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Category: Access Control » Firewall » Proxy

Reverse Utilities
Added 2001-12-13
by Roy Keene, rkeene@suspend.net
Reverse Utilities is a set of utilities (written in TCL) that can be used to bypass firewalls (if you have, at some point, access to the firewalled host) with telnet, ssh, HTTP, etc.

SMBProxy
Added 2001-11-29
by Patrik Karlsson
SMBProxy is a "Passing The Hash" tool that works as a proxy. It makes it possible to authenticate to a Windows NT4/2000 server by only knowing the md4 hash. It also makes it possible to mount shares, access the registry and anything else you could do with that particular users privileges.

Viralator Proxy Virus Scanner
Added 2001-11-13
by viralator
Viralator interfaces your network's squid proxy server with a virus scanner. Before a user can download a file, the proxy passes the file to the Viralator script which, in turn, uses a virus scanner (Inoculate for the first release) to scan, disinfect, or delete the download. This is especially good for stopping virus infected files from free email sites like hotmail, etc. Future enhancements will include other types of antivirus scanners, speed improvements, and limiting downloads to approved users. Support has now been added for AntiVir, AVP, RAV, and Sophos antivirus scanners, password protected sites, and filenames with spaces and special characters.

FK
Added 2001-10-31
by Matthew Kirkwood,
fk is an application proxy suite designed for building IP gateways. Ultimately, the intent is to provide a free software replacement for the TIS firewall toolkit.

tcpxd
Added 2001-10-22
by James Cameron, quozl@us.netrek.org
tcpxd is a TCP/IP relay or proxy, allowing a connection to a port on a system to be forwarded to another port on any other system. It is useful for firewalls and service relocations, and is small, simple, and fast. It's also easier to learn than netcat and supports TCP_NODELAY, alternate local ports, partial connection closures, and non-blocking connects.

Redir
Added 2001-10-22
by Sam Creasey, sammy@oh.verio.com
Redir is a port redirector. Its functionality basically consists of the ability to listen for TCP connections on a given port, and, when it recieves a connection, to then connect to a given destination address/port, and pass data between them. It finds most of its applications in traversing firewalls, but, of course, there are other uses. It can run under inetd or stand alone (in which case it handles multiple connections). It is 8 bit clean, not limited to line mode, is small and light.

dproxy
Added 2001-10-22
by Matthew Pratt, mattpratt@yahoo.com
dproxy is a caching name server for use on dial-up gateway machines designed to behave nicely when the gateway is not connected. This prevents programs like Netscape from locking up when trying to do DNS lookups when there is no connection. dproxy keeps its cache, in human readable form, on disk and so the cache is not lost when dproxy is restarted or stopped. Cache entries older than a set limit are flushed from the cache.

Leapfrog
Added 2001-10-22
by COTSE, webs@cotse.com
Leapfrog will anonymize and redirect (bounce) any port. It can be used to work around firewall configuration and other issues requiring a port redirect. For example, you have a firewall that does not allow telnet (23), but it does allow http (80). Set leapfrog up on the other side of the firewall to listen on port 80 and send to 23, then telnet to port 80 of the leapfrog machine and you will ricochet to the machine you wish to connect. You will have the Leapfrog machines' IP and MAC addresses. It supports unlimited users (well, limited by memory).

Tinyproxy 1.3.0
Added 2001-10-22
by Steven Young and Robert James Kaes
Tinyproxy is a small, efficient HTTP proxy daemon. Tinyproxy is very useful in a small network setting, where a larger proxy like Squid would either be too resource intensive, or a security risk. One of the key features of Tinyproxy is the buffering connection concept. In effect, Tinyproxy will buffer a high speed response from a server, and then relay it to a client at the highest speed the client will accept. This feature greatly reduces the problems with sluggishness on the Internet. If you are sharing an Internet connection with a small network, and you only want to allow HTTP requests to be allowed, then Tinyproxy is a great tool for the network administrator.

Serproxy 0.1.1
Added 2001-10-22
by Stefano Busti, asbusti@legend.co.uk
Serproxy is a multi-threaded proxy program for redirecting network socket connections to/from serial links, in cases where the remote end of the serial link doesn't have a TCP/IP stack (eg an embedded or microcontroller system). The proxy allows other hosts on the network to communicate with the system on the remote end of the serial link. The Linux version requires a recent version of libpthread to compile/run.

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