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bbs is a router for SOCKS and HTTP proxies. It exposes a SOCKS5 (or HTTP CONNECT) service and forwards incoming requests to proxies or chains of proxies based on the request's target. Routing can be configured with a PAC script (if built with PAC support), or through a JSON file.

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BBS

Description

bbs is a router for SOCKS and HTTP proxies. It exposes a SOCKS5 (or HTTP CONNECT) service and forwards incoming requests to proxies or chains of proxies based on the request's target. Routing can be configured with a PAC script (if built with PAC support), or through a JSON file.

Install

go install github.com/synacktiv/bbs@master

To install bbs with PAC script support:

go install -tags pac github.com/synacktiv/bbs@master

Note: PAC relies on unaudited third-party libraries.

Configuration

Configuration is performed through 2 files:

  • Routing rules (PAC script or JSON file)
  • Proxies and chains parameters (JSON file)

bbs reloads configuration files on SIGHUP, use kill -HUP <pid> to reload.

Proxies and chains JSON configuration

Upstream proxies and chains must be declared in a JSON configuration file (bbs.json by default, or -c <path>). The file should follow the structure from the provided example.

For proxies:

  • prot, host and port are required
  • user and pass are optional
  • prot can be socks5 or httpconnect

Chains have proxychains-like parameters (cf. https://github.com/rofl0r/proxychains-ng). The proxies key of a chain must contain an array of proxy names declared as keys in the proxies section.

The routing blocks of the JSON file or the PAC function must return declared chain names, not proxy names. If you want to use a single proxy, you must wrap it in a chain. The drop name is special and does not need to be declared in this configuration. If the PAC function or a routing block returns drop as a chain name, then the connection is dropped.

Configuration example:

{
  "proxies": {
    "proxy1": {
      "prot": "socks5",
      "host": "127.0.0.1",
      "port": "1337"
    },
    "proxy2": {
      "prot": "socks5",
      "host": "127.0.0.1",
      "port": "1338"
    },
    "proxy3": {
      "prot": "httpconnect",
      "host": "127.0.0.1",
      "port": "8080",
      "user": "foo",
      "pass": "bar"
    }
  },
  "chains": {
    "chain1": {
      "proxyDns": true,
      "tcpConnectTimeout": 1000,
      "tcpReadTimeout": 2000,
      "proxies": [
        "proxy1",
        "proxy2"
      ]
    },
    "chain2": {
      "proxies": [
        "proxy1"
      ]
    },
    "direct": {
      "proxies": []
    }
  }
}

Routing JSON configuration

The built-in configuration mode for routing is a JSON file. It associates addresses with chain names. The file must contain an array of rule blocks. Each rule block contains a comment, a set of rules, and an associated chain name. Rules are evaluated: given an address in the host:port format, they can be true or false. For a given address, blocks are evaluated in their declaration order. The evaluation stops at the first block that is true and the associated chain name is returned.

Here is an example configuration:

[
  {
    "comment": "Block1 comment",
    "rules": {
      "rule": "regexp",
      "variable": "host",
      "content": "me\\.gandi\\.net"
    },
    "route": "chain2"
  },
  {
    "comment": "Route web traffic towards 10.35.0.0/16 through chain1",
    "rules": {
      "rule1": {
        "rule": "subnet",
        "content": "10.35.0.0/16"
      },
      "op": "AND",
      "rule2": {
        "rule": "regexp",
        "variable": "port",
        "content": "^(80|443)$"
      }
    },
    "route": "chain1"
  },
  {
    "comment": "Drop traffic to 445",
    "rules": {
      "rule": "regexp",
      "variable": "port",
      "content": "^445$"
    },
    "route": "drop"
  },
  {
    "comment": "Default routing through direct chain",
    "rules": {
      "rule": "true"
    },
    "route": "direct"
  }
]

Block fields:

  • comment (string)
  • rules (Rule or RuleCombo)
  • route (string)

Rule fields:

  • rule (string): rule type, regexp, subnet or true.
  • variable (string): variable for regexp evaluation, host, port or addr (host:port).
  • content (string): content of the rule, depends on the rule type (see below).
  • negate (bool) [optional]: whether to negate the rule.

RuleCombo fields:

  • rule1 (Rule or RuleCombo): left operand.
  • op (string): operator, AND, And, and, &, &&, OR, Or, or, |, ||.
  • rule2 (Rule or RuleCombo): right operand.

Rule types:

  • regexp: match the variable defined in variable (host, port or addr=host:port) against the regexp in content.
  • subnet: checks if host is in the subnet defined in content. If host is a domain name and not a subnet address, the rule returns false.
  • true: returns true for every address. Useful for default routing at the end of the block array.

The path of the routing configuration can be set with the -routes flag. If bbs is built without PAC support, -routes default value is routes.json. If bbs is built with PAC support, -routes has no default value and must be explicitly defined in order to use a JSON file for routing (note that with PAC support, -routes and -pac are mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive)

PAC script

If bbs is built with PAC support, routing can be configured with a PAC script instead of a JSON configuration file. However, this requires using an untrusted Go library. The PAC file path must be provided with -pac. At least one of -pac and -routes argument (but not both) must be provided.

The PAC script must define the FindProxyForURL(url, host) function. The values returned by this function must match the names of the chains (not the proxies) declared in the JSON configuration.

Custom host resolution

Custom host resolution (similar to /etc/hosts) can be configured in a JSON file. The path to the file must be passed in -custom-hosts. The file must have the following format:

{
  "host1.domain.com": "10.0.0.1",
  "host2": "192.0.0.1",
  "host3": "127.0.0.1"
}

About

bbs is a router for SOCKS and HTTP proxies. It exposes a SOCKS5 (or HTTP CONNECT) service and forwards incoming requests to proxies or chains of proxies based on the request's target. Routing can be configured with a PAC script (if built with PAC support), or through a JSON file.

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