Skip to main content

Socks Proxy Setup

RIP WPA2

I can never remember how to set up a Socks proxy to my Digital Ocean Droplet, so here is a simple little how-to guide.

Using a secure proxy server to somewhere else in the wild wild world, to get through a local insecurity suddenly got added urgency, since the WiFi WPA2 protocol is now officially broken.

Using a secure proxy in this way, will prevent local script kiddies from looking over your shoulder on a WiFi connection.

The most fun you can have with your socks on!

Note that the cheapest Digital Ocean Linux or BSD virtual server costs only $5 per month and that is all you need.  You don't even need to change or install anything on it, since it comes with sshd running by default.  So, just sign up for one, start using socks over ssh and relax.

On the laptop:
Add nameserver 8.8.8.8 to the top of /etc/resolv.conf

Start the socks proxy:
# killall ssh
# ssh -fND 2222 -p 22 root@w.x.y.z

Firefox:
Open Menu
Preferences, Advanced, Network, Settings:
Socks host: localhost, port 2222
Socks 5
Use Remote DNS

Skype:
Open Skype.
Enter your Skype credentials and Sign in.
In the Menu Bar click Tools and then Options…
Advanced, Connection.
Automatic proxy detection: SOCKS 5.
Host: localhost
Port: 2222.
Uncheck Enable proxy authentication.
Save.
OK.
Restart Skype and Sign in again.


This script sort of works:
#! /bin/bash
sed -i -e 's/nameserver/nameserver 8.8.8.8\nnameserver/' /etc/resolv.conf
killall ssh
ssh -fND 2222 -p 22 root@w.x.y.z


Mac

On a Macintosh, as soon as you enable the Socks proxy server in the System Settings, *everything* will go through it - Email, Safari, Firefox, Skype...  This is both convenient and annoying, since from then on, you always have to run the proxy.

Rather than wearing out your mouse with endless clicking, the Mac proxy settings can be changed using a couple scripts and the networksetup utility.

Script sockson:
#! /bin/bash
echo Enable the Socks Proxy
killall ssh
ssh -D 2222 -f -C -N root@droplet
networksetup -setsocksfirewallproxystate "Wi-Fi" on


Script socksoff:
#! /bin/bash
echo Disable the Socks Proxy
killall ssh
networksetup -setsocksfirewallproxystate "Wi-Fi" off


Note that on a Mac the application 'firewall' in System Preferences, Security and Privacy, is best turned off.  Otherwise you may have trouble with one way connections

On a Mac, you can see what is going on - who is talking to who - with the utility nettop.

 
La voila!

Herman

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

OpenEMS with Octave and SciLAB

I wanted to do some advanced RF antenna development work and needed an electromagnetic field solver that is a bit more up to date than NEC2 .  Commercial solvers from Matlab , Ansys and others are hideously expensive (in the order of $20,000 to $50,000) and do not fit in the wallet of a hobbyist or a small consulting company.  Recently, openEMS became available and it fills the niche with a capable free tool.  In general, openEMS is a solver - a Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) numerical engine.  You interact with it through Octave , which is almost identical to Matlab .  You can watch a good video by Thorsten Liebig here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=ThMLf0d5gaE   Getting it to work is a little painful, but it is free, so bear with it - then save a backup clone, or a zipped copy of the whole virtual machine directory and NEVER update it, to ensure that it keeps going and doesn't get broken by future updates, right when you are ...

Parasitic Quadrifilar Helical Antenna

This article was reprinted in OSCAR News, March 2018:  http://www.amsat-uk.org If you want to receive Satellite Weather Pictures , then you need a decent antenna, otherwise you will receive more noise than picture. For polar orbit satellites, one needs an antenna with a mushroom shaped radiation pattern .  It needs to have strong gain towards the horizon where the satellites are distant, less gain upwards where they are close and as little as possible downwards, which would be wasted and a source of noise.  Most satellites are spin stabilized and therefore the antenna also needs circular polarization, otherwise the received signal will flutter as the antennas rotate through nulls. The helical antenna, first proposed by Kraus in 1948, is the natural solution to circular polarized satellite communications.  It is a simple twisted wire - there seems to be nothing to it.  Various papers have been published on helix antennas, so the operation is pretty well ...

Yagi Antenna for 900 MHz ISM Band

I like tinkering with wire antenna designs, since they are simple and cheap to make.  Mr Yagi invented his antenna about 100 years ago, but there are still some things left to learn about it. 900 MHz ISM Band Yagi The 900 MHz ISM band ranges from 902 to 928 MHz.  Covering the whole band with a single Yagi antenna is difficult, since they are inherently narrow band devices.  Consequently some tweaking is required and the result below is a desensitized design that can be built and replicated quite easily, but you need a network analyzer - "To Measure, is to Know!" A Yagi generally consists of a Reflector, Radiator and one or more Director elements, arranged on a boom.  For a small Yagi, a wooden ruler works a treat, since one can easily mark the position of the wires.  The wire elements are fastened to the bottom of the ruler with hot glue.  The wire elements are  made from straightened out jumbo size paper clips.  The balun, is tw...