ssl-proxy

:lock: Simple zero-config SSL reverse proxy with real autogenerated certificates (LetsEncrypt, self-signed, provided)

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A handy and simple way to add SSL to your thing running on a VM--be it your personal jupyter notebook or your team jenkins instance. ssl-proxy autogenerates SSL certs and proxies HTTPS traffic to an existing HTTP server in a single command.

Usage

With auto self-signed certificates

ssl-proxy -from 0.0.0.0:4430 -to 127.0.0.1:8000

This will immediately generate self-signed certificates and begin proxying HTTPS traffic from https://0.0.0.0:4430 to http://127.0.0.1:8000. No need to ever call openssl. It will print the SHA256 fingerprint of the cert being used for you to perform manual certificate verification in the browser if you would like (before you "trust" the cert).

I know nginx is often used for stuff like this, but I got tired of dealing with the boilerplate and wanted to explore something fun. So I ended up throwing this together.

With auto LetsEncrypt SSL certificates

ssl-proxy -from 0.0.0.0:443 -to 127.0.0.1:8000 -domain=mydomain.com

This will immediately generate, fetch, and serve real LetsEncrypt certificates for mydomain.com and begin proxying HTTPS traffic from https://0.0.0.0:443 to http://127.0.0.1:8000. For now, you need to ensure that ssl-proxy can bind port :443 and that mydomain.com routes to the server running ssl-proxy (as you may have expected, this is not the tool you should be using if you have load-balancing over multiple servers or other deployment configurations).

Provide your own certs

ssl-proxy -cert cert.pem -key myKey.pem -from 0.0.0.0:4430 -to 127.0.0.1:8000

You can provide your own existing certs, of course. Jenkins still has issues serving the fullchain certs from letsencrypt properly, so this tool has come in handy for me there.

Redirect HTTP -> HTTPS

Simply include the -redirectHTTP flag when running the program.

Installation

Simply download and uncompress the proper prebuilt binary for your system from the releases tab. Then, add the binary to your path or start using it locally (./ssl-proxy).

If you're using wget, you can fetch and uncompress the right binary for your OS using getbin.io as follows:

wget -qO- "https://getbin.io/suyashkumar/ssl-proxy", tar xvz 

or with curl (note you need to provide your os if using curl as one of (darwin, windows, linux) below):

curl -LJ "https://getbin.io/suyashkumar/ssl-proxy?os=linux", tar xvz 

Shameless plug: suyashkumar/getbin (https://getbin.io) is a general tool that can fetch the latest binaries from GitHub releases for your OS. Check it out :).

Build from source

Build from source using Docker

You can build ssl-proxy for all platforms quickly using the included Docker configurations.

If you have docker-compose installed:

docker-compose -f docker-compose.build.yml up

will build linux, osx, and darwin binaries (x86) and place them in a build/ folder in your current working directory.

Build from source locally

You must have Golang installed on your system along with make and dep. Then simply clone the repository and run make.

Attribution

Icons made by Those Icons from www.flaticon.com is licensed by CC 3.0 BY

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownersuyashkumar/ssl-proxy
Primary LanguageGo
Program languageMakefile (Language Count: 3)
Platform
License:MIT License
所有者活动
Created At2018-08-12 05:26:08
Pushed At2025-04-16 23:26:30
Last Commit At2025-03-19 20:47:44
Release Count10
Last Release Namev0.2.8 (Posted on )
First Release Namev0.1.0 (Posted on )
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Stargazers Count759
Watchers Count19
Fork Count92
Commits Count35
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count32
Issue Open Count15
Pull Requests Count23
Pull Requests Open Count8
Pull Requests Close Count5
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