Mercurial > 510Connectbot
view src/net/sourceforge/jsocks/SocksSocket.java @ 67:99d5b02ad90c tn5250
allow host override terminal type
author | Carl Byington <carl@five-ten-sg.com> |
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date | Fri, 13 Jun 2014 16:17:26 -0700 |
parents | 0ce5cc452d02 |
children | 205ee2873330 |
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package net.sourceforge.jsocks; import java.net.*; import java.io.*; /** * SocksSocket tryies to look very similar to normal Socket, * while allowing connections through the SOCKS4 or 5 proxy. * To use this class you will have to identify proxy you need * to use, Proxy class allows you to set default proxy, which * will be used by all Socks aware sockets. You can also create * either Socks4Proxy or Socks5Proxy, and use them by passing to the * appropriate constructors. * <P> * Using Socks package can be as easy as that: * * <pre><tt> * * import Socks.*; * .... * * try{ * //Specify SOCKS5 proxy * Proxy.setDefaultProxy("socks-proxy",1080); * * //OR you still use SOCKS4 * //Code below uses SOCKS4 proxy * //Proxy.setDefaultProxy("socks-proxy",1080,userName); * * Socket s = SocksSocket("some.host.of.mine",13); * readTimeFromSock(s); * }catch(SocksException sock_ex){ * //Usually it will turn in more or less meaningfull message * System.err.println("SocksException:"+sock_ex); * } * * </tt></pre> *<P> * However if the need exist for more control, like resolving addresses * remotely, or using some non-trivial authentication schemes, it can be done. */ public class SocksSocket extends Socket { //Data members protected Proxy proxy; protected String localHost, remoteHost; protected InetAddress localIP, remoteIP; protected int localPort, remotePort; private Socket directSock = null; /** * Tryies to connect to given host and port * using default proxy. If no default proxy speciefied * it throws SocksException with error code SOCKS_NO_PROXY. @param host Machine to connect to. @param port Port to which to connect. * @see SocksSocket#SocksSocket(Proxy,String,int) * @see Socks5Proxy#resolveAddrLocally */ public SocksSocket(String host, int port) throws SocksException, UnknownHostException { this(Proxy.defaultProxy, host, port); } /** * Connects to host port using given proxy server. @param p Proxy to use. @param host Machine to connect to. @param port Port to which to connect. @throws UnknownHostException If one of the following happens: <ol> <li> Proxy settings say that address should be resolved locally, but this fails. <li> Proxy settings say that the host should be contacted directly but host name can't be resolved. </ol> @throws SocksException If one of the following happens: <ul> <li> Proxy is is null. <li> Proxy settings say that the host should be contacted directly but this fails. <li> Socks Server can't be contacted. <li> Authentication fails. <li> Connection is not allowed by the SOCKS proxy. <li> SOCKS proxy can't establish the connection. <li> Any IO error occured. <li> Any protocol error occured. </ul> @throws IOexception if anything is wrong with I/O. @see Socks5Proxy#resolveAddrLocally */ public SocksSocket(Proxy p, String host, int port) throws SocksException, UnknownHostException { remoteHost = host; remotePort = port; remoteIP = InetAddress.getByName(host); doDirect(); } /** Connects to given ip and port using given Proxy server. @param p Proxy to use. @param ip Machine to connect to. @param port Port to which to connect. */ public SocksSocket(InetAddress ip, int port) throws SocksException { this.remoteIP = ip; this.remotePort = port; this.remoteHost = ip.getHostName(); doDirect(); } /** * These 2 constructors are used by the SocksServerSocket. * This socket simply overrides remoteHost, remotePort */ protected SocksSocket(String host, int port, Proxy proxy) { this.remotePort = port; this.proxy = proxy; this.localIP = proxy.proxySocket.getLocalAddress(); this.localPort = proxy.proxySocket.getLocalPort(); this.remoteHost = host; } protected SocksSocket(InetAddress ip, int port, Proxy proxy) { remoteIP = ip; remotePort = port; this.proxy = proxy; this.localIP = proxy.proxySocket.getLocalAddress(); this.localPort = proxy.proxySocket.getLocalPort(); remoteHost = remoteIP.getHostName(); } /** * Same as Socket */ public void close() throws IOException { if (proxy != null)proxy.endSession(); proxy = null; } /** * Same as Socket */ public InputStream getInputStream() { return proxy.in; } /** * Same as Socket */ public OutputStream getOutputStream() { return proxy.out; } /** * Same as Socket */ public int getPort() { return remotePort; } /** * Returns remote host name, it is usefull in cases when addresses * are resolved by proxy, and we can't create InetAddress object. @return The name of the host this socket is connected to. */ public String getHost() { return remoteHost; } /** * Get remote host as InetAddress object, might return null if * addresses are resolved by proxy, and it is not possible to resolve * it locally @return Ip address of the host this socket is connected to, or null if address was returned by the proxy as DOMAINNAME and can't be resolved locally. */ public InetAddress getInetAddress() { if (remoteIP == null) { try { remoteIP = InetAddress.getByName(remoteHost); } catch (UnknownHostException e) { return null; } } return remoteIP; } /** * Get the port assigned by the proxy for the socket, not * the port on locall machine as in Socket. @return Port of the socket used on the proxy server. */ public int getLocalPort() { return localPort; } /** * Get address assigned by proxy to make a remote connection, * it might be different from the host specified for the proxy. * Can return null if socks server returned this address as hostname * and it can't be resolved locally, use getLocalHost() then. @return Address proxy is using to make a connection. */ public InetAddress getLocalAddress() { if (localIP == null) { try { localIP = InetAddress.getByName(localHost); } catch (UnknownHostException e) { return null; } } return localIP; } /** Get name of the host, proxy has assigned to make a remote connection for this socket. This method is usefull when proxy have returned address as hostname, and we can't resolve it on this machine. @return The name of the host proxy is using to make a connection. */ public String getLocalHost() { return localHost; } /** Same as socket. */ public void setSoLinger(boolean on, int val) throws SocketException { proxy.proxySocket.setSoLinger(on, val); } /** Same as socket. */ public int getSoLinger(int timeout) throws SocketException { return proxy.proxySocket.getSoLinger(); } /** Same as socket. */ public void setSoTimeout(int timeout) throws SocketException { proxy.proxySocket.setSoTimeout(timeout); } /** Same as socket. */ public int getSoTimeout(int timeout) throws SocketException { return proxy.proxySocket.getSoTimeout(); } /** Same as socket. */ public void setTcpNoDelay(boolean on) throws SocketException { proxy.proxySocket.setTcpNoDelay(on); } /** Same as socket. */ public boolean getTcpNoDelay() throws SocketException { return proxy.proxySocket.getTcpNoDelay(); } /** Get string representation of the socket. */ public String toString() { if (directSock != null) return "Direct connection:" + directSock; return ("Proxy:" + proxy + ";" + "addr:" + remoteHost + ",port:" + remotePort + ",localport:" + localPort); } //Private Methods ////////////////// private void doDirect()throws SocksException { try { //System.out.println("IP:"+remoteIP+":"+remotePort); directSock = new Socket(remoteIP, remotePort); proxy.out = directSock.getOutputStream(); proxy.in = directSock.getInputStream(); proxy.proxySocket = directSock; localIP = directSock.getLocalAddress(); localPort = directSock.getLocalPort(); } catch (IOException io_ex) { throw new SocksException(Proxy.SOCKS_DIRECT_FAILED, "Direct connect failed:" + io_ex); } } }