Highly-opinionated (ex-bullshit-free) MTPROTO proxy for Telegram. If you use v1.0 or upgrade broke you proxy, please read the chapter Version 2
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example.config.toml 17KB

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  1. # This is an example of the configuration file for mtg. You actually can
  2. # run mtg with it. It starts a proxy on all interfaces with a secret
  3. # ee367a189aee18fa31c190054efd4a8e9573746f726167652e676f6f676c65617069732e636f6d
  4. #
  5. # It has all possible options with default values. So, a real world
  6. # configuration file should contain only those options you are going to
  7. # use. You do not need to enumerate all of them. In other words, each
  8. # option here has a default value. If you comment a key-value pair, it
  9. # should not make any effect.
  10. #
  11. # stats is the only exception.
  12. # Debug starts application in debug mode. It starts to be quite verbose
  13. # in output. Actually, the idea is that you run it in debug mode only if
  14. # you have any issue.
  15. debug = true
  16. # A secret (required). Please remember that mtg supports only FakeTLS
  17. # mode, legacy simple and secured mode are prohibited. For you it means
  18. # that secret should either be base64-encoded or starts with ee.
  19. secret = "ee367a189aee18fa31c190054efd4a8e9573746f726167652e676f6f676c65617069732e636f6d"
  20. # Host:port pair to run proxy on (required).
  21. # The host part must be a literal IP address; hostnames and "*" are rejected.
  22. # - IPv4 only:
  23. # "0.0.0.0:3128"
  24. # - dual-stack (IPv4 + IPv6) on Linux, macOS, FreeBSD, Windows:
  25. # "[::]:3128"
  26. bind-to = "0.0.0.0:3128"
  27. # This defines what types of traffic mtg listens to. If you are not sure,
  28. # then definitely keep it disable. Enable it only and only if incoming traffic
  29. # is coming from some sort of load-balancer like HAProxy or ELB.
  30. # https://www.haproxy.org/download/2.3/doc/proxy-protocol.txt
  31. #
  32. # mtg uses a library that supports v1 and v2 versions of ProxyProtocol.
  33. # default value is false.
  34. # proxy-protocol-listener = false
  35. # Defines how many concurrent connections are allowed to this proxy.
  36. # All other incoming connections are going to be dropped.
  37. concurrency = 8192
  38. # Sometimes you want to enforce mtg to use some types of
  39. # IP connectivity to Telegram. We have 4 modes:
  40. # - prefer-ipv6:
  41. # We can use both ipv4 and ipv6 but ipv6 has a preference (default)
  42. # - prefer-ipv4:
  43. # We can use both ipv4 and ipv6 but ipv4 has a preference
  44. # - only-ipv6:
  45. # Only ipv6 connectivity is used
  46. # - only-ipv4:
  47. # Only ipv4 connectivity is used
  48. prefer-ip = "prefer-ipv6"
  49. # Public IP addresses of this server. Used by 'mtg access' to generate
  50. # proxy links and by 'mtg doctor' to validate SNI-DNS match.
  51. # If not set, mtg tries to detect them automatically via ifconfig.co.
  52. # Set these if ifconfig.co is unreachable from your server.
  53. # public-ipv4 = "1.2.3.4"
  54. # public-ipv6 = "2001:db8::1"
  55. # If this setting is set, then mtg will try to get proxy updates from Telegram
  56. # Usually this is completely fine to have it disabled, because mtg has a list
  57. # of some core proxies hardcoded.
  58. auto-update = false
  59. # FakeTLS uses domain fronting protection. So it needs to know a port to
  60. # access.
  61. #
  62. # Deprecated: use [domain-fronting] configuration block. If relevant option
  63. # is defined there, this one would be ignored.
  64. # domain-fronting-port = 443
  65. # By default, mtg resolves the fronting hostname (from the secret) via DNS
  66. # to establish a TCP connection. If DNS resolution of that hostname is blocked,
  67. # you can specify an IP address to connect to directly. The hostname is still
  68. # used for SNI in the TLS handshake.
  69. #
  70. # default value is not set (DNS resolution is used).
  71. #
  72. # Deprecated: use [domain-fronting] configuration block. If relevant option
  73. # is defined there, this one would be ignored.
  74. # domain-fronting-ip = "10.0.0.10"
  75. # This makes a communication between both fronting website and mtg to use
  76. # proxy protocol.
  77. #
  78. # Deprecated: use [domain-fronting] configuration block. If relevant option
  79. # is defined there, this one would be ignored.
  80. # domain-fronting-proxy-protocol = false
  81. # FakeTLS can compare timestamps to prevent probes. Each message has
  82. # encrypted timestamp. So, mtg can compare this timestamp and decide if
  83. # we need to proceed with connection or not.
  84. #
  85. # Sometimes time can be skewed so we accept all messages within a
  86. # time range of this parameter.
  87. #
  88. # Default value is 3s
  89. tolerate-time-skewness = "5s"
  90. # Telegram has a concept of DC. You can think about DC as a number of a cluster
  91. # with a certain purpose. Some clusters serve media, some - messages, some rule
  92. # channels and so on. But sometimes unknown DC number is requested by client.
  93. # It could be a bug or some global reconfiguration of the Telegram.
  94. #
  95. # By default, proxy rejects such requests. But it is also possible to fallback
  96. # this request to any DC. Telegram works in a way that any DC is able to serve
  97. # any request but sacrificing a latency.
  98. #
  99. # If this setting is disabled (default), mtg will reject a connection.
  100. # Otherwise, chose a new DC.
  101. allow-fallback-on-unknown-dc = false
  102. # This section is relevant to communication with fronting domain. Usually
  103. # you do not need to setup anything here but there are plenty of cases, especially
  104. # if you put mtg behind load balancer, when some specific configuration is
  105. # required.
  106. [domain-fronting]
  107. # By default, mtg resolves the fronting hostname (from the secret) via DNS
  108. # to establish a TCP connection. If that resolution is blocked, or loops
  109. # back to this server (e.g. mtg sits behind an SNI router whose DNS points
  110. # at itself), override the destination here.
  111. #
  112. # Use `host` — accepts a hostname or a literal IP. Hostnames are resolved
  113. # at dial time, so a dual-stack DNS record can reach the right backend
  114. # address family for IPv4 or IPv6 clients.
  115. #
  116. # The hostname from the secret is still used for SNI in the TLS handshake.
  117. #
  118. # default value is not set (the secret's hostname is used).
  119. # host = "fronting-backend"
  120. # Deprecated: use `host`. If `ip` is set, mtg logs a warning at startup
  121. # and ignores the value (domain-fronting falls back to the secret's
  122. # hostname unless `host` is also set).
  123. # ip = "10.10.10.11"
  124. # FakeTLS uses domain fronting protection. So it needs to know a port to
  125. # access. Default value is 443
  126. # port = 443
  127. # This makes a communication between both fronting website and mtg to use
  128. # proxy protocol.
  129. # proxy-protocol = false
  130. # network defines different network-related settings
  131. [network]
  132. # please be aware that mtg needs to do some external requests. For
  133. # example, if you do not pass public ips, it will request your public ip
  134. # address from some external service.
  135. #
  136. # As for 2.0, if you set a public-ip on your own, mtg won't issue any
  137. # network requests except of those required for Telegram.
  138. #
  139. # so, in order of doing them, it needs to do DNS lookup. mtg ignores DNS
  140. # resolver of the operating system and uses DOH instead. This is a host
  141. # it has to access.
  142. #
  143. # By default we use Cloudflare.
  144. #
  145. # DEPRECATED option:
  146. # If dns option is specified, it will be used instead. No default is defined
  147. # anymore. But if you set this option, this is literally the same providing
  148. # https:// URL to `dns`.
  149. #
  150. # In other words:
  151. #
  152. # doh-ip = "1.1.1.1"
  153. #
  154. # is literally the same as
  155. #
  156. # dns = "https://1.1.1.1"
  157. # doh-ip = "1.1.1.1"
  158. # Starting from mtg v2.1.12 we have changed a configuration for DNS. Now it
  159. # supports DNS-over-HTTPS, DNS-over-TLS, custom UDP resolver and system
  160. # resolver.
  161. #
  162. # Here is how to define DNS-over-HTTPS:
  163. # - https://1.1.1.1
  164. # - https://1.1.1.1/dns-query
  165. # - https://cloudflare-dns.com/dns-query
  166. # - https://cloudflare-dns.com
  167. #
  168. # Here is how to define DNS-over-TLS:
  169. # - tls://1.1.1.1
  170. # - tls://cloudflare-dns.com
  171. #
  172. # Here is how to define a custom UDP resolver (we support only IPs here)
  173. # - 1.1.1.1
  174. # - udp://1.1.1.1
  175. #
  176. # If you set it to empty string, default resolver will be used.
  177. # But please comment out doh-ip
  178. dns = "https://1.1.1.1"
  179. # mtg can work via proxies (for now, we support only socks5). Proxy
  180. # configuration is done via list. So, you can specify many proxies
  181. # there.
  182. #
  183. # Actually, if you supply an empty list, then no proxies are going to be
  184. # used. If you supply a single proxy, then mtg will use it exclusively.
  185. # If you supply >= 2, then mtg will load balance between them.
  186. #
  187. # If you add an empty string here, this is an equivalent of 'plain network',
  188. # with no proxy usage.
  189. #
  190. # Proxy configuration is done via ordinary URI schema:
  191. #
  192. # socks5://user:password@host:port
  193. #
  194. # Only socks5 proxy is used. user/password is optional. As you can
  195. # see, you can specify some parameters in GET query. These parameters
  196. # configure circuit breaker.
  197. proxies = [
  198. # "socks5://user:password@host:port"
  199. ]
  200. # network timeouts define different settings for timeouts. tcp timeout
  201. # define a global timeout on establishing of network connections. idle
  202. # means a timeout on pumping data between sockset when nothing is
  203. # happening.
  204. [network.timeout]
  205. tcp = "5s"
  206. http = "10s"
  207. idle = "5m"
  208. handshake = "10s"
  209. # TCP_NOTSENT_LOWAT (bytes) caps the amount of *unsent* data that the
  210. # kernel buffers per outbound socket. When the not-yet-sent backlog drops
  211. # below this threshold the socket becomes writable again, which applies
  212. # back-pressure to mtg's relay loop instead of letting kernel buffers
  213. # bloat. This reduces per-connection memory and bufferbloat, but on
  214. # high-BDP links (fast pipe × high RTT) it can cap single-flow upload
  215. # throughput at roughly value / RTT.
  216. #
  217. # Default is 128kib (good for interactive latency). If uploads through
  218. # the proxy feel slow on a fast link, raise this to 1mib–4mib. Suffixes
  219. # follow the same scheme as anti-replay max-size (kib, mib, gib).
  220. # Only applies to Linux and Darwin; ignored on other platforms.
  221. # tcp-not-sent-lowat = "128kib"
  222. # this defines a configuration for TCP keep alives. Default values are taken
  223. # from Golang default behavior.
  224. [network.keep-alive]
  225. disabled = false
  226. # idle means a time period after which we start sending TCP Keep Alive probes
  227. idle = "15s"
  228. # interval is a period between 2 consecutive probes
  229. interval = "15s"
  230. # if we miss that many probes, a connection will be considered as a dead one.
  231. count = 9
  232. # mtg has to mimic real websites. It does not mean domain fronting, it also
  233. # means that traffic characteristics should be similar to real world traffic.
  234. # websites and applications behave differently, their traffic patterns are also
  235. # different. Applications do bursts of RPC-style messages (or JSON communication,
  236. # does not really matter), while websites pump heavy content in HTTP2 streams
  237. #
  238. # It means that statistically there is a different between traffic shape:
  239. # delays between packets are also different.
  240. # In order to avoid censorship detection based on these patterns, there is a
  241. # mtg subsystem called "Doppelganger" that aims to mimic website statistics
  242. # as close as it could.
  243. #
  244. # Delays between TLS packets are not constant. There are many factors
  245. # that come in play. Application should generate some response, it could
  246. # send some headers first and stream content with chunked encoding. So
  247. # some first packets could come as soon as possible, with some delays
  248. # after first ones. Such phenomenon is described by different statistic
  249. # distribution. There are 2 distribution that describe it: lognormal
  250. # distribution and Weibul distribution. Lognormal is all about steady streams
  251. # of heavy content like a video. Weibul is great about short bursts like
  252. # user who requested a static page an a couple of images.
  253. [defense.doppelganger]
  254. # This is a list of URLs that would be crawled by mtg to approximate delay
  255. # statistics. They MUST be HTTPS urls.
  256. #
  257. # You can come to the website and collect different URLs, with light and
  258. # heavy content. We recommend to search for CDNs.
  259. urls = [
  260. # "https://st-ok.cdn-vk.ru/res/react/vendor/clsx-2.1.1-amd.js"
  261. ]
  262. # A collection is done in raids. Each raid makes this number of requests to
  263. # each URL in this list. Do not use a huge number, 10 is probably ok.
  264. repeats-per-raid = 10
  265. # This is a duration between each raid. It makes no sense to have a small number
  266. # here as you would start to make a noticeable activity. Usually traffic patterns
  267. # do not change a lot, so do not expect different results if you request
  268. # each 10 minutes.
  269. raid-each = "6h"
  270. # This enables dynamic tls record sizing.
  271. #
  272. # Some modern stacks and platforms start to use the technique that is called
  273. # DRS. They start with small TLS packets and ramp up eventually. First packets
  274. # are usually about MTU size, after that we get 4k and eventually max size.
  275. # This is done with a good intention: to minimize a time to the first byte,
  276. # so application could start doing something with the data right after first
  277. # RTT.
  278. #
  279. # Apparently, about 90% of application do not employ this technique, they use
  280. # max size always: nginx, apache, java stuff. But Golang tools, angie and
  281. # some specific patches activate this technique.
  282. #
  283. # In order to mimic a real website we need to know something about software
  284. # it uses. Usually nobody cares: openssl does 16384, Python does it, nginx
  285. # does it. So this setting is disabled by default.
  286. #
  287. # https://blog.cloudflare.com/optimizing-tls-over-tcp-to-reduce-latency/
  288. # https://aws.github.io/s2n-tls/usage-guide/ch08-record-sizes.html
  289. # https://github.com/cloudflare/sslconfig/blob/master/patches/nginx__dynamic_tls_records.patch
  290. drs = false
  291. # Some countries do active probing on Telegram connections. This technique
  292. # allows to protect from such effort.
  293. #
  294. # mtg has a cache of some connection fingerprints. Actually, first bytes
  295. # of each connection. So, it stores them in some in-memory LRU+TTL cache.
  296. # You can configure this cache here.
  297. [defense.anti-replay]
  298. # You can enable/disable this feature.
  299. enabled = true
  300. # max size of such a cache. Please be aware that this number is
  301. # approximate we try hard to store data quite dense but it is possible
  302. # that we can go over this limit for 10-20% under some conditions and
  303. # architectures.
  304. max-size = "1mib"
  305. # we use stable bloom filters for anti-replay cache. This helps
  306. # to maintain a desired error ratio.
  307. error-rate = 0.001
  308. # You can protect proxies by using different blocklists. If client has
  309. # ip from the given range, we do not try to do a proper handshake. We
  310. # actually route it to fronting domain. So, this client will never ever
  311. # have a chance to use mtg to access Telegram.
  312. #
  313. # Please remember that blocklists are initialized in async way. So,
  314. # when you start a proxy, blocklists are empty, they are populated and
  315. # processed in backgrounds. An error in any URL is ignored.
  316. [defense.blocklist]
  317. # You can enable/disable this feature.
  318. enabled = true
  319. # This is a limiter for concurrency. In order to protect website
  320. # from overloading, we download files in this number of threads.
  321. download-concurrency = 2
  322. # A list of URLs in FireHOL format (https://iplists.firehol.org/)
  323. # You can provider links here (starts with https:// or http://) or
  324. # path to a local file, but in this case it should be absolute.
  325. #
  326. # NOTE: the default list below (firehol_level1.netset) includes bogon
  327. # networks, and therefore RFC1918 ranges as well (10.0.0.0/8,
  328. # 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16). If you run mtg on a home/LAN network
  329. # and connect from a client on the same LAN, that client will be
  330. # rejected with "ip was blacklisted" and the connection dropped (TCP
  331. # close, no response). If you see this, you can either disable this section
  332. # (enabled = false), replace firehol_level1 with a narrower list that
  333. # does not include bogons (e.g. firehol_abusers_1d), or connect via
  334. # a public IP/domain with hairpin NAT on your router. See README for
  335. # details.
  336. urls = [
  337. "https://iplists.firehol.org/files/firehol_level1.netset",
  338. # "/local.file"
  339. ]
  340. # How often do we need to update a blocklist set.
  341. update-each = "24h"
  342. # Allowlist is an opposite to a blocklist. Only those IPs that are coming from
  343. # subnets defined in these lists are allowed. All others will be rejected.
  344. #
  345. # If this feature is disabled, then there won't be any check performed by this
  346. # validator. It is possible to combine both blocklist and whitelist.
  347. [defense.allowlist]
  348. # You can enable/disable this feature.
  349. enabled = false
  350. # This is a limiter for concurrency. In order to protect website
  351. # from overloading, we download files in this number of threads.
  352. download-concurrency = 2
  353. # A list of URLs in FireHOL format (https://iplists.firehol.org/)
  354. # You can provider links here (starts with https:// or http://) or
  355. # path to a local file, but in this case it should be absolute.
  356. urls = [
  357. # "https://iplists.firehol.org/files/firehol_level1.netset",
  358. # "/local.file"
  359. ]
  360. update-each = "24h"
  361. # statsd statistics integration.
  362. [stats.statsd]
  363. # enabled/disabled
  364. enabled = false
  365. # host:port for UDP endpoint of statsd
  366. address = "127.0.0.1:8888"
  367. # prefix of metric for statsd
  368. metric-prefix = "mtg"
  369. # tag format to use
  370. # supported values are 'datadog', 'influxdb' and 'graphite'
  371. # default format is graphite.
  372. tag-format = "datadog"
  373. # prometheus metrics integration.
  374. [stats.prometheus]
  375. # enabled/disabled
  376. enabled = true
  377. # host:port where to start http server for endpoint
  378. bind-to = "127.0.0.1:3129"
  379. # prefix of http path
  380. http-path = "/"
  381. # prefix for metrics for prometheus
  382. metric-prefix = "mtg"