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instafeed/vendor/clue/socks-react/examples/03-proxy-chaining.php
2022-10-23 01:39:27 +02:00

47 lines
1.4 KiB
PHP
Executable File

<?php
use Clue\React\Socks\Client;
use React\Socket\Connector;
use React\Socket\ConnectionInterface;
require __DIR__ . '/../vendor/autoload.php';
if (!isset($argv[1])) {
echo 'No arguments given! Run with <proxy1> [<proxyN>...]' . PHP_EOL;
echo 'You can add 1..n proxies in the path' . PHP_EOL;
exit(1);
}
$path = array_slice($argv, 1);
// Alternatively, you can also hard-code this value like this:
//$path = array('127.0.0.1:9051', '127.0.0.1:9052', '127.0.0.1:9053');
$loop = React\EventLoop\Factory::create();
// set next SOCKS server chain via p1 -> p2 -> p3 -> destination
$connector = new Connector($loop);
foreach ($path as $proxy) {
$connector = new Client($proxy, $connector);
}
// please note how the client uses p3 (not p1!), which in turn then uses the complete chain
// this creates a TCP/IP connection to p1, which then connects to p2, then to p3, which then connects to the target
$connector = new Connector($loop, array(
'tcp' => $connector,
'timeout' => 3.0,
'dns' => false
));
echo 'Demo SOCKS client connecting to SOCKS proxy server chain ' . implode(' -> ', $path) . PHP_EOL;
$connector->connect('tls://www.google.com:443')->then(function (ConnectionInterface $stream) {
echo 'connected' . PHP_EOL;
$stream->write("GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n");
$stream->on('data', function ($data) {
echo $data;
});
}, 'printf');
$loop->run();