There are two main reasons why you may want to exempt some traffic from mitmproxy's interception mechanism: - **Certificate pinning:** Some traffic is is protected using [certificate pinning](https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/29988/what-is-certificate-pinning) and mitmproxy's interception leads to errors. For example, Windows Update or the Apple App Store fail to work if mitmproxy is active. - **Convenience:** You really don't care about some parts of the traffic and just want them to go away. If you want to peek into (SSL-protected) non-HTTP connections, check out the [tcp proxy](@!urlTo("tcpproxy.html")!@) feature. If you want to ignore traffic from mitmproxy's processing because of large response bodies, take a look at the [response streaming](@!urlTo("responsestreaming.html")!@) feature. ## How it works
command-line --ignore regex
mitmproxy shortcut o then I
mitmproxy allows you to specify a regex which is matched against a host:port string (e.g. "example.com:443") to determine hosts that should be excluded. There are two important quirks to consider: - **In transparent mode, the ignore pattern is matched against the IP.** While we usually infer the hostname from the Host header if the --host argument is passed to mitmproxy, we do not have access to this information before the SSL handshake. - In regular mode, explicit HTTP requests are never ignored.[^explicithttp] The ignore pattern is applied on CONNECT requests, which initiate HTTPS or clear-text WebSocket connections. ### Tutorial If you just want to ignore one specific domain, there's usually a bulletproof method to do so: 1. Run mitmproxy or mitmdump in verbose mode (-v) and observe the host:port information in the serverconnect messages. mitmproxy will filter on these. 2. Take the host:port string, surround it with ^ and $, escape all dots (. becomes \\.) and use this as your ignore pattern:
$ mitmdump -v
127.0.0.1:50588: clientconnect
127.0.0.1:50588: request
  -> CONNECT example.com:443 HTTP/1.1
127.0.0.1:50588: Set new server address: example.com:443
127.0.0.1:50588: serverconnect
  -> example.com:443
^C
$ mitmproxy --ignore ^example\.com:443$
Here are some other examples for ignore patterns:
# Exempt traffic from the iOS App Store (the regex is lax, but usually just works):
--ignore apple.com:443
# "Correct" version without false-positives:
--ignore '^(.+\.)?apple\.com:443$'

# Ignore example.com, but not its subdomains:
--ignore '^example.com:'

# Ignore everything but example.com and mitmproxy.org:
--ignore '^(?!example\.com)(?!mitmproxy\.org)'

# Transparent mode:
--ignore 17\.178\.96\.59:443
# IP address range:
--ignore 17\.178\.\d+\.\d+:443
### See Also - [TCP Proxy](@!urlTo("tcpproxy.html")!@) - [Response Streaming](@!urlTo("responsestreaming.html")!@) [^explicithttp]: This stems from an limitation of explicit HTTP proxying: A single connection can be re-used for multiple target domains - a GET http://example.com/ request may be followed by a GET http://evil.com/ request on the same connection. If we start to ignore the connection after the first request, we would miss the relevant second one.