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author | Aldo Cortesi <aldo@nullcube.com> | 2016-06-02 16:43:46 +1200 |
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committer | Aldo Cortesi <aldo@nullcube.com> | 2016-06-02 16:43:46 +1200 |
commit | 14d6e1d2e3aebf11fe63adc8e29cf0b73e9e01ad (patch) | |
tree | 25c4b67dd96325187a34c9cf8fc82be5ec8f1417 | |
parent | 29bcdc82509662d1c016dfd42122331678586d5b (diff) | |
download | mitmproxy-14d6e1d2e3aebf11fe63adc8e29cf0b73e9e01ad.tar.gz mitmproxy-14d6e1d2e3aebf11fe63adc8e29cf0b73e9e01ad.tar.bz2 mitmproxy-14d6e1d2e3aebf11fe63adc8e29cf0b73e9e01ad.zip |
Formatting of README
This is really a pretext to get Travis to rebuild, because it's stuck on the
wrong commit for the branch.
-rw-r--r-- | README.rst | 38 |
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 16 deletions
@@ -3,19 +3,24 @@ mitmproxy |travis| |coveralls| |latest_release| |python_versions| -This repository contains the **mitmproxy** and **pathod** projects, as well as their shared networking library, **netlib**. +This repository contains the **mitmproxy** and **pathod** projects, as well as +their shared networking library, **netlib**. -``mitmproxy`` is an interactive, SSL-capable intercepting proxy with a console interface. +``mitmproxy`` is an interactive, SSL-capable intercepting proxy with a console +interface. ``mitmdump`` is the command-line version of mitmproxy. Think tcpdump for HTTP. -``pathoc`` and ``pathod`` are perverse HTTP client and server applications designed to let you craft almost any conceivable HTTP request, including ones that creatively violate the standards. +``pathoc`` and ``pathod`` are perverse HTTP client and server applications +designed to let you craft almost any conceivable HTTP request, including ones +that creatively violate the standards. Documentation & Help -------------------- -Documentation, tutorials and precompiled binaries can be found on the mitmproxy and pathod websites. +Documentation, tutorials and precompiled binaries can be found on the mitmproxy +and pathod websites. |mitmproxy_site| |pathod_site| @@ -32,8 +37,8 @@ Hacking ------- To get started hacking on mitmproxy, make sure you have Python_ 2.7.x. with -virtualenv_ installed (you can find installation instructions for virtualenv here_). -Then do the following: +virtualenv_ installed (you can find installation instructions for virtualenv +here_). Then do the following: .. code-block:: text @@ -42,10 +47,11 @@ Then do the following: ./dev.sh -The *dev* script will create a virtualenv environment in a directory called "venv", -and install all mandatory and optional dependencies into it. -The primary mitmproxy components - mitmproxy, netlib and pathod - are installed as "editable", -so any changes to the source in the repository will be reflected live in the virtualenv. +The *dev* script will create a virtualenv environment in a directory called +"venv", and install all mandatory and optional dependencies into it. The +primary mitmproxy components - mitmproxy, netlib and pathod - are installed as +"editable", so any changes to the source in the repository will be reflected +live in the virtualenv. To confirm that you're up and running, activate the virtualenv, and run the mitmproxy test suite: @@ -56,9 +62,9 @@ mitmproxy test suite: py.test Note that the main executables for the project - ``mitmdump``, ``mitmproxy``, -``mitmweb``, ``pathod``, and ``pathoc`` - are all created within the virtualenv. After activating the -virtualenv, they will be on your $PATH, and you can run them like any other -command: +``mitmweb``, ``pathod``, and ``pathoc`` - are all created within the +virtualenv. After activating the virtualenv, they will be on your $PATH, and +you can run them like any other command: .. code-block:: text @@ -85,9 +91,9 @@ suite. The project tries to maintain 100% test coverage. Documentation ------------- -The mitmproxy documentation is build using Sphinx_, which is installed automatically if you set up a development -environment as described above. -After installation, you can render the documentation like this: +The mitmproxy documentation is build using Sphinx_, which is installed +automatically if you set up a development environment as described above. After +installation, you can render the documentation like this: .. code-block:: text |