Hide Yourself When Using the Internet With ProxyChains
Configuring ProxyChains
ProxyChains come preinstalled in Kali Linux. All you have to do is find it. I wasn’t able to make the locate command work, but I found it in /etc directory.
Step 1
What you want to do is edit the configuration file. I will be using vim, feel free to use any text editor as you would prefer.
sudo vim /etc/proxychains4.conf
This is what the configuration file would look like. It may look like a lot, but you only need to configure a few things.
# proxychains.conf VER 4.x
#
# HTTP, SOCKS4a, SOCKS5 tunneling proxifier with DNS.
# The option below identifies how the ProxyList is treated.
# only one option should be uncommented at time,
# otherwise the last appearing option will be accepted
#
#dynamic_chain
#
# Dynamic - Each connection will be done via chained proxies
# all proxies chained in the order as they appear in the list
# at least one proxy must be online to play in chain
# (dead proxies are skipped)
# otherwise EINTR is returned to the app
#
strict_chain
#
# Strict - Each connection will be done via chained proxies
# all proxies chained in the order as they appear in the list
# all proxies must be online to play in chain
# otherwise EINTR is returned to the app
#
#round_robin_chain
#
# Round Robin - Each connection will be done via chained proxies
# of chain_len length
# all proxies chained in the order as they appear in the list
# at least one proxy must be online to play in chain
# (dead proxies are skipped).
# the start of the current proxy chain is the proxy after the last
# proxy in the previously invoked proxy chain.
# if the end of the proxy chain is reached while looking for proxies
# start at the beginning again.
# otherwise EINTR is returned to the app
# These semantics are not guaranteed in a multithreaded environment.
#
#random_chain
#
# Random - Each connection will be done via random proxy
# (or proxy chain, see chain_len) from the list.
# this option is good to test your IDS :)
# Make sense only if random_chain or round_robin_chain
#chain_len = 2
# Quiet mode (no output from library)
#quiet_mode
## Proxy DNS requests - no leak for DNS data
# (disable all of the 3 items below to not proxy your DNS requests)
# method 1. this uses the proxychains4 style method to do remote dns:
# a thread is spawned that serves DNS requests and hands down an ip
# assigned from an internal list (via remote_dns_subnet).
# this is the easiest (setup-wise) and fastest method, however on
# systems with buggy libcs and very complex software like webbrowsers
# this might not work and/or cause crashes.
proxy_dns
# method 2. use the old proxyresolv script to proxy DNS requests
# in proxychains 3.1 style. requires `proxyresolv` in $PATH
# plus a dynamically linked `dig` binary.
# this is a lot slower than `proxy_dns`, doesn't support .onion URLs,
# but might be more compatible with complex software like webbrowsers.
#proxy_dns_old
# method 3. use proxychains4-daemon process to serve remote DNS requests.
# this is similar to the threaded `proxy_dns` method, however it requires
# that proxychains4-daemon is already running on the specified address.
# on the plus side it doesn't do malloc/threads so it should be quite
# compatible with complex, async-unsafe software.
# note that if you don't start proxychains4-daemon before using this,
# the process will simply hang.
#proxy_dns_daemon 127.0.0.1:1053
# set the class A subnet number to use for the internal remote DNS mapping
# we use the reserved 224.x.x.x range by default,
# if the proxified app does a DNS request, we will return an IP from that range.
# on further accesses to this ip we will send the saved DNS name to the proxy.
# in case some control-freak app checks the returned ip, and denies to
# connect, you can use another subnet, e.g. 10.x.x.x or 127.x.x.x.
# of course you should make sure that the proxified app does not need
# *real* access to this subnet.
# i.e. dont use the same subnet then in the localnet section
#remote_dns_subnet 127
#remote_dns_subnet 10
remote_dns_subnet 224
# Some timeouts in milliseconds
tcp_read_time_out 15000
tcp_connect_time_out 8000
### Examples for localnet exclusion
## localnet ranges will *not* use a proxy to connect.
## note that localnet works only when plain IP addresses are passed to the app,
## the hostname resolves via /etc/hosts, or proxy_dns is disabled or proxy_dns_old used.
## Exclude connections to 192.168.1.0/24 with port 80
# localnet 192.168.1.0:80/255.255.255.0
## Exclude connections to 192.168.100.0/24
# localnet 192.168.100.0/255.255.255.0
## Exclude connections to ANYwhere with port 80
# localnet 0.0.0.0:80/0.0.0.0
# localnet [::]:80/0
## RFC6890 Loopback address range
## if you enable this, you have to make sure remote_dns_subnet is not 127
## you'll need to enable it if you want to use an application that
## connects to localhost.
# localnet 127.0.0.0/255.0.0.0
# localnet ::1/128
## RFC1918 Private Address Ranges
# localnet 10.0.0.0/255.0.0.0
# localnet 172.16.0.0/255.240.0.0
# localnet 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0
### Examples for dnat
## Trying to proxy connections to destinations which are dnatted,
## will result in proxying connections to the new given destinations.
## Whenever I connect to 1.1.1.1 on port 1234 actually connect to 1.1.1.2 on port 443
# dnat 1.1.1.1:1234 1.1.1.2:443
## Whenever I connect to 1.1.1.1 on port 443 actually connect to 1.1.1.2 on port 443
## (no need to write :443 again)
# dnat 1.1.1.2:443 1.1.1.2
## No matter what port I connect to on 1.1.1.1 port actually connect to 1.1.1.2 on port 443
# dnat 1.1.1.1 1.1.1.2:443
## Always, instead of connecting to 1.1.1.1, connect to 1.1.1.2
# dnat 1.1.1.1 1.1.1.2
# ProxyList format
# type ip port [user pass]
# (values separated by 'tab' or 'blank')
#
# only numeric ipv4 addresses are valid
#
#
# Examples:
#
# socks5 192.168.67.78 1080 lamer secret
# http 192.168.89.3 8080 justu hidden
# socks4 192.168.1.49 1080
# http 192.168.39.93 8080
#
#
# proxy types: http, socks4, socks5, raw
# * raw: The traffic is simply forwarded to the proxy without modification.
# ( auth types supported: "basic"-http "user/pass"-socks )
#
[ProxyList]
# add proxy here ...
# meanwile
# defaults set to "tor"
socks4 127.0.0.1 9050
You’ll see all the chains that you can select from, how they works are described and explained properly.
Step 2
Uncomment the dynamic_chain
(line 10) and comment static_chain
(line 18) by using the pound (#) sign. This way, the connection will proceed to the next address in case prior fails.
Step 3
Uncomment the default IP for Tor socks4 127.0.0.1 9050
(line 161) then add your proxies below it (online search: free proxy servers list). You can see the example at line 145. It is advisable to add more than one proxy. Save the file afterwards.
Run ProxyChains
This is how you run ProxyChains.
proxychains <servicename>
Here are some examples.
proxychains firefox google.com
proxychains nmap kali.org