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Diffstat (limited to 'README.md')
| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 29 | 
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 8 deletions
@@ -12,26 +12,39 @@ The server only accepts one client at a time. The client auto-reconnects.  ## Setting up a MITM debugging proxy -To debug stateful protocols on top of websockets, it is helpful to be able to -inject messages to the server or the client in a real session, acting as a -man-in-the-middle (MITM).  On Linux you can achieve this using `webcat` and -FIFOs as follows: +By redirecting the standard input/output streams of webcat you can turn it into +a man-in-the-middle proxy, particularily useful for debugging stateful protocols +on top of websocket. + +    [some client] <-> [webcat server] <-> [webcat client] <-> [some server] +                                     FIFOs + +All it takes to set this up is four commands, for example:      mkfifo client-in server-in      webcat ws://example.com:3000/ < client-in > server-in      webcat -l 4000 < server-in > client-in      echo > server-in # unblock the FIFO deadlock -You can now connect your client to ws://localhost:4000/. -And inject messages by writing to the named pipes: +You can now connect your client to `ws://localhost:4000/` +and inject messages by writing to the named pipes:      echo "Hello from webcat" > client-in -Note that when redirecting stdout the messages are automatically printed to -stderr, so you can still observe what's happening. +Webcat does two tricks to make this setup even more convenient: + +* When redirecting stdout, the messages are automatically printed +  to stderr, so you can still observe what's happening. + +* When the client recognizes the server output `accepted new client`, +  it automatically disconnects and reconnects its server connection +  to prevent stateful application protocols from becoming out of sync. +  ## Limitations +* no support for binary messages +  * no support for messages containing newlines    (cannot send them, cannot distinguish them from separate messages)  | 
