000 Steven Young;
Copyright (c) 2000-2001 Robert James Kaes;
Copyright (c) 2009 Mukund Sivaraman;
Copyright (c) 2009 Michael Adam.
This program is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public
License version 2 or above. See the COPYING file for additional
information.
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