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authorMaximilian Hils <git@maximilianhils.com>2015-08-30 13:40:23 +0200
committerMaximilian Hils <git@maximilianhils.com>2015-08-30 13:40:23 +0200
commit421b241ff010ae979cff8df504b6744e4c291aeb (patch)
tree0d7605c39c834800e93bfa483cc9bf813de62cdd /doc-src
parent3873e08339fd701738a1522af32e37363fcec14b (diff)
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remove http2http references
Diffstat (limited to 'doc-src')
-rw-r--r--doc-src/features/reverseproxy.html17
-rw-r--r--doc-src/modes.html8
2 files changed, 10 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/doc-src/features/reverseproxy.html b/doc-src/features/reverseproxy.html
index 5ef4efc5..af5a5c53 100644
--- a/doc-src/features/reverseproxy.html
+++ b/doc-src/features/reverseproxy.html
@@ -7,22 +7,17 @@ mitmproxy forwards HTTP proxy requests to an upstream proxy server.
<table class="table">
<tbody>
<tr>
- <th width="20%">command-line</th> <td>-R <i>schema</i>://hostname[:port]</td>
+ <th width="20%">command-line</th> <td>-R <i>scheme</i>://hostname[:port]</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
-Here, **schema** is one of http, https, http2https or https2http. The latter
-two extended schema specifications control the use of HTTP and HTTPS on
-mitmproxy and the upstream server. You can indicate that mitmproxy should use
-HTTP, and the upstream server uses HTTPS like this:
+Here, **scheme** signifies if the proxy should use TLS to connect to the server.
+mitmproxy accepts both encrypted and unencrypted requests and transforms them to what the server
+expects.
- http2https://hostname:port
-
-And you can indicate that mitmproxy should use HTTPS while the upstream
-service uses HTTP like this:
-
- https2http://hostname:port
+ mitmdump -R https://httpbin.org -p 80
+ mitmdump -R https://httpbin.org -p 443
### Host Header
diff --git a/doc-src/modes.html b/doc-src/modes.html
index b5a38696..a878fd82 100644
--- a/doc-src/modes.html
+++ b/doc-src/modes.html
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ this:
<h1>Reverse Proxy</h1>
</div>
-Mitmproxy is usually used with a client that uses the proxy to access the
+mitmproxy is usually used with a client that uses the proxy to access the
Internet. Using reverse proxy mode, you can use mitmproxy to act like a normal
HTTP server:
@@ -174,14 +174,14 @@ requests recorded in mitmproxy.
- Say you have some toy project that should get SSL support. Simply set up
mitmproxy with SSL termination and you're done (<code>mitmdump -p 443 -R
-https2http://localhost:80/</code>). There are better tools for this specific
+http://localhost:80/</code>). 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 (https2http://...),
+could even spawn a mitmproxy instance that terminates SSL (-R http://...),
point it to the compression proxy and let the compression proxy point to a
-SSL-initiating mitmproxy (http2https://...), which then points to the real
+SSL-initiating mitmproxy (-R https://...), which then points to the real
server. As you see, it's a fairly flexible thing.
Note that mitmproxy supports either an HTTP or an HTTPS upstream server, not