I have a Ubuntu linux system acting as a gateway system with two interfaces on it. One interface is for the local network and one interface is for the internet. I am able to route traffic through it with no problem at all. I use two iptables
rules to forward outbound traffic from the internal interface:
iptables --table nat --append POSTROUTING --out-interface eth0 -j MASQUERADE
iptables --append FORWARD --in-interface eth1 -j ACCEPT
I now need to create an iptables
rule that filters out and redirects all tcp port 80 and 443 traffic leaving my network through the eth1
interface and send it to a proxy server that resides on a loopback interface on tcp port 9090.
I have been searching all over SO but I have not been able to find an example that works. Is there an efficient way to do this?
HTTPS cannot be used with a transparent proxy. There are some hacks, but it doesn't make any sense and is useless.
Where:
The first one sends the packets to squid-box from iptables-box. The second makes sure that the reply gets sent back through iptables-box, instead of directly to the client (this is very important!). The last one makes sure the iptables-box will forward the appropriate packets to squid-box. It may not be needed. YMMV. Note that we specified '-i eth0' and then '-o eth0', which stands for input interface eth0 and output interface eth0. If your packets are entering and leaving on different interfaces, you will need to adjust the commands accordingly.
Add these commands to your appropriate startup scripts under /etc/rc.d/
FROM: http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/TransparentProxy-6.html