6

I need to set up proxy authentication against a SOCKS proxy. I found out this post giving instructions that appear to work with common HTTP proxies.

        httpclient.getHostConfiguration().setProxy("proxyserver.example.com", 8080);

        HttpState state = new HttpState();
        state.setProxyCredentials(new AuthScope("proxyserver.example.com", 8080), 
           new UsernamePasswordCredentials("username", "password"));
        httpclient.setState(state);

Would that work with SOCKS proxies as well or do I have to do something different?

5 Answers 5

6

Java supports Socks proxy configuration via preferences:

  • socksProxyHost for the host name of the SOCKS proxy server
  • socksProxyPort for the port number, the default value being 1080

e.g.

java -DsocksProxyHost=socks.mydomain.com

(edit) For your example, if the socks proxy was configured in the way outlined before:

httpclient.getHostConfiguration().setProxy("proxyserver.example.com", 8080);
Credentials cred = new UsernamePasswordCredentials("username","password");
httpclient.getState().setProxyCredentials(AuthScope.ANY, cred); 

You can also use this variant (without httpclient):

SocketAddress addr = new
InetSocketAddress("webcache.mydomain.com", 8080);
Proxy proxy = new Proxy(Proxy.Type.SOCKS, addr); // Type.HTTP for HTTP

So completing the previous example, we can now add:

URL url = new URL("http://java.sun.com/");
URConnection conn = url.openConnection(proxy);

HTH

2
  • is that a org.apache.http.client.HttpClient? i dont see those methods on httpClient 4.5.2! i mean getConfiguration() and getState() Jul 28, 2022 at 12:39
  • 1
    yea, they don't exist anymore. The original answer is now 13 years old.
    – tuergeist
    Jul 29, 2022 at 7:26
4

The Features page of Apache HTTPClient says:

Transparent connections through SOCKS proxies (version 4 & 5) using native Java socket support.

With "transparent", I guess they mean that it works without you needing to do anything special. Do you have a SOCKS proxy available somewhere? Can't you just try it out to see if it works?

1
  • I can't install a SOCKS proxy at my workplace, but I'll be testing that soon at a customer site. Thanks
    – abahgat
    Sep 9, 2009 at 7:50
4

SOCKS is not supported by HttpClient 3 natively. You can try the SOCKS support in JDK as suggested by others. The side effect is that your whole JVM will go through the same SOCKS proxy.

Java 5 supports Username/Password authentication in SOCKS (type 2). All you have to do is to setup the authenticator like this,

Authenticator.setDefault(new Authenticator() {
    protected PasswordAuthentication getPasswordAuthentication() {
        return new PasswordAuthentication(username, password.toCharArray());
    }
});

Again, this may not work for you because it affects all authentication in your JVM (HTTP auth, Proxy Auth).

3

You can provide a custom socket factory which implements the SOCKS protocol, and register it as your default HTTP protocol handler. This solution has a limitation similar to tuergeist's answer above has - it applies globally, to any HTTP connection you'll establish through HttpClient.

If you find this a problem, take a look at this correspondence, where Oleg suggests using HttpClient 4.0, but also refers to a possible patch in HostConfiguration class for HttpClient 3.x.

Another possible solution, which is my personal favorite, is to write a wrapper HTTP proxy to the socks proxy.

1
  • The link seems dead
    – Scheintod
    Mar 14, 2018 at 14:00
1

I tried

System.setProperty("socksProxyHost", "socks.xyz.com");
System.setProperty("socksProxyPort", "1000");

and it's working fine.

1
  • 2
    If you do that in Tomcat it sets the property for the whole Tomcat JVM. Other apps might not want that. May 14, 2013 at 22:38

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