72

I'm trying to setup the HTTP client so that it uses a proxy, however I cannot quite understand how to do it. The documentation has multiple reference to "proxy" but none of the functions seem to allow to define the proxy. What I need is something like this:

client := &http.Client{}
client.SetProxy("someip:someport") // pseudo code
resp, err := client.Get("http://example.com") // do request through proxy

Any idea how to do this in Go?

6 Answers 6

156

lukad is correct, you could set the HTTP_PROXY environment variable, if you do this Go will use it by default.

Bash:

export HTTP_PROXY="http://proxyIp:proxyPort"

Go:

os.Setenv("HTTP_PROXY", "http://proxyIp:proxyPort")

You could also construct your own http.Client that MUST use a proxy regardless of the environment's configuration:

proxyUrl, err := url.Parse("http://proxyIp:proxyPort")
myClient := &http.Client{Transport: &http.Transport{Proxy: http.ProxyURL(proxyUrl)}}

This is useful if you can not depend on the environment's configuration, or do not want to modify it.

You could also modify the default transport used by the "net/http" package. This would affect your entire program (including the default HTTP client).

proxyUrl, err := url.Parse("http://proxyIp:proxyPort")
http.DefaultTransport = &http.Transport{Proxy: http.ProxyURL(proxyUrl)}
5
  • In fact, I need to concurrently send several requests, each using a different proxy, so your second solution is probably what I need. However, it doesn't seem to be working, I'm getting this error for all the proxies: Get http://stackoverflow.com: http: error connecting to proxy 87.236.233.92:8080: GetServByName: The requested name is valid, but no data of the requested type was found. Any idea what it means?
    – laurent
    Feb 3, 2013 at 5:36
  • 1
    I got my answer to this question there - stackoverflow.com/q/14669958/561309
    – laurent
    Feb 3, 2013 at 13:24
  • @voidlogic setting the env variable didn't work for me. I have to pass it to the http.Transport
    – PMat
    Mar 27, 2018 at 23:48
  • Would this also be possible with a socks5 proxy?
    – C4d
    Sep 19, 2018 at 11:12
  • If your proxy requires an username and password along with IP, the export HTTP_PROXY="http://proxyIp:proxyPort" becomes export HTTP_PROXY="http://PROXY_LOGIN:PROXY_PASS@proxyIp:proxyPort" Jan 18 at 10:30
17

Go will use the the proxy defined in the environment variable HTTP_PROXY if it's set. Otherwise it will use no proxy.

You could do it like this:

os.Setenv("HTTP_PROXY", "http://someip:someport")
resp, err := http.Get("http://example.com")
if err != nil {
    panic(err)
}
1
8

May you could also try this:

url_i := url.URL{}
url_proxy, _ := url_i.Parse(proxy_addr)

transport := http.Transport{}    
transport.Proxy = http.ProxyURL(url_proxy)// set proxy 
transport.TLSClientConfig = &tls.Config{InsecureSkipVerify: true} //set ssl

client := &http.Client{}
client.Transport = transport
resp, err := client.Get("http://example.com") // do request through proxy
3
  • 2
    I think you mean: transport := &http.Transport{} Feb 28, 2020 at 0:59
  • 1
    make sure you actually want InsecureSkipVerify before you paste this in to your code
    – 9072997
    Nov 19, 2020 at 14:59
  • 1
    hint: you don't want InsecureSkipVerify Nov 26, 2020 at 16:56
3

The Go built-in proxy use is briefly documented in the DefaultTransport:

// DefaultTransport .... It uses HTTP proxies
// as directed by the $HTTP_PROXY and $NO_PROXY (or $http_proxy and
// $no_proxy) environment variables.
var DefaultTransport RoundTripper = &Transport{
    Proxy: ProxyFromEnvironment,

This points to the usefulness of creating custom Transports from DefaultTransport vs. from scratch to take advantage of the built-in ProxyFromEnvironment function

1

If you run something like this:

HTTP_PROXY=89.x.y.z path_to_program

Then the HTTP_PROXY setting is set for that command only, which is useful if you don't want to set it for the whole shell session. Note: there's no ; between the setting and the path; if you put a semicolon, it would set (but not export) HTTP_PROXY for that shell

0

For an alternative way, you can also use GoRequest which has a feature that you can set proxy easily for any single request.

request := gorequest.New()
resp, body, errs:= request.Proxy("http://proxy:999").Get("http://example.com").End()
resp2, body2, errs2 := request.Proxy("http://proxy2:999").Get("http://example2.com").End()

Or you can set for the whole at once.

request := gorequest.New().Proxy("http://proxy:999")
resp, body, errs:= request.Get("http://example.com").End()
resp2, body2, errs2 := request.Get("http://example2.com").End()
1
  • gorequest does not support socks proxies
    – Roma Rush
    Dec 4, 2016 at 19:31

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