Starts on some documentation for certificates
This commit is contained in:
parent
dd71d26245
commit
b880108746
1 changed files with 36 additions and 3 deletions
|
@ -1,6 +1,39 @@
|
|||
# Certificate Authority
|
||||
|
||||
At some point, it would be nice if yaip does this automatically, but for now,
|
||||
you need to create a certificate authority for yaip to sign requests with.
|
||||
On startup, yaip will create a cetificate and key and store them in
|
||||
~/.config/yaip/.
|
||||
|
||||
;
|
||||
In order to intercept HTTPS traffic, yaip needs to become certificate authority.
|
||||
It will pretend to be the client to the server, making HTTP requests in the same
|
||||
way a browser would. It then pretends to be the server to the client. However,
|
||||
this is precisely the kind of "attack" that the certificate system is designed
|
||||
to prevent. Without further action, any modern browser will show warnings
|
||||
because yaip isn't the server it is pretending to be.
|
||||
|
||||
In order to get around this, yaip becomes a certificate authority and verifies
|
||||
all the responses that it makes. In order for this to work, it is necessary for
|
||||
the authority to be trusted by your browser of choice. Search for "add
|
||||
certificate authority in *your favourite browser*" in *your favourite search
|
||||
engine*.
|
||||
|
||||
## How it works
|
||||
|
||||
If you set your browser to use yaip as a proxy, it will initially send a CONNECT
|
||||
request to yaip, asking it to create a channel to the server it wants to connect
|
||||
to. This looks something like this:
|
||||
|
||||
```
|
||||
CONNECT example.com HTTP/1.1
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
For a normal (non intercepting) proxy, the proxy server would open a connection
|
||||
to example.com and all traffic going through it would be invisible to the proxy
|
||||
server. This is not very useful for us.
|
||||
|
||||
YAIP tells the client that it has established such a connection before it
|
||||
communicates with the upstream server, by sending a `200 Connection Established`
|
||||
response.
|
||||
|
||||
The client then begins the SSL/TLS negotiation. However, it negotiates with yaip
|
||||
rather than the upstream server. Yaip takes the hostname from the connect
|
||||
request so can generate a valid certificate.
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue