How is your hardware better than that program http://www.proxycap.com/ ?
> ProxyCap enables you to redirect your computer's network connections through proxy servers. You can tell ProxyCap which applications will connect to the Internet through a proxy and under what circumstances. This is done through a user friendly interface, without the need to reconfigure any of your Internet clients. ProxyCap has native support for the SSH protocol, allowing you to specify a SSH server as the proxy server.
Why should I spent around 4 times more for your hardware ?
Proxycap will probably do what you want: http://www.proxycap.com/ But absolutely make sure you are comfortable with the security implications.
Another option (as someone else mentioned) is basic SSH port forwarding. If we assume that your servers are IP'ed from 1-11 as 10.0.0.101 through 10.0.0.111, you could for example log into server 11 and run ssh -NfL
10.0.0.111:2201:localhost:22
10.0.0.101
. Now if you SSH to server 11 on port 2201, you will land on server 1. This of course assumes that your firewall will allow you to hit server 11 on arbitrary ports from your desktop. It probably shouldn't, but who knows. This somewhat hacky and you should read the man page to make sure you understand it (and to make sure that what I'm saying is actually correct - this is mostly from memory). And again, understand the security implications.
Finally, consider familiarizing yourself with screen or tmux rather than using MTPuTTY. Then you can open one SSH session to server 11, start a tmux session, and create as many shells within tmux as you need for your connections to the other servers. This may just be personal preference, but I find it much cleaner.
For setting up ProxyCap for Bluestacks, use this guide.
Hostname: 127.0.0.1
Port: 8888
This is the address of Fiddler on your computer.
This method worked for me.
The whole shebang.
You could use a proxy program such as: http://www.proxycap.com/
which can encapsulate a specific program...
It isn't free. But if you are on this subreddit. Most likely you can get it for free^If^You^Know^What^I^Mean
First off like you have been told get a new IP, prefer a dynamic IP etc.
Then protect yourself from losing your IP by tunnelling. Here is how you do it
Option A.
1) Get and pay for ProxyCap http://www.proxycap.com/ or similar app that allows you to proxyify any application. You need this because setting up a proxy in your internet settings won't cover you for stuff like skype and certain methods web pages can steal your IP.
2) Get and pay for a site that you can tunnel thru. You need either a host that gives you full ssh access to the server or a specific proxy host. This won't be cheap but shouldn't be extremely expensive. Look at linode.com or slicehost.com if you want to start small.
3) Setup proxycap to tunnel everything that could be used to get your IP, this means you don't need to tunnel sc2, nor your stream feeds to justin.tv so you won't get lag in game, nor will you use tons of bandwidth.
4) You can even setup proxycap to ignore urls you are sure are safe like youtube.com, pandora, gom etc to save bandwidth and keep your hosting needs down.
edit I just thought of option B
Get two ISPs, get two computers (The second one doesn't have to be fancy) one for each ISP. Use the first for your gaming needs (stream/starcraft) and the second for the rest. If you prefer to do everything on one computer then follow Option A but tunnel thru your second PC instead of a proxy host.
That way even if he gets your IP he can't hurt your stream/gaming.
The more I think about it, the more I like option B.
I could post my credentials to make you think I know what I'm talking about, but that's just childish :)
oouhh, you mean configuring deemix to use a proxy to connect to deezer? I doubt thats gonna happen and there are many other options to do this.
For docker, use networking functionality
For windows: http://www.proxycap.com/ (never used it, thats the 10 second google search)
Not sure, I don't use Windows or the Discord app. Check out this article about proxy manager programs. Looks like some of them support proxying arbitrary programs like ProxyCap.
Check out this question: http://superuser.com/questions/740133/simple-http-traffic-monitor-capture-by-process
Read the answer that is marked as correct and then read its comments. I think user Forivin has a good option for you. Basically use ProxyCap to force an exe to connect to a proxy of your choosing.
Actually it seams its a bug in the skyos. I am able to install it on this laptop without rebooting (i start the service manually in the services mmc).
it's availible here http://www.proxycap.com/download.html with a 30 days trial, which should be enough for testing. (i have a licence my self)
For Andy, you can just follow the normal android instructions. Just long-click on the fake WiFi network it uses. I imagine genymotion is much the same.
Bluestacks, meanwhile, is just not setup to play well with proxies and needs a program (Proxycap) that injects proxy code deep in your networking stack.
VPN your whole PC if you don't need to access local stuff (various commercial providers around, or if you're interested and a DIY type person, get a VPS with permissive terms and set up your own). You can also just proxy the things you want to get out instead if you don't want to mess around with routing for anything local you need to access, or just want to take advantage of better bandwidth and ping for unblocked things.
When I was in university, I used https://www.your-freedom.net/ and http://www.proxycap.com/ to capture traffic of applications and route it through YF via SOCKS5 proxy.
How to use a proxy to get through gay localization shit in Steam/origin
Essentially you need to setup the connection to your proxy (yourfreedom) by running their software. I'm assuming they'll tell you what the proxy settings are.
As Steam doesn't have native proxy support you then need to use ProxyCap to enable proxying.
First - setup ProxyCap so it uses the yourfreedom proxy using the details they provide you. This page should show you how: http://www.proxycap.com/telnet.html (Ignore the second half, that's about creating rules for telnet, which you won't be using).
Here is an easy way to add Steam: 1. Right click on the ProxyCap taskbar icon and choose Preferences. 2. Click the Rules category. 3. Press the New button on the toolbar. 4. In the Application field click the Specify button. Find Steam.exe in Program Files. Accept the default values for all other fields.
Some of the settings may vary depending on what yourfreedom requires, but they should tell you what these are - for example they may use a non-standard port, and socks v4 or v5. Source(s):
I think that's the method i usually use, works(worked?) 100% for steam. Fuck you and your +20% higher EU vs US prices and delayed EU releases, steam.
You can use a wrapper like Proxycap or SocksCap to route the traffic of an application through a socks proxy. Setup a simple SOCKS server on the target network (e.g. the endpoint of your VPN connection).
Alternatively, you can add custom routes. OpenVPN allows you to set exceptions for hosts to use the default gateway instead of the VPN tunnel.
Flash objects do not call through the browser. If you make the call from the flash app it sees right through a traditional use of a proxy. You need to use encapsulation and run the entire browser from within an emulator which can only see the world through the proxy. I retrofitted my sandbox system to get me through using a proxy in Montana. It was so slow I opt'd to download it rather than watch it from the 20/20 site with a tool (orbit) and at it's peak the download was 2.3k/s... took hrs to download 20 minutes of low quality blurry video just to find out about a bizarre and fascinating case which occurred quite near to me. What is the opposite of Me Gusta?
EDIT :: Just got my brother able to get through, he couldnt folly my instrucletions. He got through with proxycap and a list of free proxies.
http://www.proxycap.com/ == the tool you use
http://www.proxy4free.com == the place you get the magic numbers for the tool