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socks-tun

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  No analysis available

SocksTun - Using a TUN device to access network resources via a Socks server. Allows you to socksify outgoing connections by using a TUN device. Similar to SocksCap except it intercepts the TCP/IP data at network layer 3 instead of at network layer 4.

0 lines of code

0 current contributors

0 since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: gpl

torsocks

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  Analyzed about 5 hours ago

Torsocks: use socks-friendly applications with TorTorsocks allows you to use most socks-friendly applications in a safe way with Tor. It ensures that DNS requests are handled safely and explicitly rejects UDP traffic from the application you're using. Torsocks is known to work on Linux and some ... [More] distributions of Unix. Mac OSX is currently not supported. Once you have installed torsocks, just launch it like so: usewithtor [application]So, for example you can use ssh to a some.ssh.com by doing: usewithtor ssh username @ some.ssh.com or launch pidgin by doing: usewithtor pidgin An alternative to usewithtor is torsocks: torsocks pidginThe tables below list applications that usewithtor/torsocks will send through Tor. At the moment a 100% guarantee of safe interoperability with Tor can only be given for a few of them. This is because the operation of the applications and the data they transmit has not been fully researched, so it is possible that a given application can leak user/system data at a level that neither Tor nor torsocks can control. The following administrative applications are known to be compatible with usewithtor: Application 100% Safe DNS Comments ssh M Y Potential for identity leaks through login. telnet M Y Potential for identity leaks through login and password. svn M Y gpg M Y gpg --refresh-keys works well enough. The following messaging applications are known to be compatible with usewithtor: Application 100% Safe DNS Comments pidgin M Y Potential for identity leaks through login and password. kopete M Y Potential for identity leaks through login and password. konversation M Y Potential for identity leaks through login and password. irssi M Y Potential for identity leaks through login and password. silc M Y Potential for identity leaks through login and password. The following email applications are known to be compatible with usewithtor: Application 100% Safe DNS Comments claws-mail M Y http://rorschachstagebuch.wordpress.com/2008/11/02/claws-mail-zweit-profil-fur-tor/ thunderbird N Y Probable identity leaks through javascript, mail headers. Potential for identity leaks through login, password. The following file transfer applications are known to be compatible with usewithtor: Application 100% Safe DNS Comments wget N Y Probable identity leaks through http headers. Privoxy and polipo a better solution. ftp M Y Passive mode works well generally. Table legend: DNS: DNS requests safe for Tor? N - The application is known to leak DNS requests when used with torsocks. Y - Testing has shown that application does not leak DNS requests. 100% Safe: Fully verified to have no interoperability issues with Tor? N - Anonymity issues suspected, see comments column. M - Safe enough in theory, but either not fully researched or anonymity can be compromised through indiscreet use (e.g. email address, login, passwords). Y - Application has been researched and documented to be safe with Tor.Differences between torsocks and tsocksA complete history of changes is maintained in the Changelog. The initial working copy of torsocks was obtained through the following steps in June 2008: Tsocks was downloaded from the project's sourceforge repository. All patches listed at TSocksPatches in March 2008 were applied. In particular, the patch from Total Information Security that hooks DNS requests and passesthem to Tor. The original link for this patch is now dead and the authors are no longer available at the email addresses supplied in the patch's source. Weasel's getpeername() patch and some build-related patches from Ruben Garcia were applied. All references to tsocks in the project source files were renamed to torsocks. The project was then migrated to an automake/autoconf build system. To help with reconstructing the above steps a list of applied patches is available in the patches subdirectory of the torsocks source tree. Enhancements unique to torsocksThe first release of torsocks contained the following enhancements: Torifying reverse dns requests through gethostbyaddr() Blocking of UDP traffic from sendto() and its variants. Use of Tor-friendly defaults if no configuration file available. The addition of all RFC defined private address ranges to the default configuration. [Less]

9K lines of code

2 current contributors

2 months since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Low Activity
0.0
 
I Use This
Tags proxy socks tor

libnetpp

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  Analyzed 1 day ago

A C++ Networking Library implementing protocols for HTTP, FTP, (E)SMTP, IMAP, POP3...

3.6K lines of code

0 current contributors

almost 11 years since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Inactive
5.0
 
I Use This

BoutDuTunnel

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  Analyzed about 18 hours ago

BoutDuTunnel is a useful software for users behind restrictive firewalls and is intended to use network services that normally you cannot. You need a server located outside the firewalled area (for example your computer with permanent connection at home) which have full access to the Internet. ... [More] BoutDuTunnel is then able to create virtual connections tunnelled in HTTP requests. All data is scrambled to preserve anonymity. BoutDuTunnel is compatible with HTTP proxy servers, even if they use NTLM authentication (like ISA Server). BoutDuTunnel client acts as a Socks Server (v4, v4a and v5 are supported) and is compatible with static forwards. Several communication protocols are supported (a Built-in HTTP Server is available on the server side) [Less]

6.05K lines of code

1 current contributors

over 3 years since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Inactive
5.0
 
I Use This

WANProxy

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  Analyzed 3 days ago

WANProxy is an open source general-purpose TCP proxy with built in support for a standard WAN optimization technique, dictionary compression.

25.3K lines of code

0 current contributors

almost 7 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Inactive
0.0
 
I Use This

ansible-tsocks

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  Analyzed 3 days ago

Ansible role to set up tsocks in Debian-like systems

69 lines of code

1 current contributors

17 days since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Very Low Activity
0.0
 
I Use This

Ruby-SOCKSify

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  Analyzed about 3 hours ago

SOCKSify Ruby redirects any TCP connection initiated by a Ruby script through a SOCKS5 proxy. It serves as a small drop-in alternative to tsocks, except that it handles Ruby programs only and doesn't leak DNS queries.

916 lines of code

0 current contributors

6 days since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Very Low Activity
0.0
 
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Prometeo

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  Analyzed 2 days ago

Prometeo is a modular, extensible proxy. It comes with feature-packed HTTP, FTP (with SSL support), POP3, SSL and SOCKS5 modules, all with IPv6 support.

35.8K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 19 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Inactive
0.0
 
I Use This

Srelay - the SOCKS proxy and Relay

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  Analyzed about 14 hours ago

A Free SOCKS proxy server for Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris and MacOSX

13.1K lines of code

0 current contributors

about 7 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Inactive
0.0
 
I Use This
Licenses: No declared licenses
Tags proxy socks