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| author | Aldo Cortesi <aldo@corte.si> | 2018-02-25 10:09:45 +1300 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2018-02-25 10:09:45 +1300 | 
| commit | 0d43bb550ac9fd9b460faa528766c79a895739d8 (patch) | |
| tree | 8c4bc88c805af740113cb1f5d6934e7815837df1 /docs/src | |
| parent | 6c721665737ad1dfa0b6d4a2a80250be5f62c3ab (diff) | |
| parent | f31ce49aa59558b354e6524d5370eb36f055c876 (diff) | |
| download | mitmproxy-0d43bb550ac9fd9b460faa528766c79a895739d8.tar.gz mitmproxy-0d43bb550ac9fd9b460faa528766c79a895739d8.tar.bz2 mitmproxy-0d43bb550ac9fd9b460faa528766c79a895739d8.zip | |
Merge pull request #2914 from kira0204/docs-2913
Updating docs
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/src')
| -rw-r--r-- | docs/src/content/concepts-modes.md | 8 | 
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
| diff --git a/docs/src/content/concepts-modes.md b/docs/src/content/concepts-modes.md index 86bb7b0f..7a0b835a 100644 --- a/docs/src/content/concepts-modes.md +++ b/docs/src/content/concepts-modes.md @@ -157,20 +157,20 @@ There are various use-cases:      example.com domain and get all requests recorded in mitmproxy.  - Say you have some toy project that should get SSL support. Simply set up      mitmproxy as a reverse proxy on port 443 and you're done (`mitmdump -p 443 -    -R http://localhost:80/`). Mitmproxy auto-detects TLS traffic and intercepts +    --mode reverse:http://localhost:80/`). Mitmproxy auto-detects TLS traffic and intercepts      it dynamically. There are better tools for this specific task, but mitmproxy      is very quick and simple way to set up an SSL-speaking server.  - Want to add a non-SSL-capable compression proxy in front of your server? You -    could even spawn a mitmproxy instance that terminates SSL (`-R http://...`), +    could even spawn a mitmproxy instance that terminates SSL (`--mode reverse:http://...`),      point it to the compression proxy and let the compression proxy point to a -    SSL-initiating mitmproxy (`-R https://...`), which then points to the real +    SSL-initiating mitmproxy (`--mode reverse:https://...`), which then points to the real      server. As you see, it's a fairly flexible thing.  ### Host Header  In reverse proxy mode, mitmproxy automatically rewrites the Host header to match  the upstream server. This allows mitmproxy to easily connect to existing -endpoints on the open web (e.g. `mitmproxy -R https://example.com`). You can +endpoints on the open web (e.g. `mitmproxy --mode reverse:https://example.com`). You can  disable this behaviour with the `keep_host_header` option.  However, keep in mind that absolute URLs within the returned document or HTTP | 
