1 <!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V3.1//EN">
3 File : $Source: /cvsroot/ijbswa/current/doc/source/user-manual.sgml,v $
7 ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/home/groups/i/ij/ijbswa/htdocs/
9 $Id: user-manual.sgml,v 1.39 2002/03/06 16:19:28 hal9 Exp $
11 Written by and Copyright (C) 2001 the SourceForge
12 IJBSWA team. http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net
14 Based on the Internet Junkbuster originally written
15 by and Copyright (C) 1997 Anonymous Coders and
16 Junkbusters Corporation. http://www.junkbusters.com
20 Sat 03/02/02 04:53:47 PM
22 This should be ready for BETA release.
24 Hal Burgiss <hal@foobox.net>
29 <title>Junkbuster User Manual</title>
31 <pubdate>$Id: user-manual.sgml,v 1.39 2002/03/06 16:19:28 hal9 Exp $</pubdate>
36 <orgname>By: Junkbuster Developers</orgname>
43 The user manual gives the users information on how to install and configure
44 <application>Internet Junkbuster</application>. <application>Internet
45 Junkbuster</application> is an application that provides privacy and
46 security to users of the World Wide Web.
49 You can find the latest version of the user manual at <ulink url="http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net/user-manual/">http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net/user-manual/</ulink>.
53 Feel free to send a note to the developers at <email>ijbswa-developers@lists.sourceforge.net</email>.
60 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
62 <sect1 id="introduction"><title>Introduction</title>
64 <application>Internet Junkbuster</application> is a web proxy with advanced
65 filtering capabilities for protecting privacy, filtering and modifying web
66 page content, managing cookies, controlling access, and removing ads,
67 banners, pop-ups and other obnoxious Internet Junk.
68 <application>Junkbuster</application> has a very flexible configuration and
69 can be customized to suit individual needs and tastes. <application>Internet
70 Junkbuster</application> has application for both stand-alone systems and
75 This documentation is included with the current BETA version of
76 <application>Internet Junkbuster</application> and mostly complete at this
77 point. The most up to date reference for the time being is still the comments
78 in the source files and in the individual configuration files. Development
79 of version 3.0 is currently nearing completion, and includes many significant
80 changes and enhancements over earlier versions. The target release date for
81 stable v3.0 is <quote>soon</quote> ;-)
85 Since this is a BETA version, not all new features are well tested. This
86 documentation may be slightly out of sync as a result. And there
87 <emphasis>may be</emphasis> bugs, though hopefully not many!
91 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
93 <title>New Features</title>
95 In addition to <application>Junkbuster's</application> traditional features
96 of ad and banner blocking and cookie management, this is a list of new
97 features currently under development:
105 Integrated browser based configuration and control utility (<ulink
106 url="http://i.j.b">http://i.j.b</ulink>). Browser-based tracing of rule
113 Modularized configuration that will allow for system wide settings, and
114 individual user settings. (not implemented yet, probably a 3.1 feature)
120 Blocking of annoying pop-up browser windows.
126 HTTP/1.1 compliant (most, but not all 1.1 features are supported).
132 Support for Perl Compatible Regular Expressions in the configuration files, and
133 generally a more sophisticated and flexible configuration syntax over
146 Web page content filtering (removes banners based on size,
147 invisible <quote>web-bugs</quote>, JavaScript, pop-ups, status bar abuse,
154 Bypass many click-tracking scripts (avoids script redirection).
161 Multi-threaded (POSIX and native threads).
167 Auto-detection and re-reading of config file changes.
173 User-customizable HTML templates (e.g. 404 error page).
179 Improved cookie management features (e.g. session based cookies).
185 Builds from source on most UNIX-like systems. Packages available for: Linux
186 (RedHat, SuSE, or Debian), Windows, Sun Solaris, Mac OSX, OS/2.
193 In addition, the configuration is much more powerful and versatile over-all.
204 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
207 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
208 <sect1 id="installation"><title>Installation</title>
210 <application>Junkbuster</application> is available as raw source code, or
211 pre-compiled binaries. See the <ulink
212 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/ijbswa/">Junkbuster Home Page</ulink>
213 for current release info. <application>Junkbuster</application> is also available
215 url="http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/ijbswa/current/">CVS</ulink>.
216 This is the recommended approach at this time. But please be aware that CVS
217 is constantly changing, and it may break in mysterious ways.
220 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
221 <sect2 id="installation-source"><title>Source</title>
223 For gzipped tar archives, unpack the source:
228 tar xzvf ijb_source_* [.tgz or .tar.gz]
229 cd ijb_source_2.9.11_beta
234 For retrieving the current CVS sources, you'll need the CVS
235 package installed first. To download CVS source:
240 cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa login
241 cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co current
247 This will create a directory named <filename>current/</filename>, which will
248 contain the source tree.
252 Then, in either case, to build from tarball/CVS source:
257 ./configure (--help to see options)
258 make (the make from gnu, gmake for *BSD)
260 make -n install (to see where all the files will go)
261 make install (to really install)
266 For Redhat and SuSE Linux RPM packages, see below.
272 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
273 <sect2 id="installation-rh"><title>Red Hat</title>
275 To build Redhat RPM packages, install source as above. Then:
280 autoheader [suggested for CVS source]
281 autoconf [suggested for CVS source]
288 This will create both binary and src RPMs in the usual places. Example:
292 /usr/src/redhat/RPMS/i686/junkbuster-2.9.11-1.i686.rpm
295 /usr/src/redhat/SRPMS/junkbuster-2.9.11-1.src.rpm
299 To install, of course:
304 rpm -Uvv /usr/src/redhat/RPMS/i686/junkbuster-2.9.11-1.i686.rpm
309 This will place the <application>Junkbuster</application> configuration
310 files in <filename>/etc/junkbuster/</filename>, and log files in
311 <filename>/var/log/junkbuster/</filename>.
316 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
317 <sect2 id="installation-suse"><title>SuSE</title>
319 To build SuSE RPM packages, install source as above. Then:
324 autoheader [suggested for CVS source]
325 autoconf [suggested for CVS source]
332 This will create both binary and src RPMs in the usual places. Example:
336 /usr/src/packages/RPMS/i686/junkbuster-2.9.11-1.i686.rpm
339 /usr/src/packages/SRPMS/junkbuster-2.9.11-1.src.rpm
343 To install, of course:
348 rpm -Uvv /usr/src/packages/RPMS/i686/junkbuster-2.9.11-1.i686.rpm
353 This will place the <application>Junkbuster</application> configuration
354 files in <filename>/etc/junkbuster/</filename>, and log files in
355 <filename>/var/log/junkbuster/</filename>.
361 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
362 <sect2 id="installation-os2"><title>OS/2</title>
369 <application>Junkbuster</application> is packaged in a WarpIN self-
370 installing archive. The self-installing program will be named depending
371 on the release version, something like:
372 <filename>ijbos2_setup_1.2.3.exe</filename>. In order to install it, simply
373 run this executable or double-click on its icon and follow the WarpIN
374 installation panels. A shadow of the <application>Junkbuster</application>
375 executable will be placed in your startup folder so it will start
376 automatically whenever OS/2 starts.
380 The directory you choose to install <application>Junkbuster</application>
381 into will contain all of the configuration files.
385 If you would like to build binary images on OS/2 yourself, you will need
386 a few Unix-like tools: autoconf, autoheader and sh. These tools will be
387 used to create the required config.h file, which is not part of the
388 source distribution because it differs based on platform. You will also
390 The distribution has been created using IBM VisualAge compilers, but you
391 can use any compiler you like. GCC/EMX has the disadvantage of needing
392 to be single-threaded due to a limitation of EMX's implementation of the
393 select() socket call.
397 In addition to needing the source code distribution as outlined earlier,
398 you will want to extract the <filename>os2seutp</filename> directory from CVS:
400 cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa login
401 cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.ijbswa.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/ijbswa co os2setup
403 This will create a directory named os2setup/, which will contain the
404 <filename>Makefile.vac</filename> makefile and <filename>os2build.cmd</filename>
405 which is used to completely create the binary distribution. The sequence
406 of events for building the executable for yourself goes something like this:
413 nmake -f Makefile.vac
415 You will see this sequence laid out in <filename>os2build.cmd</filename>.
421 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
422 <sect2 id="installation-win"><title>Windows</title>
423 <para>Click-click. (I need help on this. Not a clue here. Also for
424 configuration section below. HB.)
428 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
429 <sect2 id="installation-other"><title>Other</title>
431 Some quick notes on other Operating Systems.
435 For FreeBSD (and other *BSDs?), the build will require <command>gmake</command>
436 instead of the included <command>make</command>. <command>gmake</command> is
437 available from <ulink url="http://www.gnu.org">http://www.gnu.org</ulink>.
438 The rest should be the same as above for Linux/Unix.
445 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
448 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
449 <sect1 id="configuration"><title>Invoking and Configuring JunkBuster</title>
451 For Unix, *BSD and Linux, all configuration files are located in
452 <filename>/etc/junkbuster/</filename> by default. For MS Windows, OS/2, and
453 AmigaOS these are all in the same directory as the
454 <application>Junkbuster</application> executable. The name and number of
455 configuration files has changed from previous versions, and is subject to
456 change as development progresses.
460 The installed defaults provide a reasonable starting point, though possibly
461 aggressive by some standards. For the time being, there are only three
462 default configuration files (this will change in time):
470 The main configuration file is named <filename>config</filename>
471 on Linux, Unix, BSD, OS/2, and AmigaOS and <filename>config.txt</filename>
478 The <filename>ijb.action</filename> file is used to define various
479 <quote>actions</quote> relating to images, banners, pop-ups, access
480 restrictions, banners and cookies. There is a CGI based editor for this
481 file that can be accessed via <ulink
482 url="http://i.j.b">http://i.j.b</ulink>. This is the easiest method of
483 configuring actions. (Other actions
484 files are included as well with differing levels of filtering
485 and blocking, e.g. <filename>ijb-basic.action</filename>.)
491 The <filename>re_filterfile</filename> file can be used to rewrite the raw
492 page content, including text as well as embedded HTML and JavaScript.
500 <filename>ijb.action</filename> and <filename>re_filterfile</filename>
501 can use Perl style regular expressions for maximum flexibility. All files use
502 the <quote><literal>#</literal></quote> character to denote a comment. Such
503 lines are not processed by <application>Junkbuster</application>. After
504 making any changes, there is no need to restart
505 <application>Junkbuster</application> in order for the changes to take
506 effect. <application>Junkbuster</application> should detect such changes
511 While under development, the configuration content is subject to change.
512 The below documentation may not be accurate by the time you read this.
513 Also, what constitutes a <quote>default</quote> setting, may change, so
514 please check all your configuration files on important issues.
519 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
522 <title>Command Line Options</title>
524 <application>JunkBuster</application> may be invoked with the following
525 command-line options:
533 <emphasis>--version</emphasis>
536 Print version info and exit, Unix only.
541 <emphasis>--help</emphasis>
544 Print a short usage info and exit, Unix only.
549 <emphasis>--no-daemon</emphasis>
552 Don't become a daemon, i.e. don't fork and become process group
553 leader, don't detach from controlling tty. Unix only.
558 <emphasis>--pidfile FILE</emphasis>
562 On startup, write the process ID to <emphasis>FILE</emphasis>. Delete the
563 <emphasis>FILE</emphasis> on exit. Failiure to create or delete the
564 <emphasis>FILE</emphasis> is non-fatal. If no <emphasis>FILE</emphasis>
565 option is given, no PID file will be used. Unix only.
570 <emphasis>--user USER</emphasis>
574 After (optionally) writing the PID file, assume the user ID of
575 <emphasis>USER</emphasis>. Exit if the privileges are not sufficient to do
581 <emphasis>configfile</emphasis>
584 If no <emphasis>configfile</emphasis> is included on the command line,
585 <application>JunkBuster</application> will look for a file named
586 <quote>config</quote> in the current directory (except on Win32
587 where it will look for <quote>config.txt</quote> instead). Specify
588 full path to avoid confusion.
597 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
600 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
603 <title>The Main Configuration File</title>
605 Again, the main configuration file is named <filename>config</filename> on
606 Linux/Unix/BSD and OS/2, and <filename>config.txt</filename> on Windows.
607 Configuration lines consist of an initial keyword followed by a list of
608 values, all separated by whitespace (any number of spaces or tabs). For
616 <emphasis>blockfile blocklist.ini</emphasis>
623 Indicates that the blockfile is named <quote>blocklist.ini</quote>.
627 A <quote><literal>#</literal></quote> indicates a comment. Any part of a
628 line following a <quote><literal>#</literal></quote> is ignored, except if
629 the <quote><literal>#</literal></quote> is preceded by a
630 <quote><literal>\</literal></quote>.
634 Thus, by placing a <quote><literal>#</literal></quote> at the start of an
635 existing configuration line, you can make it a comment and it will be treated
636 as if it weren't there. This is called <quote>commenting out</quote> an
637 option and can be useful to turn off features: If you comment out the
638 <quote>logfile</quote> line, <application>junkbuster</application> will not
639 log to a file at all. Watch for the <quote>default:</quote> section in each
640 explanation to see what happens if the option is left unset (or commented
645 Long lines can be continued on the next line by using a
646 <quote><literal>\</literal></quote> as the very last character.
650 There are various aspects of <application>Junkbuster</application> behavior
655 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
658 <title>Defining Other Configuration Files</title>
661 <application>Junkbuster</application> can use a number of other files to tell it
662 what ads to block, what cookies to accept, etc. This section of the
663 configuration file tells <application>Junkbuster</application> where to find
664 all those other files.
668 On <application>Windows</application> and <application>AmigaOS</application>,
669 <application>Junkbuster</application> looks for these files in the same
670 directory as the executable. On Unix and OS/2,
671 <application>Junkbuster</application> looks for these files in the current
672 working directory. In either case, an absolute path name can be used to
677 When development goes modular and multi-user, the blocker, filter, and
678 per-user config will be stored in subdirectories of <quote>confdir</quote>.
679 For now, only <filename>confdir/templates</filename> is used for storing HTML
680 templates for CGI results.
684 The location of the configuration files:
691 <emphasis>confdir /etc/junkbuster</emphasis> # No trailing /, please.
698 The directory where all logging (i.e. <filename>logfile</filename> and
699 <filename>jarfile</filename>) takes place. No trailing
700 <quote><literal>/</literal></quote>, please:
707 <emphasis>logdir /var/log/junkbuster</emphasis>
714 Note that all file specifications below are relative to
715 the above two directories!
719 The <quote>ijb.action</quote> file contains patterns to specify the actions to
720 apply to requests for each site. Default: Cookies to and from all
721 destinations are kept only during the current browser session (i.e. they
722 are not saved to disk). Pop-ups are disabled for all sites. All sites are
723 filtered if <quote>re_filterfile</quote> specified according to the
724 contents of <quote>re_filterfile</quote>. No sites are blocked. The
725 JunkBuster logo is displayed for filtered ads and other images . The syntax
726 of this file is explained in detail <link
727 linkend="actionsfile">below</link>.
734 <emphasis>actionsfile ijb.action</emphasis>
741 The <quote>re_filterfile</quote> file contains content modification rules.
742 These rules permit powerful changes on the content of Web pages, e.g., you
743 could disable your favorite JavaScript annoyances, rewrite the actual
744 content, or just have some fun replacing <quote>Microsoft</quote> with
745 <quote>MicroSuck</quote> wherever it appears on a Web page. Default: No
746 content modification, or whatever the developers are playing with :-/
750 Filtering requires buffering the page content, which may appear to slow down
751 page rendering since nothing is displayed until all content has passed
752 the filters. (It does not really take longer, but seems that way since
753 the page is not incrementally displayed.) This effect will be more noticeable
754 on slower connections.
762 <emphasis>re_filterfile re_filterfile</emphasis>
769 The logfile is where all logging and error messages are written. The logfile
770 can be useful for tracking down a problem with
771 <application>Junkbuster</application> (e.g., it's not blocking an ad you
772 think it should block) but in most cases you probably will never look at it.
776 Your logfile will grow indefinitely, and you will probably want to
777 periodically remove it. On Unix systems, you can do this with a cron job
778 (see <quote>man cron</quote>). For Redhat, a <command>logrotate</command>
779 script has been included.
783 On SuSE Linux systems, you can place a line like <quote>/var/log/junkbuster.*
784 +1024k 644 nobody.nogroup</quote> in <filename>/etc/logfiles</filename>, with
785 the effect that cron.daily will automatically archive, gzip, and empty the
786 log, when it exceeds 1M size.
790 Default: Log to the a file named <filename>logfile</filename>.
791 Comment out to disable logging.
798 <emphasis>logfile logfile</emphasis>
805 The <quote>jarfile</quote> defines where
806 <application>Junkbuster</application> stores the cookies it intercepts. Note
807 that if you use a <quote>jarfile</quote>, it may grow quite large. Default:
808 Don't store intercepted cookies.
815 <emphasis>#jarfile jarfile</emphasis>
822 If you specify a <quote>trustfile</quote>,
823 <application>Junkbuster</application> will only allow access to sites that
824 are named in the trustfile. You can also mark sites as trusted referrers,
825 with the effect that access to untrusted sites will be granted, if a link
826 from a trusted referrer was used. The link target will then be added to the
827 <quote>trustfile</quote>. This is a very restrictive feature that typical
828 users most probably want to leave disabled. Default: Disabled, don't use the
836 <emphasis>#trustfile trust</emphasis>
843 If you use the trust mechanism, it is a good idea to write up some on-line
844 documentation about your blocking policy and to specify the URL(s) here. They
845 will appear on the page that your users receive when they try to access
846 untrusted content. Use multiple times for multiple URLs. Default: Don't
847 display links on the <quote>untrusted</quote> info page.
854 <emphasis>trust-info-url http://www.your-site.com/why_we_block.html</emphasis>
855 <emphasis>trust-info-url http://www.your-site.com/what_we_allow.html</emphasis>
863 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
867 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
870 <title>Other Configuration Options</title>
873 This part of the configuration file contains options that control how
874 <application>Junkbuster</application> operates.
878 <quote>Admin-address</quote> should be set to the email address of the proxy
879 administrator. It is used in many of the proxy-generated pages. Default:
887 <emphasis>#admin-address fill@me.in.please</emphasis>
894 <quote>Proxy-info-url</quote> can be set to a URL that contains more info
895 about this <application>Junkbuster</application> installation, it's
896 configuration and policies. It is used in many of the proxy-generated pages
897 and its use is highly recommended in multi-user installations, since your
898 users will want to know why certain content is blocked or modified. Default:
899 Don't show a link to on-line documentation.
906 <emphasis>proxy-info-url http://www.your-site.com/proxy.html</emphasis>
913 <quote>Listen-address</quote> specifies the address and port where
914 <application>Junkbuster</application> will listen for connections from your
915 Web browser. The default is to listen on the localhost port 8118, and
916 this is suitable for most users. (In your web browser, under proxy
917 configuration, list the proxy server as <quote>localhost</quote> and the
918 port as <quote>8118</quote>).
922 If you already have another service running on port 8118, or if you want to
923 serve requests from other machines (e.g. on your local network) as well, you
924 will need to override the default. The syntax is
925 <quote>listen-address [<ip-address>]:<port></quote>. If you leave
926 out the IP address, <application>junkbuster</application> will bind to all
927 interfaces (addresses) on your machine and may become reachable from the
928 Internet. In that case, consider using access control lists (acl's) (see
929 <quote>aclfile</quote> above), or a firewall.
933 For example, suppose you are running <application>Junkbuster</application> on
934 a machine which has the address 192.168.0.1 on your local private network
935 (192.168.0.0) and has another outside connection with a different address.
936 You want it to serve requests from inside only:
943 <emphasis>listen-address 192.168.0.1:8118</emphasis>
950 If you want it to listen on all addresses (including the outside
958 <emphasis>listen-address :8118</emphasis>
965 If you do this, consider using ACLs (see <quote>aclfile</quote> above). Note:
966 you will need to point your browser(s) to the address and port that you have
967 configured here. Default: localhost:8118 (127.0.0.1:8118).
971 The debug option sets the level of debugging information to log in the
972 logfile (and to the console in the Windows version). A debug level of 1 is
973 informative because it will show you each request as it happens. Higher
974 levels of debug are probably only of interest to developers.
981 debug 1 # GPC = show each GET/POST/CONNECT request
982 debug 2 # CONN = show each connection status
983 debug 4 # IO = show I/O status
984 debug 8 # HDR = show header parsing
985 debug 16 # LOG = log all data into the logfile
986 debug 32 # FRC = debug force feature
987 debug 64 # REF = debug regular expression filter
988 debug 128 # = debug fast redirects
989 debug 256 # = debug GIF de-animation
990 debug 512 # CLF = Common Log Format
991 debug 1024 # = debug kill pop-ups
992 debug 4096 # INFO = Startup banner and warnings.
993 debug 8192 # ERROR = Non-fatal errors
1000 It is <emphasis>highly recommended</emphasis> that you enable ERROR
1001 reporting (debug 8192), at least until the next stable release.
1005 The reporting of FATAL errors (i.e. ones which crash
1006 <application>JunkBuster</application>) is always on and cannot be disabled.
1010 If you want to use CLF (Common Log Format), you should set <quote>debug
1011 512</quote> ONLY, do not enable anything else.
1015 Multiple <quote>debug</quote> directives, are OK - they're logical-OR'd
1023 <emphasis>debug 15 # same as setting the first 4 listed above</emphasis>
1037 <emphasis>debug 1 # URLs</emphasis>
1038 <emphasis>debug 4096 # Info</emphasis>
1039 <emphasis>debug 8192 # Errors - *we highly recommended enabling this*</emphasis>
1046 <application>Junkbuster</application> normally uses
1047 <quote>multi-threading</quote>, a software technique that permits it to
1048 handle many different requests simultaneously. In some cases you may wish to
1049 disable this -- particularly if you're trying to debug a problem. The
1050 <quote>single-threaded</quote> option forces
1051 <application>Junkbuster</application> to handle requests sequentially.
1052 Default: Multi-threaded mode.
1059 <emphasis>#single-threaded</emphasis>
1066 <quote>toggle</quote> allows you to temporarily disable all
1067 <application>Junkbuster's</application> filtering. Just set <quote>toggle
1072 The Windows version of <application>Junkbuster</application> puts an icon in
1073 the system tray, which also allows you to change this option. If you
1074 right-click on that icon (or select the <quote>Options</quote> menu), one
1075 choice is <quote>Enable</quote>. Clicking on enable toggles
1076 <application>Junkbuster</application> on and off. This is useful if you want
1077 to temporarily disable <application>Junkbuster</application>, e.g., to access
1078 a site that requires cookies which you would otherwise have blocked. This can also
1079 be toggled via a web browser at the <application>Junkbuster</application>
1080 internal address of <ulink url="http://i.j.b">http://i.j.b</ulink> on
1085 <quote>toggle 1</quote> means <application>Junkbuster</application> runs
1086 normally, <quote>toggle 0</quote> means that
1087 <application>Junkbuster</application> becomes a non-anonymizing non-blocking
1088 proxy. Default: 1 (on).
1095 <emphasis>toggle 1</emphasis>
1102 For content filtering, i.e. the <quote>+filter</quote> and
1103 <quote>+deanimate-gif</quote> actions, it is necessary that
1104 <application>Junkbuster</application> buffers the entire document body.
1105 This can be potentially dangerous, since a server could just keep sending
1106 data indefinitely and wait for your RAM to exhaust. With nasty consequences.
1110 The <application>buffer-limit</application> option lets you set the maximum
1111 size in Kbytes that each buffer may use. When the documents buffer exceeds
1112 this size, it is flushed to the client unfiltered and no further attempt to
1113 filter the rest of it is made. Remember that there may multiple threads
1114 running, which might require increasing the <quote>buffer-limit</quote>
1115 Kbytes <emphasis>each</emphasis>, unless you have enabled
1116 <quote>single-threaded</quote> above.
1123 <emphasis>buffer-limit 4069</emphasis>
1130 To enable the web-based <filename>ijb.action</filename> file editor set
1131 <application>enable-edit-actions</application> to 1, or 0 to disable. Note
1132 that you must have compiled <application>JunkBuster</application> with
1133 support for this feature, otherwise this option has no effect. This
1134 internal page can be reached at <ulink
1135 url="http://i.j.b">http://i.j.b</ulink>.
1139 Security note: If this is enabled, anyone who can use the proxy
1140 can edit the actions file, and their changes will affect all users.
1141 For shared proxies, you probably want to disable this. Default: enabled.
1148 <emphasis>enable-edit-actions 1</emphasis>
1155 Allow <application>JunkBuster</application> to be toggled on and off
1156 remotely, using your web browser. Set <quote>enable-remote-toggle</quote>to
1157 1 to enable, and 0 to disable. Note that you must have compiled
1158 <application>JunkBuster</application> with support for this feature,
1159 otherwise this option has no effect.
1163 Security note: If this is enabled, anyone who can use the proxy can toggle
1164 it on or off (see <ulink url="http://i.j.b">http://i.j.b</ulink>), and
1165 their changes will affect all users. For shared proxies, you probably want to
1166 disable this. Default: enabled.
1173 <emphasis>enable-remote-toggle 1</emphasis>
1181 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
1184 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1187 <title>Access Control List (ACL)</title>
1189 Access controls are included at the request of some ISPs and systems
1190 administrators, and are not usually needed by individual users. Please note
1191 the warnings in the FAQ that this proxy is not intended to be a substitute
1192 for a firewall or to encourage anyone to defer addressing basic security
1197 If no access settings are specified, the proxy talks to anyone that
1198 connects. If any access settings file are specified, then the proxy
1199 talks only to IP addresses permitted somewhere in this file and not
1200 denied later in this file.
1204 Summary -- if using an ACL:
1209 Client must have permission to receive service.
1214 LAST match in ACL wins.
1219 Default behavior is to deny service.
1224 The syntax for an entry in the Access Control List is:
1231 ACTION SRC_ADDR[/SRC_MASKLEN] [ DST_ADDR[/DST_MASKLEN] ]
1238 Where the individual fields are:
1245 <emphasis>ACTION</emphasis> = <quote>permit-access</quote> or <quote>deny-access</quote>
1247 <emphasis>SRC_ADDR</emphasis> = client hostname or dotted IP address
1248 <emphasis>SRC_MASKLEN</emphasis> = number of bits in the subnet mask for the source
1250 <emphasis>DST_ADDR</emphasis> = server or forwarder hostname or dotted IP address
1251 <emphasis>DST_MASKLEN</emphasis> = number of bits in the subnet mask for the target
1259 The field separator (FS) is whitespace (space or tab).
1263 IMPORTANT NOTE: If the <application>junkbuster</application> is using a
1264 forwarder (see below) or a gateway for a particular destination URL, the
1265 <literal>DST_ADDR</literal> that is examined is the address of the forwarder
1266 or the gateway and <emphasis>NOT</emphasis> the address of the ultimate
1267 target. This is necessary because it may be impossible for the local
1268 <application>Junkbuster</application> to determine the address of the
1269 ultimate target (that's often what gateways are used for).
1273 Here are a few examples to show how the ACL features work:
1277 <quote>localhost</quote> is OK -- no DST_ADDR implies that
1278 <emphasis>ALL</emphasis> destination addresses are OK:
1285 <emphasis>permit-access localhost</emphasis>
1292 A silly example to illustrate permitting any host on the class-C subnet with
1293 <application>Junkbuster</application> to go anywhere:
1300 <emphasis>permit-access www.junkbusters.com/24</emphasis>
1307 Except deny one particular IP address from using it at all:
1314 <emphasis>deny-access ident.junkbusters.com</emphasis>
1321 You can also specify an explicit network address and subnet mask.
1322 Explicit addresses do not have to be resolved to be used.
1329 <emphasis>permit-access 207.153.200.0/24</emphasis>
1336 A subnet mask of 0 matches anything, so the next line permits everyone.
1343 <emphasis>permit-access 0.0.0.0/0</emphasis>
1350 Note, you <emphasis>cannot</emphasis> say:
1357 <emphasis>permit-access .org</emphasis>
1364 to allow all *.org domains. Every IP address listed must resolve fully.
1368 An ISP may want to provide a <application>Junkbuster</application> that is
1369 accessible by <quote>the world</quote> and yet restrict use of some of their
1370 private content to hosts on its internal network (i.e. its own subscribers).
1371 Say, for instance the ISP owns the Class-B IP address block 123.124.0.0 (a 16
1372 bit netmask). This is how they could do it:
1379 <emphasis>permit-access 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0</emphasis> # other clients can go anywhere
1380 # with the following exceptions:
1382 <emphasis>deny-access</emphasis> 0.0.0.0/0 123.124.0.0/16 # block all external requests for
1383 # sites on the ISP's network
1385 <emphasis>permit 0.0.0.0/0 www.my_isp.com</emphasis> # except for the ISP's main
1388 <emphasis>permit 123.124.0.0/16 0.0.0.0/0</emphasis> # the ISP's clients can go
1396 Note that if some hostnames are listed with multiple IP addresses,
1397 the primary value returned by DNS (via gethostbyname()) is used. Default:
1398 Anyone can access the proxy.
1403 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
1406 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1409 <title>Forwarding</title>
1412 This feature allows chaining of HTTP requests via multiple proxies.
1413 It can be used to better protect privacy and confidentiality when
1414 accessing specific domains by routing requests to those domains
1415 to a special purpose filtering proxy such as lpwa.com. Or to use
1416 a caching proxy to speed up browsing.
1420 It can also be used in an environment with multiple networks to route
1421 requests via multiple gateways allowing transparent access to multiple
1422 networks without having to modify browser configurations.
1426 Also specified here are SOCKS proxies. <application>Junkbuster</application>
1427 SOCKS 4 and SOCKS 4A. The difference is that SOCKS 4A will resolve the target
1428 hostname using DNS on the SOCKS server, not our local DNS client.
1432 The syntax of each line is:
1439 <emphasis>forward target_domain[:port] http_proxy_host[:port]</emphasis>
1440 <emphasis>forward-socks4 target_domain[:port] socks_proxy_host[:port] http_proxy_host[:port]</emphasis>
1441 <emphasis>forward-socks4a target_domain[:port] socks_proxy_host[:port] http_proxy_host[:port]</emphasis>
1448 If http_proxy_host is <quote>.</quote>, then requests are not forwarded to a
1449 HTTP proxy but are made directly to the web servers.
1453 Lines are checked in sequence, and the last match wins.
1457 There is an implicit line equivalent to the following, which specifies that
1458 anything not finding a match on the list is to go out without forwarding
1459 or gateway protocol, like so:
1466 <emphasis>forward .* . </emphasis># implicit
1473 In the following common configuration, everything goes to Lucent's LPWA,
1474 except SSL on port 443 (which it doesn't handle):
1481 <emphasis>forward .* lpwa.com:8000</emphasis>
1482 <emphasis>forward :443 .</emphasis>
1489 See the FAQ for instructions on how to automate the login procedure for LPWA.
1490 Some users have reported difficulties related to LPWA's use of
1491 <quote>.</quote> as the last element of the domain, and have said that this
1492 can be fixed with this:
1499 <emphasis>forward lpwa. lpwa.com:8000</emphasis>
1506 (NOTE: the syntax for specifying target_domain has changed since the
1507 previous paragraph was written -- it will not work now. More information
1512 In this fictitious example, everything goes via an ISP's caching proxy,
1513 except requests to that ISP:
1520 <emphasis>forward .* caching.myisp.net:8000</emphasis>
1521 <emphasis>forward myisp.net .</emphasis>
1528 For the @home network, we're told the forwarding configuration is this:
1536 <emphasis>forward .* proxy:8080</emphasis>
1543 Also, we're told they insist on getting cookies and JavaScript, so you should
1544 add home.com to the cookie file. We consider JavaScript a security risk.
1545 Java need not be enabled.
1549 In this example direct connections are made to all <quote>internal</quote>
1550 domains, but everything else goes through Lucent's LPWA by way of the
1551 company's SOCKS gateway to the Internet.
1558 <emphasis>forward-socks4 .* lpwa.com:8000 firewall.my_company.com:1080</emphasis>
1559 <emphasis>forward my_company.com .</emphasis>
1566 This is how you could set up a site that always uses SOCKS but no forwarders:
1573 <emphasis>forward-socks4a .* . firewall.my_company.com:1080</emphasis>
1580 An advanced example for network administrators:
1584 If you have links to multiple ISPs that provide various special content to
1585 their subscribers, you can configure forwarding to pass requests to the
1586 specific host that's connected to that ISP so that everybody can see all
1587 of the content on all of the ISPs.
1591 This is a bit tricky, but here's an example:
1596 host-a has a PPP connection to isp-a.com. And host-b has a PPP connection to
1597 isp-b.com. host-a can run a <application>Junkbuster</application> proxy with
1598 forwarding like this:
1605 <emphasis>forward .* .</emphasis>
1606 <emphasis>forward isp-b.com host-b:8118</emphasis>
1613 host-b can run a <application>Junkbuster</application> proxy with forwarding
1621 <emphasis>forward .* .</emphasis>
1622 <emphasis>forward isp-a.com host-a:8118</emphasis>
1629 Now, <emphasis>anyone</emphasis> on the Internet (including users on host-a
1630 and host-b) can set their browser's proxy to <emphasis>either</emphasis>
1631 host-a or host-b and be able to browse the content on isp-a or isp-b.
1635 Here's another practical example, for University of Kent at
1636 Canterbury students with a network connection in their room, who
1637 need to use the University's Squid web cache.
1644 <emphasis>forward *. ssbcache.ukc.ac.uk:3128</emphasis> # Use the proxy, except for:
1645 <emphasis>forward .ukc.ac.uk . </emphasis> # Anything on the same domain as us
1646 <emphasis>forward * . </emphasis> # Host with no domain specified
1647 <emphasis>forward 129.12.*.* . </emphasis> # A dotted IP on our /16 network.
1648 <emphasis>forward 127.*.*.* . </emphasis> # Loopback address
1649 <emphasis>forward localhost.localdomain . </emphasis> # Loopback address
1650 <emphasis>forward www.ukc.mirror.ac.uk . </emphasis> # Specific host
1657 If you intend to chain <application>Junkbuster</application> and
1658 <application>squid</application> locally, then chain as
1659 <literal>browser -> squid -> junkbuster</literal> is the recommended way.
1663 Your squid configuration could then look like this:
1670 # Define junkbuster as parent cache
1671 <!-- per feedback from user...
1672 cache_peer 127.0.0.1 8118 parent 0 no-query
1674 cache_peer 127.0.0.1 parent 8118 0 no-query
1676 # Define ACL for protocol FTP
1679 # Do not forward ACL FTP to junkbuster
1680 always_direct allow FTP
1682 # Do not forward ACL CONNECT (https) to junkbuster
1683 always_direct allow CONNECT
1685 # Forward the rest to junkbuster
1686 never_direct allow all
1694 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
1697 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1700 <title>Windows GUI Options</title>
1702 Removed references to Win32. HB 09/23/01
1705 <application>Junkbuster</application> has a number of options specific to the
1706 Windows GUI interface:
1710 If <quote>activity-animation</quote> is set to 1, the
1711 <application>Junkbuster</application> icon will animate when
1712 <quote>Junkbuster</quote> is active. To turn off, set to 0.
1719 <emphasis>activity-animation 1</emphasis>
1726 If <quote>log-messages</quote> is set to 1,
1727 <application>Junkbuster</application> will log messages to the console
1735 <emphasis>log-messages 1</emphasis>
1742 If <quote>log-buffer-size</quote> is set to 1, the size of the log buffer,
1743 i.e. the amount of memory used for the log messages displayed in the
1744 console window, will be limited to <quote>log-max-lines</quote> (see below).
1748 Warning: Setting this to 0 will result in the buffer to grow infinitely and
1749 eat up all your memory!
1756 <emphasis>log-buffer-size 1</emphasis>
1763 <application>log-max-lines</application> is the maximum number of lines held
1764 in the log buffer. See above.
1771 <emphasis>log-max-lines 200</emphasis>
1778 If <quote>log-highlight-messages</quote> is set to 1,
1779 <application>Junkbuster</application> will highlight portions of the log
1780 messages with a bold-faced font:
1787 <emphasis>log-highlight-messages 1</emphasis>
1794 The font used in the console window:
1801 <emphasis>log-font-name Comic Sans MS</emphasis>
1808 Font size used in the console window:
1815 <emphasis>log-font-size 8</emphasis>
1822 <quote>show-on-task-bar</quote> controls whether or not
1823 <application>Junkbuster</application> will appear as a button on the Task bar
1831 <emphasis>show-on-task-bar 0</emphasis>
1838 If <quote>close-button-minimizes</quote> is set to 1, the Windows close
1839 button will minimize <application>Junkbuster</application> instead of closing
1840 the program (close with the exit option on the File menu).
1847 <emphasis>close-button-minimizes 1</emphasis>
1854 The <quote>hide-console</quote> option is specific to the MS-Win console
1855 version of <application>JunkBuster</application>. If this option is used,
1856 <application>Junkbuster</application> will disconnect from and hide the
1873 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
1876 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1877 <sect2 id="actionsfile">
1878 <title>The Actions File</title>
1881 The <quote>ijb.action</quote> file (formerly
1882 <filename>actionsfile</filename>) is used to define what actions
1883 <application>Junkbuster</application> takes, and thus determines how images,
1884 cookies and various other aspects of HTTP content and transactions are
1885 handled. Images can be anything you want, including ads, banners, or just
1886 some obnoxious image that you would rather not see. Cookies can be accepted
1887 or rejected, or accepted only during the current browser session (i.e.
1888 not written to disk). Changes to <filename>ijb.action</filename> should
1889 be immediately visible to <application>Junkbuster</application> without
1890 the need to restart.
1894 To determine which actions apply to a request, the URL of the request is
1895 compared to all patterns in this file. Every time it matches, the list of
1896 applicable actions for the URL is incrementally updated. You can trace
1897 this process by visiting <ulink
1898 url="http://i.j.b/show-url-info">http://i.j.b/show-url-info</ulink>.
1902 The actions file can be edited with a browser by loading
1903 <ulink url="http://i.j.b/">http://i.j.b/</ulink>, and then select
1904 <quote>Edit Actions</quote>.
1908 There are four types of lines in this file: comments (begin with a
1909 <quote>#</quote> character), actions, aliases and patterns, all of which are
1910 explained below, as well as the configuration file syntax that
1911 <application>Junkbuster</application> understands.
1916 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
1918 <title>URL Domain and Path Syntax</title>
1920 Generally, a pattern has the form <domain>/<path>, where both the
1921 <domain> and <path> part are optional. If you only specify a
1922 domain part, the <quote>/</quote> can be left out:
1926 <emphasis>www.example.com</emphasis> - is a domain only pattern and will match any request to
1927 <quote>www.example.com</quote>.
1931 <emphasis>www.example.com/</emphasis> - means exactly the same.
1935 <emphasis>www.example.com/index.html</emphasis> - matches only the single
1936 document <quote>/index.html</quote> on <quote>www.example.com</quote>.
1940 <emphasis>/index.html</emphasis> - matches the document <quote>/index.html</quote>, regardless of
1945 <emphasis>index.html</emphasis> - matches nothing, since it would be
1946 interpreted as a domain name and there is no top-level domain called
1947 <quote>.html</quote>.
1951 The matching of the domain part offers some flexible options: if the
1952 domain starts or ends with a dot, it becomes unanchored at that end.
1957 <emphasis>.example.com</emphasis> - matches any domain that <emphasis>ENDS</emphasis> in
1958 <quote>.example.com</quote>.
1962 <emphasis>www.</emphasis> - matches any domain that <emphasis>STARTS</emphasis> with
1967 Additionally, there are wild-cards that you can use in the domain names
1968 themselves. They work pretty similar to shell wild-cards: <quote>*</quote>
1969 stands for zero or more arbitrary characters, <quote>?</quote> stands for
1970 any single character. And you can define character classes in square
1971 brackets and they can be freely mixed:
1975 <emphasis>ad*.example.com</emphasis> - matches <quote>adserver.example.com</quote>,
1976 <quote>ads.example.com</quote>, etc but not <quote>sfads.example.com</quote>.
1980 <emphasis>*ad*.example.com</emphasis> - matches all of the above, and then some.
1984 <emphasis>.?pix.com</emphasis> - matches <quote>www.ipix.com</quote>,
1985 <quote>pictures.epix.com</quote>, <quote>a.b.c.d.e.upix.com</quote>, etc.
1989 <emphasis>www[1-9a-ez].example.com</emphasis> - matches <quote>www1.example.com</quote>,
1990 <quote>www4.example.com</quote>, <quote>wwwd.example.com</quote>,
1991 <quote>wwwz.example.com</quote>, etc., but <emphasis>not</emphasis>
1992 <quote>wwww.example.com</quote>.
1996 If <application>Junkbuster</application> was compiled with
1997 <quote>pcre</quote> support (default), Perl compatible regular expressions
1998 can be used. See the <filename>pcre/docs/</filename> directory or <quote>man
1999 perlre</quote> (also available on <ulink
2000 url="http://www.perldoc.com/perl5.6/pod/perlre.html">http://www.perldoc.com/perl5.6/pod/perlre.html</ulink>)
2001 for details. A brief discussion of regular expressions is in the
2002 <link linkend="regex">Appendix</link>. For instance:
2006 <emphasis>/.*/advert[0-9]+\.jpe?g</emphasis> - would match a URL from any
2007 domain, with any path that includes <quote>advert</quote> followed
2008 immediately by one or more digits, then a <quote>.</quote> and ending in
2009 either <quote>jpeg</quote> or <quote>jpg</quote>. So we match
2010 <quote>example.com/ads/advert2.jpg</quote>, and
2011 <quote>www.example.com/ads/banners/advert39.jpeg</quote>, but not
2012 <quote>www.example.com/ads/banners/advert39.gif</quote> (no gifs in the
2017 Please note that matching in the path is case
2018 <emphasis>INSENSITIVE</emphasis> by default, but you can switch to case
2019 sensitive at any point in the pattern by using the
2020 <quote>(?-i)</quote> switch:
2024 <emphasis>www.example.com/(?-i)PaTtErN.*</emphasis> - will match only
2025 documents whose path starts with <quote>PaTtErN</quote> in
2026 <emphasis>exactly</emphasis> this capitalization.
2031 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
2035 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2038 <title>Actions</title>
2040 Actions are enabled if preceded with a <quote>+</quote>, and disabled if
2041 preceded with a <quote>-</quote>. Actions are invoked by enclosing the
2042 action name in curly braces (e.g. {+some_action}), followed by a list of
2043 URLs to which the action applies. There are three classes of actions:
2051 Boolean (e.g. <quote>+/-block</quote>):
2057 <emphasis>{+name}</emphasis> # enable this action
2058 <emphasis>{-name}</emphasis> # disable this action
2068 parameterized (e.g. <quote>+/-hide-user-agent</quote>):
2074 <emphasis>{+name{param}}</emphasis> # enable action and set parameter to <quote>param</quote>
2075 <emphasis>{-name}</emphasis> # disable action
2084 Multi-value (e.g. <quote>{+/-add-header{Name: value}}</quote>, <quote>{+/-wafer{name=value}}</quote>):
2090 <emphasis>{+name{param}}</emphasis> # enable action and add parameter <quote>param</quote>
2091 <emphasis>{-name{param}}</emphasis> # remove the parameter <quote>param</quote>
2092 <emphasis>{-name}</emphasis> # disable this action totally
2103 If nothing is specified in this file, no <quote>actions</quote> are taken.
2104 So in this case <application>JunkBuster</application> would just be a
2105 normal, non-blocking, non-anonymizing proxy. You must specifically
2106 enable the privacy and blocking features you need (although the
2107 provided default <filename>ijb.action</filename> file will
2108 give a good starting point).
2112 Later defined actions always over-ride earlier ones. For multi-valued
2113 actions, the actions are applied in the order they are specified.
2117 The list of valid <application>Junkbuster</application> <quote>actions</quote> are:
2125 Add the specified HTTP header, which is not checked for validity.
2126 You may specify this many times to specify many different headers:
2132 <emphasis>+add-header{Name: value}</emphasis>
2142 Block this URL totally.
2148 <emphasis>+block</emphasis>
2158 De-animate all animated GIF images, i.e. reduce them to their last frame.
2159 This will also shrink the images considerably (in bytes, not pixels!). If
2160 the option <quote>first</quote> is given, the first frame of the animation
2161 is used as the replacement. If <quote>last</quote> is given, the last frame
2162 of the animation is used instead, which probably makes more sense for most
2163 banner animations, but also has the risk of not showing the entire last
2164 frame (if it is only a delta to an earlier frame).
2170 <emphasis>+deanimate-gifs{last}</emphasis>
2171 <emphasis>+deanimate-gifs{first}</emphasis>
2180 <quote>+downgrade</quote> will downgrade HTTP/1.1 client requests to
2181 HTTP/1.0 and downgrade the responses as well. Use this action for servers
2182 that use HTTP/1.1 protocol features that
2183 <application>Junkbuster</application> doesn't handle well yet. HTTP/1.1
2184 is only partially implemented. Default is not to downgrade requests.
2190 <emphasis>+downgrade</emphasis>
2199 Many sites, like yahoo.com, don't just link to other sites. Instead, they
2200 will link to some script on their own server, giving the destination as a
2201 parameter, which will then redirect you to the final target. URLs resulting
2202 from this scheme typically look like:
2203 http://some.place/some_script?http://some.where-else.
2206 Sometimes, there are even multiple consecutive redirects encoded in the
2207 URL. These redirections via scripts make your web browsing more traceable,
2208 since the server from which you follow such a link can see where you go to.
2209 Apart from that, valuable bandwidth and time is wasted, while your browser
2210 ask the server for one redirect after the other. Plus, it feeds the
2214 The <quote>+fast-redirects</quote> option enables interception of these
2215 requests by <application>Junkbuster</application>, who will cut off all but
2216 the last valid URL in the request and send a local redirect back to your
2217 browser without contacting the remote site.
2223 <emphasis>+fast-redirects</emphasis>
2232 Filter the website through the re_filterfile:
2238 <emphasis>+filter{filename}</emphasis>
2247 Block any existing X-Forwarded-for header, and do not add a new one:
2253 <emphasis>+hide-forwarded</emphasis>
2262 If the browser sends a <quote>From:</quote> header containing your e-mail
2263 address, this either completely removes the header (<quote>block</quote>), or
2264 changes it to the specified e-mail address.
2270 <emphasis>+hide-from{block}</emphasis>
2271 <emphasis>+hide-from{spam@sittingduck.xqq}</emphasis>
2280 Don't send the <quote>Referer:</quote> (sic) header to the web site. You
2281 can block it, forge a URL to the same server as the request (which is
2282 preferred because some sites will not send images otherwise) or set it to a
2283 constant string of your choice.
2289 <emphasis>+hide-referer{block}</emphasis>
2290 <emphasis>+hide-referer{forge}</emphasis>
2291 <emphasis>+hide-referer{http://nowhere.com}</emphasis>
2300 Alternative spelling of <quote>+hide-referer</quote>. It has the same
2301 parameters, and can be freely mixed with, <quote>+hide-referer</quote>.
2302 (<quote>referrer</quote> is the correct English spelling, however the HTTP
2303 specification has a bug - it requires it to be spelled <quote>referer</quote>.)
2309 <emphasis>+hide-referrer{...}</emphasis>
2318 Change the <quote>User-Agent:</quote> header so web servers can't tell your
2319 browser type. Warning! This breaks many web sites. Specify the
2320 user-agent value you want. Example, pretend to be using Netscape on
2327 <emphasis>+hide-user-agent{Mozilla (X11; I; Linux 2.0.32 i586)}</emphasis>
2334 Or to identify yourself explicitly as a <quote>Junkbuster</quote> user:
2340 <emphasis>+hide-user-agent{JunkBuster/1.0}</emphasis>
2345 (Don't change the version number from 1.0 - after all, why tell them?)
2352 <emphasis>+hide-user-agent{browser-type}</emphasis>
2362 Treat this URL as an image. This only matters if it's also <quote>+block</quote>ed,
2363 in which case a <quote>blocked</quote> image can be sent rather than a HTML page.
2364 See <quote>+image-blocker{}</quote> below for the control over what is actually sent.
2370 <emphasis>+image</emphasis>
2379 Decides what to do with URLs that end up tagged with <quote>{+block
2380 +image}</quote>. There are 4 options. <quote>-image-blocker</quote> will
2381 send a HTML <quote>blocked</quote> page, usually resulting in a
2382 <quote>broken image</quote> icon. <quote>+image-blocker{logo}</quote> will
2383 send a <quote>JunkBuster</quote> image.
2384 <quote>+image-blocker{blank}</quote> will send a 1x1 transparent GIF image.
2385 And finally, <quote>+image-blocker{http://xyz.com}</quote> will send a HTTP
2386 temporary redirect to the specified image. This has the advantage of the
2387 icon being being cached by the browser, which will speed up the display.
2393 <emphasis>+image-blocker{logo}</emphasis>
2394 <emphasis>+image-blocker{blank}</emphasis>
2395 <emphasis>+image-blocker{http://i.j.b/send-banner}</emphasis>
2404 By default (i.e. in the absence of a <quote>+limit-connect</quote>
2405 action), <application>Junkbuster</application> will only allow CONNECT
2406 requests to port 443, which is the standard port for https as a
2411 The CONNECT methods exists in HTTP to allow access to secure websites
2412 (https:// URLs) through proxies. It works very simply: the proxy
2413 connects to the server on the specified port, and then short-circuits
2414 its connections to the client <emphasis>and</emphasis> to the remote proxy.
2415 This can be a big security hole, since CONNECT-enabled proxies can
2416 be abused as TCP relays very easily.
2420 If you want to allow CONNECT for more ports than this, or want to forbid
2421 CONNECT altogether, you can specify a comma separated list of ports and
2422 port ranges (the latter using dashes, with the minimum defaulting to 0 and
2430 <emphasis>+limit-connect{443} # This is the default and need no be specified.</emphasis>
2431 <emphasis>+limit-connect{80,443} # Ports 80 and 443 are OK.</emphasis>
2432 <emphasis>+limit-connect{-3, 7, 20-100, 500-} # Port less than 3, 7, 20 to 100</emphasis>
2433 <emphasis> #and above 500 are OK.</emphasis>
2443 <quote>+no-compression</quote> prevents the website from compressing the
2444 data. Some websites do this, which can be a problem for
2445 <application>Junkbuster</application>, since <quote>+filter</quote>,
2446 <quote>+no-popup</quote> and <quote>+gif-deanimate</quote> will not work on
2447 compressed data. This will slow down connections to those websites,
2448 though. Default is <quote>nocompression</quote> is turned on.
2455 <emphasis>+nocompression</emphasis>
2464 If the website sets cookies, <quote>no-cookies-keep</quote> will make sure
2465 they are erased when you exit and restart your web browser. This makes
2466 profiling cookies useless, but won't break sites which require cookies so
2467 that you can log in for transactions. Default: on.
2473 <emphasis>+no-cookies-keep</emphasis>
2482 Prevent the website from reading cookies:
2488 <emphasis>+no-cookies-read</emphasis>
2497 Prevent the website from setting cookies:
2503 <emphasis>+no-cookies-set</emphasis>
2512 Filter the website through a built-in filter to disable those obnoxious
2513 JavaScript pop-up windows via window.open(), etc. The two alternative
2514 spellings are equivalent.
2520 <emphasis>+no-popup</emphasis>
2521 <emphasis>+no-popups</emphasis>
2530 This action only applies if you are using a <filename>jarfile</filename>
2531 for saving cookies. It sends a cookie to every site stating that you do not
2532 accept any copyright on cookies sent to you, and asking them not to track
2533 you. Of course, this is a (relatively) unique header they could use to
2540 <emphasis>+vanilla-wafer</emphasis>
2549 This allows you to add an arbitrary cookie. It can be specified multiple
2550 times in order to add as many cookies as you like.
2556 <emphasis>+wafer{name=value}</emphasis>
2567 The meaning of any of the above is reversed by preceding the action with a
2568 <quote>-</quote>, in place of the <quote>+</quote>.
2576 Turn off cookies by default, then allow a few through for specified sites:
2583 # Turn off all persistent cookies
2584 { +no-cookies-read }
2586 # Allow cookies for this browser session ONLY
2587 { +no-cookies-keep }
2589 # Exceptions to the above, sites that benefit from persistent cookies
2590 { -no-cookies-read }
2592 { -no-cookies-keep }
2599 # Alternative way of saying the same thing
2600 {-no-cookies-set -no-cookies-read -no-cookies-keep}
2609 Now turn off <quote>fast redirects</quote>, and then we allow two exceptions:
2619 # Reverse it for these two sites, which don't work right without it.
2621 www.ukc.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wac\.cgi\?
2629 Turn on page filtering, with one exception for sourceforge:
2636 # Run everything through the default filter file (<filename>re_filterfile</filename>):
2639 # But please don't re_filter code from sourceforge!
2641 .cvs.sourceforge.net
2648 Now some URLs that we want <quote>blocked</quote>, ie we won't see them.
2649 Many of these use regular expressions that will expand to match multiple
2659 /.*/(.*[-_.])?ads?[0-9]?(/|[-_.].*|\.(gif|jpe?g))
2660 /.*/(.*[-_.])?count(er)?(\.cgi|\.dll|\.exe|[?/])
2661 /.*/(ng)?adclient\.cgi
2662 /.*/(plain|live|rotate)[-_.]?ads?/
2663 /.*/(sponsor)s?[0-9]?/
2664 /.*/_?(plain|live)?ads?(-banners)?/
2666 /.*/ad(sdna_image|gifs?)/
2667 /.*/ad(server|stream|juggler)\.(cgi|pl|dll|exe)
2671 /.*/adv((er)?ts?|ertis(ing|ements?))?/
2675 /.*/cgi-bin/centralad/getimage
2676 /.*/images/addver\.gif
2677 /.*/images/marketing/.*\.(gif|jpe?g)
2681 /.*/sponsors?[0-9]?/
2682 /.*/advert[0-9]+\.jpg
2689 /graphics/defaultAd/
2691 /image\.ng/transactionID
2692 /images/.*/.*_anim\.gif # alvin brattli
2693 /ip_img/.*\.(gif|jpe?g)
2697 /cgi-bin/nph-adclick.exe/
2698 /.*/Image/BannerAdvertising/
2700 /.*/adlib/server\.cgi
2709 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
2712 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2714 <title>Aliases</title>
2716 Custom <quote>actions</quote>, known to <application>Junkbuster</application>
2717 as <quote>aliases</quote>, can be defined by combining other <quote>actions</quote>.
2718 These can in turn be invoked just like the built-in <quote>actions</quote>.
2719 Currently, an alias can contain any character except space, tab, <quote>=</quote>,
2720 <quote>{</quote> or <quote>}</quote>. But please use only <quote>a</quote>-
2721 <quote>z</quote>, <quote>0</quote>-<quote>9</quote>, <quote>+</quote>, and
2722 <quote>-</quote>. Alias names are not case sensitive, and
2723 <emphasis>must be defined before anything</emphasis> else in the
2724 <filename>ijb.action</filename>file ! And there can only be one set of
2725 <quote>aliases</quote> defined.
2729 Now let's define a few aliases:
2736 # Useful customer aliases we can use later. These must come first!
2738 +no-cookies = +no-cookies-set +no-cookies-read
2739 -no-cookies = -no-cookies-set -no-cookies-read
2740 fragile = -block -no-cookies -filter -fast-redirects -hide-referer -no-popups
2741 shop = -no-cookies -filter -fast-redirects
2742 +imageblock = +block +image
2744 #For people who don't like to type too much: ;-)
2747 c2 = -no-cookies-set +no-cookies-read
2748 c3 = +no-cookies-set -no-cookies-read
2749 #... etc. Customize to your heart's content.
2756 Some examples using our <quote>shop</quote> and <quote>fragile</quote>
2764 # These sites are very complex and require
2765 # minimal interference.
2767 .office.microsoft.com
2768 .windowsupdate.microsoft.com
2771 # Shopping sites - still want to block ads.
2774 .worldpay.com # for quietpc.com
2778 # These shops require pop-ups
2790 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
2793 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2794 <sect2 id="filterfile">
2795 <title>The Filter File</title>
2797 The filter file defines what filtering of web pages
2798 <application>Junkbuster</application> does. The default filter file is
2799 <filename>re_filterfile</filename>, located in the config directory. In this
2800 file, <emphasis>any document content</emphasis>, whether viewable text or
2801 embedded non-visible content, can be changed.
2805 This file uses regular expressions to alter or remove any string in the
2806 target page. Some examples from the included default <filename>re_filterfile</filename>:
2810 Stop web pages from displaying annoying messages in the status bar by
2811 deleting such references:
2818 # The status bar is for displaying link targets, not pointless buzzwords.
2819 # Again, check it out on http://www.airport-cgn.de/.
2820 s/status='.*?';*//ig
2827 Just for kicks, replace any occurrence of <quote>Microsoft</quote> with
2828 <quote>MicroSuck</quote>:
2835 s/microsoft(?!.com)/MicroSuck/ig
2842 Kill those auto-refresh tags:
2849 # Kill refresh tags. I like to refresh myself. Manually.
2850 # check it out on http://www.airport-cgn.de/ and go to the arrivals page.
2852 s/<meta[^>]*http-equiv[^>]*refresh.*URL=([^>]*?)"?>/<link rev="x-refresh" href=$1>/i
2853 s/<meta[^>]*http-equiv="?page-enter"?[^>]*content=[^>]*>/<!--no page enter for me-->/i
2861 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
2865 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2868 <title>Templates</title>
2870 When <application>Junkbuster</application> displays one of its internal
2871 pages, such as a 404 Not Found error page, it uses the appropriate template.
2872 On Linux, BSD, and Unix, these are locate in
2873 <filename>/etc/junkbuster/templates</filename> by default. These may be
2874 customized, if desired.
2881 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
2885 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
2886 <sect1 id="quickstart"><title>Quickstart to Using Junkbuster</title>
2888 Install package, then run and enjoy! <application>JunkBuster</application>
2889 accepts only one command line option -- the configuration file to be
2890 used. Example Unix startup command:
2896 # /usr/sbin/junkbuster /etc/junkbuster/config
2902 An init script is provided for SuSE and Redhat.
2906 For for SuSE: /etc/rc.d/junkbuster start
2910 For RedHat: /etc/rc.d/init.d/junkbuster start
2915 If no configuration file is specified on the command line,
2916 <application>Junkbuster</application> will look for a file named
2917 <filename>config</filename> in the current directory. Except on Win32 where
2918 it will try <filename>config.txt</filename>. If no file is specified on the
2919 command line and no default configuration file can be found,
2920 <application>Junkbuster</application> will fail to start.
2924 Be sure your browser is set to use the proxy which is by default at
2925 localhost, port 8118. With <application>Netscape</application> (and
2926 <application>Mozilla</application>), this can be set under <literal>Edit
2927 -> Preferences -> Advanced -> Proxies -> HTTP Proxy</literal>.
2928 For <application>Internet Explorer</application>: <literal>Tools >
2929 Internet Properties -> Connections -> LAN Setting</literal>. Then,
2930 check <quote>Use Proxy</quote> and fill in the appropriate info (Address:
2931 localhost, Port: 8118). Include if HTTPS proxy support too.
2935 The included default configuration files should give a reasonable starting
2936 point, though may be somewhat aggressive in blocking junk. You will probably
2937 want to keep an eye out for sites that require persistent cookies, and add these to
2938 <filename>ijb.action</filename> as needed. By default, most of these will
2939 be accepted only during the current browser session, until you add them to
2940 the configuration. If you want the browser to handle this instead, you will
2941 need to edit <filename>ijb.action</filename> and disable this feature. If you
2942 use more than one browser, it would make more sense to let
2943 <application>Junkbuster</application> handle this. In which case, the
2944 browser(s) should be set to accept all cookies.
2948 If a particular site shows problems loading properly, try adding it
2949 to the <literal>{fragile}</literal> section of
2950 <filename>ijb.action</filename>. This will turn off most actions for
2955 <application>Junkbuster</application> is HTTP/1.1 compliant, but not all 1.1
2956 features are as yet implemented. If browsers that support HTTP/1.1 (like
2957 <application>Mozilla</application> or recent versions of I.E.) experience
2958 problems, you might try to force HTTP/1.0 compatibility. For Mozilla, look
2959 under <literal>Edit -> Preferences -> Debug -> Networking</literal>.
2960 Or set the <quote>+downgrade</quote> config option in
2961 <filename>ijb.action</filename>.
2965 After running <application>Junkbuster</application> for a while, you can
2966 start to fine tune the configuration to suit your personal, or site,
2967 preferences and requirements. There are many, many aspects that can
2968 be customized. <quote>Actions</quote> (as specified in <filename>ijb.action</filename>)
2969 can be adjusted by pointing your browser to
2970 <ulink url="http://i.j.b/">http://i.j.b/</ulink>,
2971 and then follow the link to <quote>edit the actions list</quote>.
2972 (This is an internal page and does not require Internet access.)
2976 In fact, various aspects of <application>Junkbuster</application>
2977 configuration can be viewed from this page, including
2978 current configuration parameters, source code version numbers,
2979 the browser's request headers, and <quote>actions</quote> that apply
2980 to a given URL. In addition to the <filename>ijb.action</filename> file
2981 editor mentioned above, <application>Junkbuster</application> can also
2982 be turned <quote>on</quote> and <quote>off</quote> from this page.
2986 If you encounter problems, please verify it is a
2987 <application>Junkbuster</application> bug, by disabling
2988 <application>Junkbuster</application>, and then trying the same page.
2989 Also, try another browser if possible to eliminate browser or site
2990 problems. Before reporting it as a bug, see if there is not a configuration
2991 option that is enabled that is causing the page not to load. You can
2992 then add an exception for that page or site. If a bug, please report it to
2993 the developers (see below).
2999 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
3000 <sect1 id="contact"><title>Contacting the Developers, Bug Reporting and Feature
3003 We value your feedback. However, to provide you with the best support,
3006 <member>Use the <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=11118&atid=211118">support forum</ulink> to get
3008 <member>Submit bugs only thru our <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=11118&atid=111118">bug
3010 Make sure that the bug has not yet been submitted. Please try to
3011 verify that it is a <application>Junkbuster</application> bug, and not
3012 a browser or site bug first. Also, check to make sure this is not
3013 already a known bug. If you are using your own custom configuration,
3014 please try the stock configs to see if the problem is a configuration
3015 related bug. And if not using the latest development snapshot, please
3016 try the latest one. Or even better, CVS sources.
3018 <member>Submit feature requests only thru our <ulink
3019 url="http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?atid=361118&group_id=11118&func=browse">feature request forum</ulink>.</member>
3024 For any other issues, feel free to use the <a
3025 href="http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=11118">mailing lists</a>.
3029 Anyone interested in actively participating in development and related
3030 discussions can join the appropriate mailing list
3031 <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=11118">here</ulink>.
3032 Archives are available here too.
3038 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
3039 <sect1 id="copyright"><title>Copyright and History</title>
3042 <title>License</title>
3044 <application>Internet Junkbuster</application> is free software; you can
3045 redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public
3046 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
3047 License, or (at your option) any later version.
3051 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
3052 ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
3053 FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
3054 details, which is available from <ulink
3055 url="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html">the Free Software Foundation,
3056 Inc</ulink>, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
3061 <!-- ~ End section ~ -->
3064 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
3067 <title>History</title>
3069 <application>Junkbuster</application> was originally written by Anonymous
3071 url="http://www.junkbusters.com/ht/en/ijbfaq.html">Junkbuster's
3072 Corporation</ulink>, and was released as free open-source software under the
3073 GNU GPL. <ulink url="http://www.waldherr.org/junkbuster/">Stefan
3074 Waldherr</ulink> made many improvements, and started the <ulink
3075 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/ijbswa/">SourceForge project</ulink> to
3076 rekindle development. There are now several active developers contributing.
3077 The last stable release was v2.0.2, which has now grown whiskers ;-).
3084 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
3085 <sect1 id="seealso"><title>See also</title>
3090 <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/ijbswa">http://sourceforge.net/projects/ijbswa</ulink>
3095 <ulink url="http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net/">http://ijbswa.sourceforge.net/</ulink>
3100 <ulink url="http://i.j.b/">http://i.j.b/</ulink>
3105 <ulink url="http://www.junkbusters.com/ht/en/cookies.html">http://www.junkbusters.com/ht/en/cookies.html</ulink>
3110 <ulink url="http://www.waldherr.org/junkbuster/">http://www.waldherr.org/junkbuster/</ulink>
3115 <ulink url="http://privacy.net/analyze/">http://privacy.net/analyze/</ulink>
3120 <ulink url="http://www.squid-cache.org/">http://www.squid-cache.org/</ulink>
3129 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
3130 <sect1 id="appendix"><title>Appendix</title>
3133 <!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
3135 <title>Regular Expressions</title>
3137 <application>Junkbuster</application> can use <quote>regular expressions</quote>
3138 in various config files. Assuming support for <quote>pcre</quote> (Perl
3139 Compatible Regular Expressions) is compiled in, which is the default. Such
3140 configuration directives do not require regular expressions, but they can be
3141 used to increase flexibility by matching a pattern with wild-cards against
3146 If you are reading this, you probably don't understand what <quote>regular
3147 expressions</quote> are, or what they can do. So this will be a very brief
3148 introduction only. A full explanation would require a book ;-)
3152 <quote>Regular expressions</quote> is a way of matching one character
3153 expression against another to see if it matches or not. One of the
3154 <quote>expressions</quote> is a literal string of readable characters
3155 (letter, numbers, etc), and the other is a complex string of literal
3156 characters combined with wild-cards, and other special characters, called
3157 meta-characters. The <quote>meta-characters</quote> have special meanings and
3158 are used to build the complex pattern to be matched against. Perl Compatible
3159 Regular Expressions is an enhanced form of the regular expression language
3160 with backward compatibility.
3164 To make a simple analogy, we do something similar when we use wild-card
3165 characters when listing files with the <command>dir</command> command in DOS.
3166 <literal>*.*</literal> matches all filenames. The <quote>special</quote>
3167 character here is the asterisk which matches any and all characters. We can be
3168 more specific and use <literal>?</literal> to match just individual
3169 characters. So <quote>dir file?.text</quote> would match
3170 <quote>file1.txt</quote>, <quote>file2.txt</quote>, etc. We are pattern
3171 matching, using a similar technique to <quote>regular expressions</quote>!
3175 Regular expressions do essentially the same thing, but are much, much more
3176 powerful. There are many more <quote>special characters</quote> and ways of
3177 building complex patterns however. Let's look at a few of the common ones,
3178 and then some examples:
3183 <emphasis>.</emphasis> - Matches any single character, e.g. <quote>a</quote>,
3184 <quote>A</quote>, <quote>4</quote>, <quote>:</quote>, or <quote>@</quote>.
3190 <emphasis>?</emphasis> - The preceding character or expression is matched ZERO or ONE
3197 <emphasis>+</emphasis> - The preceding character or expression is matched ONE or MORE
3204 <emphasis>*</emphasis> - The preceding character or expression is matched ZERO or MORE
3211 <emphasis>\</emphasis> - The <quote>escape</quote> character denotes that
3212 the following character should be taken literally. This is used where one of the
3213 special characters (e.g. <quote>.</quote>) needs to be taken literally and
3214 not as a special meta-character.
3220 <emphasis>[]</emphasis> - Characters enclosed in brackets will be matched if
3221 any of the enclosed characters are encountered.
3227 <emphasis>()</emphasis> - parentheses are used to group a sub-expression,
3228 or multiple sub-expressions.
3234 <emphasis>|</emphasis> - The <quote>bar</quote> character works like an
3235 <quote>or</quote> conditional statement. A match is successful if the
3236 sub-expression on either side of <quote>|</quote> matches.
3242 <emphasis>s/string1/string2/g</emphasis> - This is used to rewrite strings of text.
3243 <quote>string1</quote> is replaced by <quote>string2</quote> in this
3249 These are just some of the ones you are likely to use when matching URLs with
3250 <application>Junkbuster</application>, and is a long way from a definitive
3251 list. This is enough to get us started with a few simple examples which may
3252 be more illuminating:
3256 <emphasis><literal>/.*/banners/.*</literal></emphasis> - A simple example
3257 that uses the common combination of <quote>.</quote> and <quote>*</quote> to
3258 denote any character, zero or more times. In other words, any string at all.
3259 So we start with a literal forward slash, then our regular expression pattern
3260 (<quote>.*</quote>) another literal forward slash, the string
3261 <quote>banners</quote>, another forward slash, and lastly another
3262 <quote>.*</quote>. We are building
3263 a directory path here. This will match any file with the path that has a
3264 directory named <quote>banners</quote> in it. The <quote>.*</quote> matches
3265 any characters, and this could conceivably be more forward slashes, so it
3266 might expand into a much longer looking path. For example, this could match:
3267 <quote>/eye/hate/spammers/banners/annoy_me_please.gif</quote>, or just
3268 <quote>/banners/annoying.html</quote>, or almost an infinite number of other
3269 possible combinations, just so it has <quote>banners</quote> in the path
3274 A now something a little more complex:
3278 <emphasis><literal>/.*/adv((er)?ts?|ertis(ing|ements?))?/</literal></emphasis> -
3279 We have several literal forward slashes again (<quote>/</quote>), so we are
3280 building another expression that is a file path statement. We have another
3281 <quote>.*</quote>, so we are matching against any conceivable sub-path, just so
3282 it matches our expression. The only true literal that <emphasis>must
3283 match</emphasis> our pattern is <application>adv</application>, together with
3284 the forward slashes. What comes after the <quote>adv</quote> string is the
3289 Remember the <quote>?</quote> means the preceding expression (either a
3290 literal character or anything grouped with <quote>(...)</quote> in this case)
3291 can exist or not, since this means either zero or one match. So
3292 <quote>((er)?ts?|ertis(ing|ements?))</quote> is optional, as are the
3293 individual sub-expressions: <quote>(er)</quote>,
3294 <quote>(ing|ements?)</quote>, and the <quote>s</quote>. The <quote>|</quote>
3295 means <quote>or</quote>. We have two of those. For instance,
3296 <quote>(ing|ements?)</quote>, can expand to match either <quote>ing</quote>
3297 <emphasis>OR</emphasis> <quote>ements?</quote>. What is being done here, is an
3298 attempt at matching as many variations of <quote>advertisement</quote>, and
3299 similar, as possible. So this would expand to match just <quote>adv</quote>,
3300 or <quote>advert</quote>, or <quote>adverts</quote>, or
3301 <quote>advertising</quote>, or <quote>advertisement</quote>, or
3302 <quote>advertisements</quote>. You get the idea. But it would not match
3303 <quote>advertizements</quote> (with a <quote>z</quote>). We could fix that by
3304 changing our regular expression to:
3305 <quote>/.*/adv((er)?ts?|erti(s|z)(ing|ements?))?/</quote>, which would then match
3310 <emphasis><literal>/.*/advert[0-9]+\.(gif|jpe?g)</literal></emphasis> - Again
3311 another path statement with forward slashes. Anything in the square brackets
3312 <quote>[]</quote> can be matched. This is using <quote>0-9</quote> as a
3313 shorthand expression to mean any digit one through nine. It is the same as
3314 saying <quote>0123456789</quote>. So any digit matches. The <quote>+</quote>
3315 means one or more of the preceding expression must be included. The preceding
3316 expression here is what is in the square brackets -- in this case, any digit
3317 one through nine. Then, at the end, we have a grouping: <quote>(gif|jpe?g)</quote>.
3318 This includes a <quote>|</quote>, so this needs to match the expression on
3319 either side of that bar character also. A simple <quote>gif</quote> on one side, and the other
3320 side will in turn match either <quote>jpeg</quote> or <quote>jpg</quote>,
3321 since the <quote>?</quote> means the letter <quote>e</quote> is optional and
3322 can be matched once or not at all. So we are building an expression here to
3323 match image GIF or JPEG type image file. It must include the literal
3324 string <quote>advert</quote>, then one or more digits, and a <quote>.</quote>
3325 (which is now a literal, and not a special character, since it is escaped
3326 with <quote>\</quote>), and lastly either <quote>gif</quote>, or
3327 <quote>jpeg</quote>, or <quote>jpg</quote>. Some possible matches would
3328 include: <quote>//advert1.jpg</quote>,
3329 <quote>/nasty/ads/advert1234.gif</quote>,
3330 <quote>/banners/from/hell/advert99.jpg</quote>. It would not match
3331 <quote>advert1.gif</quote> (no leading slash), or
3332 <quote>/adverts232.jpg</quote> (the expression does not include an
3333 <quote>s</quote>), or <quote>/advert1.jsp</quote> (<quote>jsp</quote> is not
3334 in the expression anywhere).
3338 <emphasis><literal>s/microsoft(?!.com)/MicroSuck/i</literal></emphasis> - This is
3339 a substitution. <quote>MicroSuck</quote> will replace any occurrence of
3340 <quote>microsoft</quote>. The <quote>i</quote> at the end of the expression
3341 means ignore case. The <quote>(?!.com)</quote> means
3342 the match should fail if <quote>microsoft</quote> is followed by
3343 <quote>.com</quote>. In other words, this acts like a <quote>NOT</quote>
3344 modifier. In case this is a hyperlink, we don't want to break it ;-).
3348 We are barely scratching the surface of regular expressions here so that you
3349 can understand the default <application>Junkbuster</application>
3350 configuration files, and maybe use this knowledge to customize your own
3351 installation. There is much, much more that can be done with regular
3352 expressions. Now that you know enough to get started, you can learn more on
3357 More reading on Perl Compatible Regular expressions:
3358 <ulink url="http://www.perldoc.com/perl5.6/pod/perlre.html">http://www.perldoc.com/perl5.6/pod/perlre.html</ulink>
3367 This program is free software; you can redistribute it
3368 and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General
3369 Public License as published by the Free Software
3370 Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
3371 your option) any later version.
3373 This program is distributed in the hope that it will
3374 be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
3375 implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
3376 PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public
3377 License for more details.
3379 The GNU General Public License should be included with
3380 this file. If not, you can view it at
3381 http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
3382 or write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59
3383 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
3385 $Log: user-manual.sgml,v $
3386 Revision 1.39 2002/03/06 16:19:28 hal9
3387 Note on perceived filtering slowdown per FR.
3389 Revision 1.38 2002/03/05 23:55:14 hal9
3390 Stupid I did it again. Double hyphen in comment breaks jade.
3392 Revision 1.37 2002/03/05 23:53:49 hal9
3393 jade barfs on '- -' embedded in comments. - -user option broke it.
3395 Revision 1.36 2002/03/05 22:53:28 hal9
3396 Add new - - user option.
3398 Revision 1.35 2002/03/05 00:17:27 hal9
3399 Added section on command line options.
3401 Revision 1.34 2002/03/04 19:32:07 oes
3402 Changed default port to 8118
3404 Revision 1.33 2002/03/03 19:46:13 hal9
3405 Emphasis on where/how to report bugs, etc
3407 Revision 1.32 2002/03/03 09:26:06 joergs
3408 AmigaOS changes, config is now loaded from PROGDIR: instead of
3409 AmiTCP:db/junkbuster/ if no configuration file is specified on the
3412 Revision 1.31 2002/03/02 22:45:52 david__schmidt
3415 Revision 1.30 2002/03/02 22:00:14 hal9
3416 Updated 'New Features' list. Ran through spell-checker.
3418 Revision 1.29 2002/03/02 20:34:07 david__schmidt
3419 Update OS/2 build section
3421 Revision 1.28 2002/02/24 14:34:24 jongfoster
3422 Formatting changes. Now changing the doctype to DocBook XML 4.1
3423 will work - no other changes are needed.
3425 Revision 1.27 2002/01/11 14:14:32 hal9
3426 Added a very short section on Templates
3428 Revision 1.26 2002/01/09 20:02:50 hal9
3429 Fix bug re: auto-detect config file changes.
3431 Revision 1.25 2002/01/09 18:20:30 hal9
3432 Touch ups for *.action files.
3434 Revision 1.24 2001/12/02 01:13:42 hal9
3437 Revision 1.23 2001/12/02 00:20:41 hal9
3438 Updates for recent changes.
3440 Revision 1.22 2001/11/05 23:57:51 hal9
3441 Minor update for startup now daemon mode.
3443 Revision 1.21 2001/10/31 21:11:03 hal9
3444 Correct 2 minor errors
3446 Revision 1.18 2001/10/24 18:45:26 hal9
3447 *** empty log message ***
3449 Revision 1.17 2001/10/24 17:10:55 hal9
3450 Catching up with Jon's recent work, and a few other things.
3452 Revision 1.16 2001/10/21 17:19:21 swa
3453 wrong url in documentation
3455 Revision 1.15 2001/10/14 23:46:24 hal9
3456 Various minor changes. Fleshed out SEE ALSO section.
3458 Revision 1.13 2001/10/10 17:28:33 hal9
3461 Revision 1.12 2001/09/28 02:57:04 hal9
3464 Revision 1.11 2001/09/28 02:25:20 hal9
3467 Revision 1.9 2001/09/27 23:50:29 hal9
3468 A few changes. A short section on regular expression in appendix.
3470 Revision 1.8 2001/09/25 00:34:59 hal9
3471 Some additions, and re-arranging.
3473 Revision 1.7 2001/09/24 14:31:36 hal9
3476 Revision 1.6 2001/09/24 14:10:32 hal9
3477 Including David's OS/2 installation instructions.
3479 Revision 1.2 2001/09/13 15:27:40 swa
3482 Revision 1.1 2001/09/12 15:36:41 swa
3483 source files for junkbuster documentation
3485 Revision 1.3 2001/09/10 17:43:59 swa
3486 first proposal of a structure.
3488 Revision 1.2 2001/06/13 14:28:31 swa
3489 docs should have an author.
3491 Revision 1.1 2001/06/13 14:20:37 swa
3492 first import of project's documentation for the webserver.