Java rendition of node-mitmproxy
Make sure to read the prerequisites section below.
Detailed information included in the AppiumPro article which introduces this library.
mitmproxy
is great for capturing network traffic, but has no easy interface for Java users.
The software testing community, specifically Appium mobile testers, want to be able to capture network requests made by devices during their Java tests.
This library will run mitmproxy
in the background as a separate process, and allow you to pass in a lambda function which gets called on every network request captured by mitmproxy
. This allows you to check the captured requests within you Java code without having to stop the proxy or end capture.
See @jonahss's Appium Pro posts on this topic:
- https://appiumpro.com/editions/62
- https://appiumpro.com/editions/63
- https://appiumpro.com/editions/65
For transparently rewriting HTTP/HTTPS responses. The mitmproxy plugin lets every HTTP request go through to the server uninhibited, and then passes it to Java via a WebSocket for rewriting.
mitmproxy-java
starts a Websocket server and a Python plugin for mitmproxy
connects to it and sends requests over. The two communicate via binary messages to reduce marshaling-related overhead.
mitmproxy
V4 must be installed and runnable from the terminal. The install method cannot be a prebuilt binary or homebrew, since those packages are missing the Python websockets module. Install viapip
or from source.- Python 3.6, since we use the new async/await syntax in the mitmproxy plugin
pip3 install websockets
Maven:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.appium</groupId>
<artifactId>mitmproxy-java</artifactId>
<version>1.6.2</version>
</dependency>
Gradle:
testCompile group: 'io.appium', name: 'mitmproxy-java', version: '1.6.1'
List<InterceptedMessage> messages = new ArrayList<InterceptedMessage>();
//optional, default port is 8080
int mitmproxyPort = 8090;
//optional, you can pass null if no extra params
List<String> extraMitmproxyParams = Arrays.asList("param1", "value1", "param2", "value2");
// remember to set local OS proxy settings in the Network Preferences
proxy = new MitmproxyJava("/usr/local/bin/mitmdump", (InterceptedMessage m) -> {
System.out.println("intercepted request for " + m.getRequest().getUrl());
messages.add(m);
return m;
}, mitmproxyPort, extraMitmproxyParams);
proxy.start();
// do stuff
proxy.stop();
See AppriumPro article for more guidelines: https://appiumpro.com/editions/65 Example can be found here: https://github.com/cloudgrey-io/appiumpro/blob/master/java/src/test/java/Edition065_Capture_Network_Requests.java
I'm no Java expert! You may see some bad patterns, like my terrible disregard for exception handling. Let's make it better. File your issues and land some PRs! I wrote this in just a couple days for our weekly newsletter.
See node-mitmproxy. Pull requests welcome!
Upload to Central Repository with command ./gradlew uploadArchives