X-Git-Url: http://www.privoxy.org/gitweb/?p=privoxy.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=config;h=4fa0a3712fce1e92a1ef3b341f9ae9b0bd0107b3;hp=520ad09214152c1f92a8ff2d20e3fbf1f12bf946;hb=67eb2fc00b66255750de74c6cbc883cef5d0da3a;hpb=f2f1071b16f0c74edc0e89ffe7b0c01636c54c4f diff --git a/config b/config index 520ad092..4fa0a371 100644 --- a/config +++ b/config @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ # Sample Configuration file for the Internet Junkbuster 2.0 # -# $Id: config,v 1.4 2001/05/22 17:43:35 oes Exp $ +# $Id: config,v 1.12 2001/06/04 10:44:57 swa Exp $ # # Table of Contents @@ -61,32 +61,34 @@ # files in the current working directory. In either case, an # absolute path name can be used to avoid problems. +# While we go modular and multiuser, the blocker, filter, and +# per-user config will be stored in subdirectories of confdir. +# Now, only confdir/templates is used for storing HTML templates +# for CGI results. # -# The blockfile contains regular expressions, one per line, of URLs -# to be blocked by Junkbuster. +# No trailing /, please. +confdir . + # -# Default: Don't block anything. +# The directory where all logging (i.e. logfile and jarfile) takes place +# No trailing /, please. # -blockfile ./blocklist +logdir . # -# The imagefile contains regular expressions, one per line, of URLs -# to be blocked as images by Junkbuster, regardless of whether they -# look like image URLs or not. -# -# Default: Block all URLs as HTML requests. +# Note that all file specifications below are relative to +# the above two directories!!! # -imagefile ./imagelist -# # The permissions file contains patterns to specify the -# cookie and filtering rules to apply to each site. +# filtering rules to apply to each site. # # Default: Cookies to and from all destinations are filtered. # Popups are disabled for all sites. # All sites are filtered if re_filterfile specified. +# No sites are blocked. Nothing is an image. # -permissionsfile ./permissionsfile +permissionsfile permissionsfile # # The re_filterfile contains content modification rules. These rules @@ -97,7 +99,7 @@ permissionsfile ./permissionsfile # # Default: No content modification. # -re_filterfile ./re_filterfile +re_filterfile re_filterfile # # The logfile is where all logging and error messages are written. @@ -105,8 +107,7 @@ re_filterfile ./re_filterfile # Junkbuster (e.g., it's not blocking an ad you think it should # block) but in most cases you probably will never look at it. # -# If you do not use 'log-buffer-size'/'log-max-lines' (see below) -# your logfile will grow indefinitely, and you will probably want to +# Your logfile will grow indefinitely, and you will probably want to # periodically remove it. On Unix systems, you can do this with a # cron job (see 'man cron'). # @@ -117,7 +118,7 @@ re_filterfile ./re_filterfile # # Default: Log to the standard error channel, not to a file # -logfile ./junkbuster.log +logfile logfile # # The jarfile defines where Junkbuster stores the cookies it @@ -126,7 +127,7 @@ logfile ./junkbuster.log # # Default: Don't store intercepted cookies # -#jarfile ./jarfile +#jarfile jarfile # # The forwardfile defines domain-specific forwarding of HTTP @@ -137,7 +138,7 @@ logfile ./junkbuster.log # # Default: Make all connections directly. # -forwardfile ./forward +forwardfile forward # # Generally, Junkbuster is used as a personal proxy. The default @@ -155,7 +156,7 @@ forwardfile ./forward # Default: No access control. Everybody that can reach junkbuster # will be served. # -#aclfile ./aclfile +#aclfile aclfile # # 4. OPTIONS @@ -164,64 +165,6 @@ forwardfile ./forward # how Junkbuster operates. # -# -# If 'add-forwarded-header' is set, an "X-Forwarded-For:" -# specification will be added to each request header. Generally, -# this is not needed and will reduce your privacy, as the server -# will not only see which proxy the request came through, but also -# which machine behind that proxy the request originally came from. -# -# Default: Don't add the "X-Forwarded-For:" header. -# -#add-forwarded-header - -# -# Junkbuster can add "wafers", i.e. fake cookies, to each request -# header it sends out. -# These wafers can be seen by Web site operators in their log files, -# so it's a way for you to communicate (very indirectly!) with -# them. Junkbuster will add as many wafers as you like to each -# request, just list them all here. Here's an example: -# -# wafer NOTE=Like most people, I want my browsing to be anonymous. -# wafer WARNING=Please do not attempt to track me. -# -# Wafers make each request larger and will have a (small) impact on -# your browsing speed, so you probably don't want to do this unless -# you have a particular need. -# -# Default: Don't add a wafer -# -#wafer NOTE=Add your wafer here... - -# -# There's also a pre-defined wafer containing a privacy message, -# called the vanilla wafer, which is sent by default. Setting -# suppress-vanilla-wafer suppresses this. You guessed that, didn't you? -# -# Default: Send the vanilla wafer -# -suppress-vanilla-wafer - -# -# In fact, Junkbuster can add anything at all to the request headers. -# You can specify the headers to add with the add-header option. For -# example: -# -# add-header Forwarded: by http://stay-out-of-my-backyard.net -# -# Generally, random headers will simply be ignored by the Web site, -# so there's little use in adding them. However, there are some -# cases where you might want to add a header, e.g., if you're -# forwarding Junkbuster requests to another proxy you might want to -# add: -# -# add-header Proxy-Connection: Keep-Alive -# -# to every request. -# -#add-header My-Header: Whatever you'd like... - # # Listen-address specifies the address and port where Junkbuster will # listen for connections from your Web browser. The default is to @@ -258,129 +201,6 @@ suppress-vanilla-wafer # listen-address 127.0.0.1:8000 # -# -# When your Web browser makes a request from a Web site, it informs -# the Web site what sort of browser it is, e.g., "Internet Explorer -# V2.0" or some such. In theory, Web sites can use this information -# to tailor themselves for your browser. -# -# The 'user-agent' option controls whether Junkbuster will conceal -# your browser type or not. If user-agent is set to . (period) the -# User-Agent header is passed to the server unchanged, along with any -# UA headers produced by MS-IE (which would otherwise be deleted). If -# user-agent is set to @ (at) these headers are sent unchanged in -# cases where the cookiefile specifies that a cookie would be sent, -# otherwise only a default User-Agent header is sent. That default is -# Mozilla/3.0 (Netscape) with an unremarkable Linux configuration. -# If left unset, the default header is always sent. -# -# Note that if you choose to mislead Web sites about your browser -# type, you may get Web pages that confuse your browser or display -# incorrectly. In most cases, it's probably fine to send your real -# browser type. -# -# Default: Always send the (forged) default user agent header -# -user-agent . - -# -# When your Web browser requests a page from a Web site, it also -# informs the Web site where it came from, i.e., when you click -# through to a new web page, your browser tells the new web site the -# URL of the old web page. This is called the "Referer" header. -# -# Junkbuster has the ability to mask the Referer header. Referer -# headers can be used to track users as they browse around the web, -# and many consider them invasive. Junkbuster provides several -# options for dealing with referer headers: -# -# VALUE EFFECT -# ===== ====== -# default Kill the referrer-header from the client. -# . Pass the referrer unchanged. -# @ Pass the referrer if the server is in the cookie file, -# kill the referrer otherwise. -# L Pass the referrer if the server is in the cookie file, -# send a forged referrer that points to the -# root-directory URL of the current request otherwise. -# 'text' Always send as the referrer. -# -# L is probably preferable to @, because it will break fewer Web -# sites while still concealing your browsing path. -# -# Default: see above -# -referer L - -# -# Some browsers provide a "From:" header that gives Web sites your -# email address. The only real effect of this is to make you a -# target for unsolicited email (spam). There are three options -# what to do with the "From:" header if it is present: -# -# VALUE EFFECT -# ===== ====== -# default Kill every "From:" header -# . Pass the "From:" header unchanged -# 'text' replace the email address in the "From:" header with 'text' -# -# Default: see above -# -#from spam-me-senseless@sittingduck.xqq - -# -# The 'tinygif' option lets you change how Junkbuster treats blocked -# images. The default behavior is to send an HTML answer to requests -# for images, resulting in a "broken image icon" in place of the blocked -# image. That's a little ugly, so several other options are available: -# -# VALUE EFFECT -# ===== ====== -# 0 Send HTML -# 1 Send a GIF of one transparent pixel -# 2 Send a GIF with the word "JUNKBUSTER" -# 3 Send a redirect to the image indicated by the -# -# As an example of the last option: -# -# tinygif 3 http://no.where/ijb-send-banner.gif -# -# Will replace every blocked image with an image built into junkbuster. -# -# There is one non-obvious benefit to using option "3". If you use -# option 3, your Web browser will likely cache the image you specify -# on your local machine. That means that after the first use, that -# image will load very quickly (and won't require a request to the -# junkbuster proxy) -# -# Default: 0, i.e. send HTML -# -tinygif 2 - -# -# Many sites, like yahoo.com, don't just link to other sites. -# Instead, they will link to some script on their own server, -# giving the destination as a parameter, which will then redirect -# you to the final target. -# -# URLs resulting from this scheme typically look like: -# http://some.place/some_script?http://some.where-else -# -# Sometimes, there are even multiple consecutive redirects encoded -# in the URL. These redirections via scripts make your web browing -# more traceable, since the server from which you follow such a link -# can see where you go to. Apart from that, valuable bandwidth and -# time is wasted, while your browser aks the server for one redirect -# after the other. Plus, it feeds the advertisers. -# -# The fast-redirects option enables interception of these requests -# by junkbuster, who will cut off all but the last valid URL in the -# request and send a local redirect back to your browser without -# contacting the remote site. -# -# Default: Don't intercept script-redirect URLs -# -fast-redirects # # The debug option sets the level of debugging information to log in @@ -397,15 +217,29 @@ fast-redirects # debug 32 # FRC = debug force feature # debug 64 # REF = debug regular expression filter # debug 128 # RED = debug fast redirects +# debug 256 # CLF = Common Log Format +# debug 4096 # INFO = Startup banner and warnings. +# debug 8192 # ERROR = Non-fatal errors +# +# It is *highly recommended* that you enable ERROR +# reporting. (debug 8192). +# +# The reporting of FATAL errors (i.e. ones which crash +# JunkBuster) is always on and cannot be disabled. +# +# If you want to use CLF, you should set "debug 256" ONLY, +# do not enable anything else. # # Multiple "debug" directives, are OK - they're logical-OR'd # together. # # debug 15 # same as setting the first 4 listed above # -# Default: 0, i.e. log nothing but errors and infos +# Default: 0, i.e. log nothing but fatal errors # -debug 1 +debug 1 # URLs +debug 4096 # Info +debug 8192 # Errors - *we highly recommended enabling this* # # Junkbuster normally uses "multi-threading", a software technique @@ -419,28 +253,27 @@ debug 1 #single-threaded # -# 'toggle' controls whether Junkbuster can temporarily be toggled on -# and off. +# 'toggle' allows you to temporarily disable all Junkbuster's +# filtering. Just set "toggle 0". # # The Windows version of Junkbuster puts an icon in the system -# tray. If you right-click on that icon (or select the 'Options' -# menu), one choice is "Enable". Clicking on enable toggles -# Junkbuster on and off. This is useful if you want to temporarily -# disable Junkbuster, e.g., to access a site that requires cookies -# which you normally have blocked. -# -# Unix versions of Junkbuster are toggled on and off by sending a -# SIGHUP to Junkbuster. +# tray, which allows you to change this option without having +# to edit this file. If you right-click on that icon (or select +# the 'Options' menu), one choice is "Enable". Clicking on enable +# toggles Junkbuster on and off. This is useful if you want to +# temporarily disable Junkbuster, e.g., to access a site that +# requires cookies which you normally have blocked. # -# 'toggle 1' means permit toggling of Junkbuster, 'toggle 0' means -# don't. +# 'toggle 1' means Junkbuster runs normally, 'toggle 0' means +# that Junkbuster becomes a non-anonymizing non-blocking +# proxy. # # Default: 1 # toggle 1 # -# 5. WINDOWS GUI OTPIONS +# 5. WINDOWS GUI OPTIONS # # Junkbuster has a number of options specific to the Windows GUI # interface: @@ -496,8 +329,8 @@ toggle 1 # show-on-task-bar {1 or 0} # -# Controls whether or not Junkbuster will appear on the Task bar -# when minimized. +# Controls whether or not Junkbuster will appear as a button on the Task +# bar when minimized. # #Win32-only: show-on-task-bar 0