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http::proxy::headerfilter(3pm) [debian man page]

HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			    HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter(3pm)

NAME
HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter - A base class for HTTP message header filters SYNOPSIS
package MyFilter; use base qw( HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter ); # changes the User-Agent header in all requests # this filter must be pushed on the request stack sub filter { my ( $self, $headers, $message ) = @_; $message->headers->header( User_Agent => 'MyFilter/1.0' ); } 1; DESCRIPTION
The HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter class is used to create filters for HTTP request/response headers. Creating a HeaderFilter A HeaderFilter is just a derived class that implements some methods called by the proxy. Of all the methods presented below, only "filter()" must be defined in the derived class. filter() The signature of the filter() method is the following: sub filter { my ( $self, $headers, $message) = @_; ... } where $self is the filter object, $headers is a HTTP::Headers object, and $message is either a HTTP::Request or a HTTP::Response object. The $headers HTTP::Headers object is the one that will be sent to the client (if the filter is on the response stack) or origin server (if the filter is on the request stack). If $headers is modified by the filter, the modified headers will be sent to the client or server. The init() method (if it exists) is called by the new() constructeur to perform all initisalisation tasks. It's called once in the filter lifetime. A HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter object is a blessed hash, and the base class reserves only hash keys that start with "_hphf". new() The constructor is defined for all subclasses. Initialisation tasks (if any) for subclasses should be done in the "init()" method (see below). init() This method is called by the "new()" constructeur to perform all initisalisation tasks. It's called once in the filter lifetime. It receives all the parameters passed to "new()". Standard HeaderFilters Standard HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter classes are lowercase. The following HeaderFilters are included in the HTTP::Proxy distribution: simple This class lets you create a simple header filter from a code reference. standard This is the filter that provides standard headers handling for HTTP::Proxy. It is loaded automatically by HTTP::Proxy. Please read each filter's documentation for more details about their use. USEFUL METHODS FOR SUBCLASSES
Some methods are available to filters, so that they can eventually use the little knowledge they might have of HTTP::Proxy's internals. They mostly are accessors. proxy() Gets a reference to the HTTP::Proxy objects that owns the filter. This gives access to some of the proxy methods. AUTHOR
Philippe "BooK" Bruhat, <book@cpan.org>. SEE ALSO
HTTP::Proxy, HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter. COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2003-2005, Philippe Bruhat. LICENSE
This module is free software; you can redistribute it or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.12.4 2011-07-03 HTTP::Proxy::HeaderFilter(3pm)

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Net::Proxy::Connector::connect_ssl(3pm) 		User Contributed Perl Documentation		   Net::Proxy::Connector::connect_ssl(3pm)

NAME
Net::Proxy::Connector::connect_ssl - Create SSL/CONNECT tunnels through HTTP proxies SYNOPSIS
# sample proxy using Net::Proxy::Connector::tcp # and Net::Proxy::Connector::connect_ssl use Net::Proxy; # listen on localhost:6789 # and proxy to remotehost:9876 through proxy.company.com:8080 # using the given credentials my $proxy = Net::Proxy->new( in => { type => 'tcp', port => '6789' }, out => { type => 'connect_ssl', host => 'remotehost', port => '9876', proxy_host => 'proxy.company.com', proxy_port => '8080', proxy_user => 'jrandom', proxy_pass => 's3kr3t', proxy_agent => 'Mozilla/4.04 (X11; I; SunOS 5.4 sun4m)', }, ); $proxy->register(); Net::Proxy->mainloop(); DESCRIPTION
"Net::Proxy::Connecter::connect_ssl" is a "Net::Proxy::Connector" that uses the HTTP CONNECT method to ask the proxy to create a tunnel to an outside server. The data is then encrypted using SSL. Obviously, you'll need a server that understands SSL (or a proxy using "Net::Proxy::Connector::ssl") at the other end. This connector is only an "out" connector. In addition to the options listed below, this connector accepts all "SSL_..." options to "IO::Socket::SSL". They are transparently passed through to the appropriate "IO::Socket::SSL" methods when upgrading the socket to SSL. CONNECTOR OPTIONS
"Net::Proxy::Connector::connect" accepts the following options: "out" o host The destination host. o port The destination port. o proxy_host The web proxy name or address. o proxy_port The web proxy port. o proxy_user The authentication username for the proxy. o proxy_pass The authentication password for the proxy. o proxy_agent The user-agent string to use when connecting to the proxy. AUTHOR
Philippe 'BooK' Bruhat, "<book@cpan.org>". HISTORY
Because "Net::Proxy" blocks when it tries to connect to itself, it wasn't possible to pass an SSL-encrypted connection through a proxy with a single script: you needed one for the SSL encapsulation, and another one for bypassing the proxy with the "CONNECT" HTTP method. See "Net::Proxy::Connector::connect" and "Net::Proxy::Connector::ssl" for details. COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2007 Philippe 'BooK' Bruhat, All Rights Reserved. LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2009-10-18 Net::Proxy::Connector::connect_ssl(3pm)
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