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A caching proxy for offline use - supporting HTTP and HTTPS contents - written in Java on top of LittleProxy-mitm, LittleProxy, Netty - contains extensions for Mozilla and Chrome browsers - to use it nearly everywhere

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ganskef/MoCuishle

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Mo Cuishle - A caching proxy for offline use

All web pages you've seen on the Internet via HTTP or HTTPS will be available later to read them without having to remain connected.

See https://ganskef.github.io/MoCuishle/ for further information.

Build and install

Get this repository:

git clone https://github.com/ganskef/MoCuishle

Change dir and build with Maven:

mvn clean install

Tested on Windows, macOS, GNU/Debian and FreeBSD, development on Arch Linux with OpenJDK 21+35 and Maven 3.8.7. It's simple Java internally with a Kotlin runtime dependency OkHttp.

Initialize the application

First run the Java application by double click or command line:

java -jar mocuishle/target/mocuishle-2.2.0-shaded.jar

Browser communication to the application is initialized, it's necessary if the location of the JAR is changed:

122    2023-10-03 23:19:26,664 INFO  [main] d.g.m.MoCuishleMain - Install Native Messaging to support browser extensions...
128    2023-10-03 23:19:26,670 INFO  [main] d.g.m.m.BrowserExtensionSupport - FIREFOX_UNIX
128    2023-10-03 23:19:26,670 INFO  [main] d.g.m.m.BrowserExtensionSupport - CHROME_UNIX
128    2023-10-03 23:19:26,670 INFO  [main] d.g.m.m.BrowserExtensionSupport - CHROMIUM_UNIX
494    2023-10-03 23:19:27,036 INFO  [main] d.g.m.p.McOkProxy - Starting proxy server with port 9090 ...
502    2023-10-03 23:19:27,044 INFO  [main] d.g.m.p.McOkProxy - Startup done

In the home directory a ~/MoCuishle directory is created. It contains the runtime data of the application and will updated if needed. A symbolic link to put it to another location is okay.

Browser Certificate

The first execution creates a certificate ~/MoCuishle/mocuishle.pem to install in your browsers Authorities or system wide if needed.

  • 2023-09-30 MoCuishle uses the formerly mocuishle.pem instead of okhttp.pem (but mocuishle.p12 contains a root certificate instead of the intermediate certificate, might not work) [2023-10-06] Mo Cuishle works with an existing KeyStore too.

The second file ~/MoCuishle/mocuishle.p12 is generated to hold the matching private key and intermediate certificate, the proxy use to intercept upstream connections (Man In The Middle).

If needed, use a PKCS12 KeyStore (and certificate authority) of your own by setting this system properties:

Property Default value
de.ganskef.mocuishle.keystore.alias mocuishle
de.ganskef.mocuishle.keystore.name _Mo Cuishle (offline cache)
de.ganskef.mocuishle.keystore.password Be Your Own Lantern

(historic default password taken from https://github.com/adamfisk/LittleProxy)

Install Browser Extensions

For Chrome like browsers install the built browser extension with the URI: chrome://extensions. It requires to enable the Developer mode. Use the button Load unpacked to select the subdir mocuishle-browser/target/classes in your workspace. The browser should open an new tab with http://localhost:9090/.

Hint: For Chrome browsers it's necessary to get the ID of the unpacked extension which is generated at first installation. Until it's published in the Web Stores, please modify the native host config files. I'm working on it, see: #7.

Native messaging host requires allowed_origins which is generated while installing an unpacked extension in the Chrome browser. The file looks like this, but with your home dir, here with an additional unpacked extension:

{
  "name": "de.ganskef.mocuishle",
  "description": "A caching proxy for offline use.",
  "path": "/home/frank/MoCuishle/mocuishle.sh",
  "type": "stdio",
  "allowed_origins": [ "chrome-extension://ajccdogbepemoknjbdigfdnjlinpbedj/","chrome-extension://oohnpccaehbcpnanlbbboljabnajlhem/" ]
}

For Mozilla browsers it's necessary to use signed extension. You have to use a Developer Edition to load the built extension mocuishle-browser/target/mocuishle-browser-2.1.4-firefox.zip. Have a look at the release page to grab a signed extension.

Of course you can use an other proxy switcher, but try to disable the browser cache to avoid conflicts, since Mo Cuishle should be the cache for offline use.

Trouble Shooting

  • I had some problems with more recent versions of Java and Maven while testing macOS and Windows. I'm working on it (see: #5. Please use the given versions at the moment. Double check using an OpenJDK instead of a JDK or JRE and a Previous Stable 3.8.x Release of Maven. 2023-10-03 After replacing LittleProxy-mitm with OkProxy build succeeds on every tested system, with current Maven and Java, with LANG=de_DE and LANG=en_US. Please describe an Issue, if not.
  • I had test failures on macOS and Windows, try mvn clean install -DskipTests. I'm working on it. 2023-09-30 After replacing LittleProxy-mitm with OkProxy tests are working on every tested system.
  • You have to be an administrative user in macOS, maybe Windows too to install the browser certificate as a trusted certificate agency. If not, You could use a Mozilla browser to install it.
  • Native Host Messaging (browser extension starts the Java application) won't work with new installed unpacked extension in Chrome browsers. I'm working on it, see: #7. Simply use the autostart feature of your system to launch the MoCuishle JAR in the background.

This is not as simple like the early days. For good security reasons in modern browser extensions it's not possibly anymore:

  • ... to install the certificate in the browser automatically
  • ... to simply handle a Java process by the extension
  • ... to package the Java application into the extension

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A caching proxy for offline use - supporting HTTP and HTTPS contents - written in Java on top of LittleProxy-mitm, LittleProxy, Netty - contains extensions for Mozilla and Chrome browsers - to use it nearly everywhere

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