diff options
author | Denys Dmytriyenko <denis@denix.org> | 2009-03-17 14:32:59 -0400 |
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committer | Denys Dmytriyenko <denis@denix.org> | 2009-03-17 14:32:59 -0400 |
commit | 709c4d66e0b107ca606941b988bad717c0b45d9b (patch) | |
tree | 37ee08b1eb308f3b2b6426d5793545c38396b838 /recipes/privoxy | |
parent | fa6cd5a3b993f16c27de4ff82b42684516d433ba (diff) |
rename packages/ to recipes/ per earlier agreement
See links below for more details:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.handhelds.openembedded/21326
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.handhelds.openembedded/21816
Signed-off-by: Denys Dmytriyenko <denis@denix.org>
Acked-by: Mike Westerhof <mwester@dls.net>
Acked-by: Philip Balister <philip@balister.org>
Acked-by: Khem Raj <raj.khem@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Marcin Juszkiewicz <hrw@openembedded.org>
Acked-by: Koen Kooi <koen@openembedded.org>
Acked-by: Frans Meulenbroeks <fransmeulenbroeks@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'recipes/privoxy')
-rw-r--r-- | recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.conf | 1088 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.init | 49 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | recipes/privoxy/privoxy_3.0.3.bb | 63 |
3 files changed, 1200 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.conf b/recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..7e1a1f891c --- /dev/null +++ b/recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.conf @@ -0,0 +1,1088 @@ +# Sample Configuration File for Privoxy +# +# Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Privoxy Developers http://privoxy.org +# +# +# Modified by Bastian Ballmann <balle@chaostal.de> for use +# with Tor and to provide maximum privacy +# +# $Id: config,v $ +# +#################################################################### +# # +# Table of Contents # +# # +# I. INTRODUCTION # +# II. FORMAT OF THE CONFIGURATION FILE # +# # +# 1. CONFIGURATION AND LOG FILE LOCATIONS # +# 2. LOCAL SET-UP DOCUMENTATION # +# 3. DEBUGGING # +# 4. ACCESS CONTROL AND SECURITY # +# 5. FORWARDING # +# 6. WINDOWS GUI OPTIONS # +# # +#################################################################### +# +# +# I. INTRODUCTION +# =============== +# +# This file holds the Privoxy configuration. If you modify this file, +# you will need to send a couple of requests to the proxy before any +# changes take effect. +# +# When starting Privoxy on Unix systems, give the name of this file as +# an argument. On Windows systems, Privoxy will look for this file +# with the name 'config.txt' in the same directory where Privoxy +# is installed. +# +# +# II. FORMAT OF THE CONFIGURATION FILE +# ==================================== +# +# Configuration lines consist of an initial keyword followed by a +# list of values, all separated by whitespace (any number of spaces +# or tabs). For example, +# +# actionsfile default.action +# +# Indicates that the actionsfile is named 'default.action'. +# +# The '#' indicates a comment. Any part of a line following a '#' +# is ignored, except if the '#' is preceded by a '\'. +# +# Thus, by placing a # at the start of an existing configuration line, +# you can make it a comment and it will be treated as if it weren't +# there. This is called "commenting out" an option and can be useful. +# +# Note that commenting out and option and leaving it at its default +# are two completely different things! Most options behave very +# differently when unset. See the the "Effect if unset" explanation +# in each option's description for details. +# +# Long lines can be continued on the next line by using a `\' as the +# last character. +# + +# +# 1. CONFIGURATION AND LOG FILE LOCATIONS +# ======================================= +# +# Privoxy can (and normally does) use a number of other files for +# additional configuration, help and logging. This section of the +# configuration file tells Privoxy where to find those other files. +# +# The user running Privoxy, must have read permission for all +# configuration files, and write permission to any files that would +# be modified, such as log files and actions files. +# + +# +# 1.1. confdir +# ============ +# +# Specifies: +# +# The directory where the other configuration files are located +# +# Type of value: +# +# Path name +# +# Default value: +# +# /etc/privoxy (Unix) or Privoxy installation dir (Windows) +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Mandatory +# +# Notes: +# +# No trailing "/", please +# +# When development goes modular and multi-user, the blocker, +# filter, and per-user config will be stored in subdirectories of +# "confdir". For now, the configuration directory structure is +# flat, except for confdir/templates, where the HTML templates +# for CGI output reside (e.g. Privoxy's 404 error page). +# +confdir /etc/privoxy + +# +# 1.2. logdir +# =========== +# +# Specifies: +# +# The directory where all logging takes place (i.e. where logfile +# and jarfile are located) +# +# Type of value: +# +# Path name +# +# Default value: +# +# /var/log/privoxy (Unix) or Privoxy installation dir (Windows) +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Mandatory +# +# Notes: +# +# No trailing "/", please +# +#logdir /var/log/privoxy + +# We dont want logging +logdir + +# +# 1.3. actionsfile +# ================ +# +# Specifies: +# +# The actions file(s) to use +# +# Type of value: +# +# File name, relative to confdir, without the .action suffix +# +# Default values: +# +# standard # Internal purposes, no editing recommended +# +# default # Main actions file +# +# user # User customizations +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# No actions are taken at all. Simple neutral proxying. +# +# Notes: +# +# Multiple actionsfile lines are permitted, and are in fact +# recommended! +# +# The default values include standard.action, which is used +# for internal purposes and should be loaded, default.action, +# which is the "main" actions file maintained by the developers, +# and user.action, where you can make your personal additions. +# +# Actions files are where all the per site and per URL +# configuration is done for ad blocking, cookie management, +# privacy considerations, etc. There is no point in using Privoxy +# without at least one actions file. +# +actionsfile standard # Internal purpose, recommended +actionsfile default # Main actions file +actionsfile user # User customizations + +# +# 1.4. filterfile +# =============== +# +# Specifies: +# +# The filter file to use +# +# Type of value: +# +# File name, relative to confdir +# +# Default value: +# +# default.filter (Unix) or default.filter.txt (Windows) +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# No textual content filtering takes place, i.e. all +filter{name} +# actions in the actions files are turned neutral. +# +# Notes: +# +# The filter file contains content modification rules that use +# regular expressions. These rules permit powerful changes on the +# content of Web pages, e.g., you could disable your favorite +# JavaScript annoyances, re-write the actual displayed text, +# or just have some fun replacing "Microsoft" with "MicroSuck" +# wherever it appears on a Web page. +# +# The +filter{name} actions rely on the relevant filter (name) +# to be defined in the filter file! +# +# A pre-defined filter file called default.filter that contains +# a bunch of handy filters for common problems is included in the +# distribution. See the section on the filter action for a list. +# +filterfile default.filter + +# +# 1.5. logfile +# ============ +# +# Specifies: +# +# The log file to use +# +# Type of value: +# +# File name, relative to logdir +# +# Default value: +# +# logfile (Unix) or privoxy.log (Windows) +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# No log file is used, all log messages go to the console (STDERR). +# +# Notes: +# +# The windows version will additionally log to the console. +# +# The logfile is where all logging and error messages are +# written. The level of detail and number of messages are set with +# the debug option (see below). The logfile can be useful for +# tracking down a problem with Privoxy (e.g., it's not blocking +# an ad you think it should block) but in most cases you probably +# will never look at it. +# +# Your logfile will grow indefinitely, and you will probably +# want to periodically remove it. On Unix systems, you can do +# this with a cron job (see "man cron"). For Red Hat, a logrotate +# script has been included. +# +# On SuSE Linux systems, you can place a line like +# "/var/log/privoxy.* +1024k 644 nobody.nogroup" in /etc/logfiles, +# with the effect that cron.daily will automatically archive, +# gzip, and empty the log, when it exceeds 1M size. +# +# Any log files must be writable by whatever user Privoxy is +# being run as (default on UNIX, user id is "privoxy"). +# +#logfile logfile + +# We dont want logging +logfile + +# +# 1.6. jarfile +# ============ +# +# Specifies: +# +# The file to store intercepted cookies in +# +# Type of value: +# +# File name, relative to logdir +# +# Default value: +# +# jarfile (Unix) or privoxy.jar (Windows) +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Intercepted cookies are not stored at all. +# +# Notes: +# +# The jarfile may grow to ridiculous sizes over time. +# +#jarfile jarfile +jarfile + +# +# 1.7. trustfile +# ============== +# +# Specifies: +# +# The trust file to use +# +# Type of value: +# +# File name, relative to confdir +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset (commented out). When activated: trust (Unix) or trust.txt +# (Windows) +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# The entire trust mechanism is turned off. +# +# Notes: +# +# The trust mechanism is an experimental feature for building +# white-lists and should be used with care. It is NOT recommended +# for the casual user. +# +# If you specify a trust file, Privoxy will only allow access to +# sites that are specified in the trustfile. Sites can be listed +# in one of two ways: +# +# Prepending a ~ character limits access to this site only (and +# any sub-paths within this site), e.g. ~www.example.com. +# +# Or, you can designate sites as trusted referrers, by prepending +# the name with a + character. The effect is that access to +# untrusted sites will be granted -- but only if a link from this +# trusted referrer was used. The link target will then be added +# to the "trustfile" so that future, direct accesses will be +# granted. Sites added via this mechanism do not become trusted +# referrers themselves (i.e. they are added with a ~ designation). +# +# If you use the + operator in the trust file, it may grow +# considerably over time. +# +# It is recommended that Privoxy be compiled with the +# --disable-force, --disable-toggle and --disable-editor options, +# if this feature is to be used. +# +# Possible applications include limiting Internet access for +# children. +# +#trustfile trust + +# +# 2. LOCAL SET-UP DOCUMENTATION +# ============================= +# +# If you intend to operate Privoxy for more users than just yourself, +# it might be a good idea to let them know how to reach you, what +# you block and why you do that, your policies, etc. +# + +# +# 2.1. user-manual +# ================ +# +# Specifies: +# +# Location of the Privoxy User Manual. +# +# Type of value: +# +# A fully qualified URI +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# http://www.privoxy.org/version/user-manual/ will be used, +# where version is the Privoxy version. +# +# Notes: +# +# The User Manual URI is used for help links from some of the +# internal CGI pages. The manual itself is normally packaged +# with the binary distributions, so you probably want to set this +# to a locally installed copy. For multi-user setups, you could +# provide a copy on a local webserver for all your users and use +# the corresponding URL here. +# +# Examples: +# +# Unix, in local filesystem: +# +# user-manual file:///usr/share/doc/privoxy-3.0.1/user-manual/index.html +# +# Windows, in local filesystem, must use forward slash notation, +# and %20 to denote spaces in path names: +# +# user-manual file:///c:/some%20dir/privoxy/user-manual/index.html +# +# Windows, UNC notation (forward slashes required again): +# +# user-manual file://///some-server/some-path/privoxy/user-manual/index.html +# +# Any platform, on local webserver (called "local-webserver"): +# +# user-manual http://local-webserver/privoxy-user-manual/ +# +# WARNING!!! +# +# If set, this option should be the first option in the config +# file, because it is used while the config file is being read. +# +user-manual /usr/share/doc/privoxy/user-manual + +# +# 2.2. trust-info-url +# =================== +# +# Specifies: +# +# A URL to be displayed in the error page that users will see if +# access to an untrusted page is denied. +# +# Type of value: +# +# URL +# +# Default value: +# +# Two example URL are provided +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# No links are displayed on the "untrusted" error page. +# +# Notes: +# +# The value of this option only matters if the experimental trust +# mechanism has been activated. (See trustfile above.) +# +# If you use the trust mechanism, it is a good idea to write +# up some on-line documentation about your trust policy and to +# specify the URL(s) here. Use multiple times for multiple URLs. +# +# The URL(s) should be added to the trustfile as well, so users +# don't end up locked out from the information on why they were +# locked out in the first place! +# +#trust-info-url http://www.example.com/why_we_block.html +#trust-info-url http://www.example.com/what_we_allow.html + +# +# 2.3. admin-address +# ================== +# +# Specifies: +# +# An email address to reach the proxy administrator. +# +# Type of value: +# +# Email address +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# No email address is displayed on error pages and the CGI user +# interface. +# +# Notes: +# +# If both admin-address and proxy-info-url are unset, the whole +# "Local Privoxy Support" box on all generated pages will not +# be shown. +# +#admin-address privoxy-admin@example.com + +# +# 2.4. proxy-info-url +# =================== +# +# Specifies: +# +# A URL to documentation about the local Privoxy setup, +# configuration or policies. +# +# Type of value: +# +# URL +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# No link to local documentation is displayed on error pages and +# the CGI user interface. +# +# Notes: +# +# If both admin-address and proxy-info-url are unset, the whole +# "Local Privoxy Support" box on all generated pages will not +# be shown. +# +# This URL shouldn't be blocked ;-) +# +#proxy-info-url http://www.example.com/proxy-service.html + +# +# 3. DEBUGGING +# ============ +# +# These options are mainly useful when tracing a problem. Note that +# you might also want to invoke Privoxy with the --no-daemon command +# line option when debugging. +# + +# +# 3.1. debug +# ========== +# +# Specifies: +# +# Key values that determine what information gets logged to +# the logfile. +# +# Type of value: +# +# Integer values +# +# Default value: +# +# 12289 (i.e.: URLs plus informational and warning messages) +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Nothing gets logged. +# +# Notes: +# +# The available debug levels are: +# +# debug 1 # show each GET/POST/CONNECT request +# debug 2 # show each connection status +# debug 4 # show I/O status +# debug 8 # show header parsing +# debug 16 # log all data into the logfile +# debug 32 # debug force feature +# debug 64 # debug regular expression filter +# debug 128 # debug fast redirects +# debug 256 # debug GIF de-animation +# debug 512 # Common Log Format +# debug 1024 # debug kill pop-ups +# debug 2048 # CGI user interface +# debug 4096 # Startup banner and warnings. +# debug 8192 # Non-fatal errors +# +# To select multiple debug levels, you can either add them or +# use multiple debug lines. +# +# A debug level of 1 is informative because it will show you each +# request as it happens. 1, 4096 and 8192 are highly recommended +# so that you will notice when things go wrong. The other levels +# are probably only of interest if you are hunting down a specific +# problem. They can produce a hell of an output (especially 16). +# +# The reporting of fatal errors (i.e. ones which crash Privoxy) +# is always on and cannot be disabled. +# +# If you want to use CLF (Common Log Format), you should set +# "debug 512" ONLY and not enable anything else. +# +#debug 1 # show each GET/POST/CONNECT request +#debug 4096 # Startup banner and warnings +debug 8192 # Errors - *we highly recommended enabling this* + +# +# 3.2. single-threaded +# ==================== +# +# Specifies: +# +# Whether to run only one server thread +# +# Type of value: +# +# None +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Multi-threaded (or, where unavailable: forked) operation, +# i.e. the ability to serve multiple requests simultaneously. +# +# Notes: +# +# This option is only there for debug purposes and you should +# never need to use it. It will drastically reduce performance. +# +#single-threaded + +# +# 4. ACCESS CONTROL AND SECURITY +# ============================== +# +# This section of the config file controls the security-relevant +# aspects of Privoxy's configuration. +# + +# +# 4.1. listen-address +# =================== +# +# Specifies: +# +# The IP address and TCP port on which Privoxy will listen for +# client requests. +# +# Type of value: +# +# [IP-Address]:Port +# +# Default value: +# +# 127.0.0.1:8118 +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Bind to 127.0.0.1 (localhost), port 8118. This is suitable and +# recommended for home users who run Privoxy on the same machine +# as their browser. +# +# Notes: +# +# You will need to configure your browser(s) to this proxy address +# and port. +# +# If you already have another service running on port 8118, or +# if you want to serve requests from other machines (e.g. on your +# local network) as well, you will need to override the default. +# +# If you leave out the IP address, Privoxy will bind to all +# interfaces (addresses) on your machine and may become reachable +# from the Internet. In that case, consider using access control +# lists (ACL's, see below), and/or a firewall. +# +# If you open Privoxy to untrusted users, you will also want +# to turn off the enable-edit-actions and enable-remote-toggle +# options! +# +# Example: +# +# Suppose you are running Privoxy on a machine which has the +# address 192.168.0.1 on your local private network (192.168.0.0) +# and has another outside connection with a different address. You +# want it to serve requests from inside only: +# +# listen-address 192.168.0.1:8118 +# +listen-address 127.0.0.1:8118 + +# +# 4.2. toggle +# =========== +# +# Specifies: +# +# Initial state of "toggle" status +# +# Type of value: +# +# 1 or 0 +# +# Default value: +# +# 1 +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Act as if toggled on +# +# Notes: +# +# If set to 0, Privoxy will start in "toggled off" mode, +# i.e. behave like a normal, content-neutral proxy where all ad +# blocking, filtering, etc are disabled. See enable-remote-toggle +# below. This is not really useful anymore, since toggling is +# much easier via the web interface than via editing the conf file. +# +# The windows version will only display the toggle icon in the +# system tray if this option is present. +# +toggle 1 + +# +# 4.3. enable-remote-toggle +# ========================= +# +# Specifies: +# +# Whether or not the web-based toggle feature may be used +# +# Type of value: +# +# 0 or 1 +# +# Default value: +# +# 1 +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# The web-based toggle feature is disabled. +# +# Notes: +# +# When toggled off, Privoxy acts like a normal, content-neutral +# proxy, i.e. it acts as if none of the actions applied to +# any URL. +# +# For the time being, access to the toggle feature can not be +# controlled separately by "ACLs" or HTTP authentication, so that +# everybody who can access Privoxy (see "ACLs" and listen-address +# above) can toggle it for all users. So this option is not +# recommended for multi-user environments with untrusted users. +# +# Note that you must have compiled Privoxy with support for this +# feature, otherwise this option has no effect. +# +enable-remote-toggle 0 + +# +# 4.4. enable-edit-actions +# ======================== +# +# Specifies: +# +# Whether or not the web-based actions file editor may be used +# +# Type of value: +# +# 0 or 1 +# +# Default value: +# +# 1 +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# The web-based actions file editor is disabled. +# +# Notes: +# +# For the time being, access to the editor can not be controlled +# separately by "ACLs" or HTTP authentication, so that everybody +# who can access Privoxy (see "ACLs" and listen-address above) +# can modify its configuration for all users. So this option is +# not recommended for multi-user environments with untrusted users. +# +# Note that you must have compiled Privoxy with support for this +# feature, otherwise this option has no effect. +# +enable-edit-actions 0 + +# +# 4.5. ACLs: permit-access and deny-access +# ======================================== +# +# Specifies: +# +# Who can access what. +# +# Type of value: +# +# src_addr[/src_masklen] [dst_addr[/dst_masklen]] +# +# Where src_addr and dst_addr are IP addresses in dotted decimal +# notation or valid DNS names, and src_masklen and dst_masklen are +# subnet masks in CIDR notation, i.e. integer values from 2 to 30 +# representing the length (in bits) of the network address. The +# masks and the whole destination part are optional. +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Don't restrict access further than implied by listen-address +# +# Notes: +# +# Access controls are included at the request of ISPs and systems +# administrators, and are not usually needed by individual +# users. For a typical home user, it will normally suffice to +# ensure that Privoxy only listens on the localhost (127.0.0.1) +# or internal (home) network address by means of the listen-address +# option. +# +# Please see the warnings in the FAQ that this proxy is not +# intended to be a substitute for a firewall or to encourage +# anyone to defer addressing basic security weaknesses. +# +# Multiple ACL lines are OK. If any ACLs are specified, then +# the Privoxy talks only to IP addresses that match at least one +# permit-access line and don't match any subsequent deny-access +# line. In other words, the last match wins, with the default +# being deny-access. +# +# If Privoxy is using a forwarder (see forward below) for a +# particular destination URL, the dst_addr that is examined is +# the address of the forwarder and NOT the address of the ultimate +# target. This is necessary because it may be impossible for the +# local Privoxy to determine the IP address of the ultimate target +# (that's often what gateways are used for). +# +# You should prefer using IP addresses over DNS names, because +# the address lookups take time. All DNS names must resolve! You +# can not use domain patterns like "*.org" or partial domain +# names. If a DNS name resolves to multiple IP addresses, only +# the first one is used. +# +# Denying access to particular sites by ACL may have undesired +# side effects if the site in question is hosted on a machine +# which also hosts other sites. +# +# Examples: +# +# Explicitly define the default behavior if no ACL and +# listen-address are set: "localhost" is OK. The absence of a +# dst_addr implies that all destination addresses are OK: +# +# permit-access localhost +# +# Allow any host on the same class C subnet as www.privoxy.org +# access to nothing but www.example.com: +# +# permit-access www.privoxy.org/24 www.example.com/32 +# +# Allow access from any host on the 26-bit subnet 192.168.45.64 +# to anywhere, with the exception that 192.168.45.73 may not +# access www.dirty-stuff.example.com: +# +# permit-access 192.168.45.64/26 +# deny-access 192.168.45.73 www.dirty-stuff.example.com +# + +# +# 4.6. buffer-limit +# ================= +# +# Specifies: +# +# Maximum size of the buffer for content filtering. +# +# Type of value: +# +# Size in Kbytes +# +# Default value: +# +# 4096 +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Use a 4MB (4096 KB) limit. +# +# Notes: +# +# For content filtering, i.e. the +filter and +deanimate-gif +# actions, it is necessary that Privoxy buffers the entire document +# body. This can be potentially dangerous, since a server could +# just keep sending data indefinitely and wait for your RAM to +# exhaust -- with nasty consequences. Hence this option. +# +# When a document buffer size reaches the buffer-limit, it is +# flushed to the client unfiltered and no further attempt to filter +# the rest of the document is made. Remember that there may be +# multiple threads running, which might require up to buffer-limit +# Kbytes each, unless you have enabled "single-threaded" above. +# +buffer-limit 4096 + +# +# 5. FORWARDING +# ============= +# +# This feature allows routing of HTTP requests through a chain +# of multiple proxies. It can be used to better protect privacy +# and confidentiality when accessing specific domains by routing +# requests to those domains through an anonymous public proxy +# or to use a caching proxy to speed up browsing. Or chaining to +# a parent proxy may be necessary because the machine that Privoxy +# runs on has no direct Internet access. +# +# Also specified here are SOCKS proxies. Privoxy supports the SOCKS +# 4 and SOCKS 4A protocols. +# + +# +# 5.1. forward +# ============ +# +# Specifies: +# +# To which parent HTTP proxy specific requests should be routed. +# +# Type of value: +# +# target_pattern http_parent[:port] +# +# where target_pattern is a URL pattern that specifies to which +# requests (i.e. URLs) this forward rule shall apply. Use / +# to denote "all URLs". http_parent[:port] is the DNS name or +# IP address of the parent HTTP proxy through which the requests +# should be forwarded, optionally followed by its listening port +# (default: 8080). Use a single dot (.) to denote "no forwarding". +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Don't use parent HTTP proxies. +# +# Notes: +# +# If http_parent is ".", then requests are not forwarded to +# another HTTP proxy but are made directly to the web servers. +# +# Multiple lines are OK, they are checked in sequence, and the +# last match wins. +# +# Examples: +# +# Everything goes to an example anonymizing proxy, except SSL on +# port 443 (which it doesn't handle): +# +# forward / anon-proxy.example.org:8080 +# forward :443 . +# +# Everything goes to our example ISP's caching proxy, except for +# requests to that ISP's sites: +# +# forward / caching-proxy.example-isp.net:8000 +# forward .example-isp.net . +# + +# +# 5.2. forward-socks4 and forward-socks4a +# ======================================= +# +# Specifies: +# +# Through which SOCKS proxy (and to which parent HTTP proxy) +# specific requests should be routed. +# +# Type of value: +# +# target_pattern socks_proxy[:port] http_parent[:port] +# +# where target_pattern is a URL pattern that specifies to which +# requests (i.e. URLs) this forward rule shall apply. Use / to +# denote "all URLs". http_parent and socks_proxy are IP addresses +# in dotted decimal notation or valid DNS names (http_parent may +# be "." to denote "no HTTP forwarding"), and the optional port +# parameters are TCP ports, i.e. integer values from 1 to 64535 +# +# Default value: +# +# Unset +# +# Effect if unset: +# +# Don't use SOCKS proxies. +# +# Notes: +# +# Multiple lines are OK, they are checked in sequence, and the +# last match wins. +# +# The difference between forward-socks4 and forward-socks4a +# is that in the SOCKS 4A protocol, the DNS resolution of the +# target hostname happens on the SOCKS server, while in SOCKS 4 +# it happens locally. +# +# If http_parent is ".", then requests are not forwarded to another +# HTTP proxy but are made (HTTP-wise) directly to the web servers, +# albeit through a SOCKS proxy. +# +# Examples: +# +# From the company example.com, direct connections are made to all +# "internal" domains, but everything outbound goes through their +# ISP's proxy by way of example.com's corporate SOCKS 4A gateway +# to the Internet. +# +# forward-socks4a / socks-gw.example.com:1080 www-cache.example-isp.net:8080 +# forward .example.com . +# +# A rule that uses a SOCKS 4 gateway for all destinations but no +# HTTP parent looks like this: +# +# forward-socks4 / socks-gw.example.com:1080 . +# + +# +# UNCOMMENT THE FOLLOWING TO USE TOR OVER PRIVOXY +# +#forward-socks4a / localhost:9050 . + + +# +# 6. WINDOWS GUI OPTIONS +# ====================== +# +# Privoxy has a number of options specific to the Windows GUI +# interface: +# + +# If "activity-animation" is set to 1, the Privoxy icon will animate +# when "Privoxy" is active. To turn off, set to 0. +# +#activity-animation 1 + +# If "log-messages" is set to 1, Privoxy will log messages to the +# console window: +# +#log-messages 1 + +# If "log-buffer-size" is set to 1, the size of the log buffer, +# i.e. the amount of memory used for the log messages displayed in +# the console window, will be limited to "log-max-lines" (see below). +# +# Warning: Setting this to 0 will result in the buffer to grow +# infinitely and eat up all your memory! +# +#log-buffer-size 1 + +# log-max-lines is the maximum number of lines held in the log +# buffer. See above. +# +#log-max-lines 200 + +# If "log-highlight-messages" is set to 1, Privoxy will highlight +# portions of the log messages with a bold-faced font: +# +#log-highlight-messages 1 + +# The font used in the console window: +# +#log-font-name Comic Sans MS + +# Font size used in the console window: +# +#log-font-size 8 + +# "show-on-task-bar" controls whether or not Privoxy will appear as +# a button on the Task bar when minimized: +# +#show-on-task-bar 0 + +# If "close-button-minimizes" is set to 1, the Windows close button +# will minimize Privoxy instead of closing the program (close with +# the exit option on the File menu). +# +#close-button-minimizes 1 + +# The "hide-console" option is specific to the MS-Win console version +# of Privoxy. If this option is used, Privoxy will disconnect from +# and hide the command console. +# +#hide-console + +# diff --git a/recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.init b/recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.init new file mode 100755 index 0000000000..3140c2a30e --- /dev/null +++ b/recipes/privoxy/files/privoxy.init @@ -0,0 +1,49 @@ + +#! /bin/sh +# +# This is an init script for Privoxy on Openzaurus +# + +PRIVOXY_PRG="privoxy" +PRIVOXY_BIN="/usr/sbin/$PRIVOXY_PRG" +PRIVOXY_CONF="/etc/$PRIVOXY_PRG/config" +PRIVOXY_USER="privoxy" +PRIVOXY_PID=/var/run/$PRIVOXY_PRG.pid +PRIVOXY_LOCK=/var/lock/subsys/$PRIVOXY_PRG +PRIVOXY="$PRIVOXY_BIN --user $PRIVOXY_USER --pidfile $PRIVOXY_PID $PRIVOXY_CONF" + +test -f $PRIVOXY_BIN || exit 0 +test -f $PRIVOXY_CONF || exit 0 +test -d /var/log/privoxy || mkdir /var/log/privoxy && chown privoxy:privoxy /var/log/privoxy + +case "$1" in + start) + echo -n "Starting privoxy daemon" + + if [ -f $PRIVOXY_PID ]; then + killall privoxy && rm -f $PRIVOXY_LOCK $PRIVOXY_PID + fi + + start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --exec $PRIVOXY + echo "." + ;; + stop) + echo -n "Stopping privoxy daemon" + killall $PRIVOXY_PRG + echo "." + ;; + restart) + echo -n "Stopping privoxy daemon" + killall $PRIVOXY_PRG + echo "." + + echo -n "Starting privoxy daemon" + start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --exec $PRIVOXY + echo "." + ;; + *) + echo "Usage: /etc/init.d/tor {start|stop|restart|start_socats|stop_socats}" + exit 1 +esac + +exit 0 diff --git a/recipes/privoxy/privoxy_3.0.3.bb b/recipes/privoxy/privoxy_3.0.3.bb new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..55580b1aa5 --- /dev/null +++ b/recipes/privoxy/privoxy_3.0.3.bb @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ +DESCRIPTION = "Privoxy is a web proxy with advanced filtering capabilities for protecting \ + privacy, modifying web page content, managing cookies, controlling access, and \ + removing ads, banners, pop-ups and other obnoxious Internet junk." +SECTION = "console/network" +PRIORITY = "optional" +LICENSE = "GPL" +DEPENDS = "pcre" +PR = "r0" + +SRC_URI = "${SOURCEFORGE_MIRROR}/ijbswa/privoxy-${PV}-stable-src.tar.gz \ + file://privoxy.conf \ + file://privoxy.init" + +S = "${WORKDIR}/privoxy-${PV}-stable" + +inherit autotools update-rc.d + +LDFLAGS += "-L${STAGING_LIBDIR}" +CFLAGS += "-L${STAGING_LIBDIR} -I${STAGING_INCDIR}" + +INITSCRIPT_NAME = "privoxy" + +do_compile() { + autoheader && autoconf && ./configure --host=localhost --disable-pthread + oe_runmake CFLAGS="${CFLAGS}" LDFLAGS="${LDFLAGS}" +} + +do_install() { + mkdir -p ${D}/${sbindir} + install -m 0755 ${S}/privoxy ${D}/${sbindir} + + # Documentation + mkdir -p ${D}/${docdir} + install -m 0755 -d ${S}/doc ${D}/${docdir} + + # Install man page + mkdir -p ${D}/${mandir} + install -m 0755 ${S}/privoxy.1 ${D}/${mandir} +} + + +do_install_append() { + # Install config files + install -d ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/templates + install ${WORKDIR}/privoxy.conf ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/config + install ${S}/templates/* ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/templates/ + install ${S}/default.action ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/ + install ${S}/default.filter ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/ + install ${S}/standard.action ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/ + install ${S}/trust ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/ + install ${S}/user.action ${D}${sysconfdir}/privoxy/ + + # Install init script + install -d ${D}${sysconfdir}/init.d + install ${WORKDIR}/privoxy.init ${D}${sysconfdir}/init.d/privoxy +} + +# Add user and groups +pkg_postinst() { + grep -q privoxy: /etc/group || addgroup privoxy + grep -q privoxy: /etc/passwd || adduser --disabled-password --home=/etc/privoxy \ + --ingroup privoxy -g "Privoxy" privoxy +} |