-# Sample Configuration File for Privoxy v3.0.6
+# Sample Configuration File for Privoxy v3.0.7
#
-# $Id: config,v 1.57 2007/01/02 01:39:52 david__schmidt Exp $
+# $Id: p-config.sgml,v 2.22 2007/11/09 20:26:58 fabiankeil Exp $
#
-# Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Privoxy Developers http://privoxy.org
+# Copyright (C) 2001-2007 Privoxy Developers http://www.privoxy.org/
#
####################################################################
# #
# I. INTRODUCTION
# ===============
#
-# This file holds the Privoxy configuration. If you modify this file,
-# you will need to send a couple of requests (of any kind) to the
-# proxy before any changes take effect.
+# This file holds Privoxy's main configuration. Privoxy detects
+# configuration changes automatically, so you don't have to restart
+# it unless you want to load a different configuration file.
#
-# When starting Privoxy on Unix systems, give the name of this file as
-# an argument. On Windows systems, Privoxy will look for this file
-# with the name 'config.txt' in the same directory where Privoxy
-# is installed.
+# The configuration will be reloaded with the first request after
+# the change was done, this request itself will still use the old
+# configuration, though. In other words: it takes two requests before
+# you see the result of your changes. Requests that are dropped due
+# to ACL don't trigger reloads.
+#
+# When starting Privoxy on Unix systems, give the location of this
+# file as last argument. On Windows systems, Privoxy will look for
+# this file with the name 'config.txt' in the current working directory
+# of the Privoxy process.
#
#
# II. FORMAT OF THE CONFIGURATION FILE
# The '#' indicates a comment. Any part of a line following a '#'
# is ignored, except if the '#' is preceded by a '\'.
#
-# Thus, by placing a # at the start of an existing configuration line,
-# you can make it a comment and it will be treated as if it weren't
-# there. This is called "commenting out" an option and can be useful.
+# Thus, by placing a # at the start of an existing configuration
+# line, you can make it a comment and it will be treated as if it
+# weren't there. This is called "commenting out" an option and can
+# be useful. Removing the # again is called "uncommenting".
#
-# Note that commenting out and option and leaving it at its default
+# Note that commenting out an option and leaving it at its default
# are two completely different things! Most options behave very
-# differently when unset. See the the "Effect if unset" explanation
-# in each option's description for details.
+# differently when unset. See the "Effect if unset" explanation in
+# each option's description for details.
#
# Long lines can be continued on the next line by using a `\' as the
# last character.
#
-
+#
#
# 1. LOCAL SET-UP DOCUMENTATION
-# =============================
#
# If you intend to operate Privoxy for more users than just yourself,
# it might be a good idea to let them know how to reach you, what
# you block and why you do that, your policies, etc.
#
-
+#
#
# 1.1. user-manual
-# ================
#
# Specifies:
#
# The User Manual URI is the single best source of information on
# Privoxy, and is used for help links from some of the internal
# CGI pages. The manual itself is normally packaged with the
-# binary distributions, so you probably want to set this to
-# a locally installed copy. For multi-user setups, you could
-# provide a copy on a local webserver for all your users and use
-# the corresponding URL here.
+# binary distributions, so you probably want to set this to a
+# locally installed copy.
#
# Examples:
#
#
# user-manual /usr/share/doc/privoxy/user-manual
#
+#
# The User Manual is then available to anyone with
-# access to the proxy, by following the built-in URL:
+# access to Privoxy, by following the built-in URL:
# http://config.privoxy.org/user-manual/ (or the shortcut:
# http://p.p/user-manual/).
#
#
# user-manual http://example.com/privoxy/user-manual/
#
+#
# WARNING!!!
#
# If set, this option should be the first option in the config
# file, because it is used while the config file is being read.
#
#user-manual http://www.privoxy.org/user-manual/
-
+#
#
# 1.2. trust-info-url
-# ===================
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Default value:
#
-# Two example URL are provided
+# Two example URLs are provided
#
# Effect if unset:
#
# Notes:
#
# The value of this option only matters if the experimental trust
-# mechanism has been activated. (See trustfile above.)
+# mechanism has been activated. (See trustfile below.)
#
# If you use the trust mechanism, it is a good idea to write
# up some on-line documentation about your trust policy and to
#
trust-info-url http://www.example.com/why_we_block.html
trust-info-url http://www.example.com/what_we_allow.html
-
+#
#
# 1.3. admin-address
-# ==================
#
# Specifies:
#
-# An email address to reach the proxy administrator.
+# An email address to reach the Privoxy administrator.
#
# Type of value:
#
# be shown.
#
#admin-address privoxy-admin@example.com
-
+#
#
# 1.4. proxy-info-url
-# ===================
#
# Specifies:
#
# This URL shouldn't be blocked ;-)
#
#proxy-info-url http://www.example.com/proxy-service.html
-
+#
#
# 2. CONFIGURATION AND LOG FILE LOCATIONS
-# =======================================
#
# Privoxy can (and normally does) use a number of other files for
# additional configuration, help and logging. This section of the
# configuration files, and write permission to any files that would
# be modified, such as log files and actions files.
#
-
+#
#
# 2.1. confdir
-# ============
#
# Specifies:
#
-# The directory where the other configuration files are located
+# The directory where the other configuration files are located.
#
# Type of value:
#
#
# Notes:
#
-# No trailing "/", please
-#
-# When development goes modular and multi-user, the blocker,
-# filter, and per-user config will be stored in subdirectories of
-# "confdir". For now, the configuration directory structure is
-# flat, except for confdir/templates, where the HTML templates
-# for CGI output reside (e.g. Privoxy's 404 error page).
+# No trailing "/", please.
#
confdir .
-
#
-# 2.2. logdir
-# ===========
+#
+# 2.2. templdir
+#
+# Specifies:
+#
+# An alternative directory where the templates are loaded from.
+#
+# Type of value:
+#
+# Path name
+#
+# Default value:
+#
+# unset
+#
+# Effect if unset:
+#
+# The templates are assumed to be located in confdir/template.
+#
+# Notes:
+#
+# Privoxy's original templates are usually overwritten with each
+# update. Use this option to relocate customized templates that
+# should be kept. As template variables might change between
+# updates, you shouldn't expect templates to work with Privoxy
+# releases other than the one they were part of, though.
+#
+#templdir .
+#
+#
+# 2.3. logdir
#
# Specifies:
#
# The directory where all logging takes place (i.e. where logfile
-# and jarfile are located)
+# and jarfile are located).
#
# Type of value:
#
#
# Notes:
#
-# No trailing "/", please
+# No trailing "/", please.
#
logdir .
-
#
-# 2.3. actionsfile
-# ================
+#
+# 2.4. actionsfile
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Type of value:
#
-# File name, relative to confdir, without the .action suffix
+# Complete file name, relative to confdir
#
# Default values:
#
-# standard # Internal purposes, no editing recommended
+# standard.action # Internal purposes, no editing recommended
#
-# default # Main actions file
+# default.action # Main actions file
#
-# user # User customizations
+# user.action # User customizations
#
# Effect if unset:
#
-# No actions are taken at all. Simple neutral proxying.
+# No actions are taken at all. More or less neutral proxying.
#
# Notes:
#
# which is the "main" actions file maintained by the developers,
# and user.action, where you can make your personal additions.
#
-# Actions files are where all the per site and per URL
-# configuration is done for ad blocking, cookie management,
-# privacy considerations, etc. There is no point in using Privoxy
-# without at least one actions file.
+# Actions files contain all the per site and per URL configuration
+# for ad blocking, cookie management, privacy considerations,
+# etc. There is no point in using Privoxy without at least one
+# actions file.
+#
+# Note that since Privoxy 3.0.7, the complete filename, including
+# the ".action" extension has to be specified. The syntax change
+# was necessary to be consistent with the other file options and
+# to allow previously forbidden characters.
#
actionsfile standard.action # Internal purpose, recommended
actionsfile default.action # Main actions file
actionsfile user.action # User customizations
-
#
-# 2.4. filterfile
-# ===============
+#
+# 2.5. filterfile
#
# Specifies:
#
# Multiple filterfile lines are permitted.
#
# The filter files contain content modification rules that use
-# regular expressions. These rules permit powerful changes on
-# the content of Web pages, and optionally the headers as well,
-# e.g., you could disable your favorite JavaScript annoyances,
+# regular expressions. These rules permit powerful changes on the
+# content of Web pages, and optionally the headers as well, e.g.,
+# you could try to disable your favorite JavaScript annoyances,
# re-write the actual displayed text, or just have some fun
# playing buzzword bingo with web pages.
#
#
filterfile default.filter
#filterfile user.filter # User customizations
-
#
-# 2.5. logfile
-# ============
+#
+# 2.6. logfile
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Default value:
#
-# logfile (Unix) or privoxy.log (Windows)
+# Unset (commented out). When activated: logfile (Unix) or
+# privoxy.log (Windows).
#
# Effect if unset:
#
-# No log file is used, all log messages go to the console (STDERR).
+# Logging is disabled unless --no-daemon mode is used.
#
# Notes:
#
# written. The level of detail and number of messages are set with
# the debug option (see below). The logfile can be useful for
# tracking down a problem with Privoxy (e.g., it's not blocking
-# an ad you think it should block) but in most cases you probably
-# will never look at it.
+# an ad you think it should block) and it can help you to monitor
+# what your browser is doing.
+#
+# Many users will never look at it, however, and it's a privacy
+# risk if third parties can get access to it. It is therefore
+# disabled by default in Privoxy 3.0.7 and later.
+#
+# For troubleshooting purposes, you will have to explicitly enable
+# it. Please don't file any support requests without trying to
+# reproduce the problem with logging enabled first. Once you read
+# the log messages, you may even be able to solve the problem on
+# your own.
#
# 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"). For Red Hat, a logrotate
-# script has been included.
-#
-# On SuSE Linux systems, you can place a line like
-# "/var/log/privoxy.* +1024k 644 nobody.nogroup" in /etc/logfiles,
-# with the effect that cron.daily will automatically archive,
-# gzip, and empty the log, when it exceeds 1M size.
+# this with a cron job (see "man cron"). For Red Hat based Linux
+# distributions, a logrotate script has been included.
#
# Any log files must be writable by whatever user Privoxy is
-# being run as (default on UNIX, user id is "privoxy").
+# being run as (on Unix, default user id is "privoxy").
#
-logfile logfile
-
+#logfile logfile
#
-# 2.6. jarfile
-# ============
+#
+# 2.7. jarfile
#
# Specifies:
#
# Default value:
#
# Unset (commented out). When activated: jarfile (Unix) or
-# privoxy.jar (Windows)
+# privoxy.jar (Windows).
#
# Effect if unset:
#
#
# The jarfile may grow to ridiculous sizes over time.
#
-# If debug 8 (show header parsing) is enabled, cookies are written
-# to the logfile with the rest of the headers.
+# If debug 8 (show header parsing) is enabled, cookies are also
+# written to the logfile with the rest of the headers. Therefore
+# this option isn't very useful and may be removed in future
+# releases. Please report to the developers if you are still
+# using it.
#
#jarfile jarfile
-
#
-# 2.7. trustfile
-# ==============
+#
+# 2.8. trustfile
#
# Specifies:
#
-# The trust file to use
+# The name of the trust file to use
#
# Type of value:
#
#
# Effect if unset:
#
-# The entire trust mechanism is turned off.
+# The entire trust mechanism is disabled.
#
# Notes:
#
# in one of two ways:
#
# Prepending a ~ character limits access to this site only (and
-# any sub-paths within this site), e.g. ~www.example.com.
+# any sub-paths within this site), e.g. ~www.example.com allows
+# access to ~www.example.com/ features/news.html, etc.
#
# Or, you can designate sites as trusted referrers, by prepending
# the name with a + character. The effect is that access to
-# untrusted sites will be granted -- but only if a link from this
-# trusted referrer was used. The link target will then be added
-# to the "trustfile" so that future, direct accesses will be
-# granted. Sites added via this mechanism do not become trusted
-# referrers themselves (i.e. they are added with a ~ designation).
+# untrusted sites will be granted -- but only if a link from
+# this trusted referrer was used to get there. The link target
+# will then be added to the "trustfile" so that future, direct
+# accesses will be granted. Sites added via this mechanism do
+# not become trusted referrers themselves (i.e. they are added
+# with a ~ designation). There is a limit of 512 such entries,
+# after which new entries will not be made.
#
# If you use the + operator in the trust file, it may grow
# considerably over time.
# children.
#
#trustfile trust
-
+#
#
# 3. DEBUGGING
-# ============
#
# These options are mainly useful when tracing a problem. Note that
# you might also want to invoke Privoxy with the --no-daemon command
# line option when debugging.
#
-
+#
#
# 3.1. debug
-# ==========
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# The available debug levels are:
#
-# debug 1 # show each GET/POST/CONNECT request
-# debug 2 # show each connection status
-# debug 4 # show I/O status
-# debug 8 # show header parsing
-# debug 16 # log all data into the logfile
-# debug 32 # debug force feature
-# debug 64 # debug regular expression filter
-# debug 128 # debug fast redirects
-# debug 256 # debug GIF de-animation
-# debug 512 # Common Log Format
-# debug 1024 # debug kill pop-ups
-# debug 2048 # CGI user interface
-# debug 4096 # Startup banner and warnings.
-# debug 8192 # Non-fatal errors
+# debug 1 # show each GET/POST/CONNECT request
+# debug 2 # show each connection status
+# debug 4 # show I/O status
+# debug 8 # show header parsing
+# debug 16 # log all data written to the network into the logfile
+# debug 32 # debug force feature
+# debug 64 # debug regular expression filters
+# debug 128 # debug redirects
+# debug 256 # debug GIF de-animation
+# debug 512 # Common Log Format
+# debug 1024 # debug kill pop-ups
+# debug 2048 # CGI user interface
+# debug 4096 # Startup banner and warnings.
+# debug 8192 # Non-fatal errors
+#
#
# To select multiple debug levels, you can either add them or
# use multiple debug lines.
# are probably only of interest if you are hunting down a specific
# problem. They can produce a hell of an output (especially 16).
#
-# The reporting of fatal errors (i.e. ones which crash Privoxy)
-# is always on and cannot be disabled.
-#
# If you want to use CLF (Common Log Format), you should set
# "debug 512" ONLY and not enable anything else.
#
+# Privoxy has a hard-coded limit for the length of log messages. If
+# it's reached, messages are logged truncated and marked with
+# "... [too long, truncated]".
+#
debug 1 # show each GET/POST/CONNECT request
debug 4096 # Startup banner and warnings
debug 8192 # Errors - *we highly recommended enabling this*
-
+#
#
# 3.2. single-threaded
-# ====================
#
# Specifies:
#
-# Whether to run only one server thread
+# Whether to run only one server thread.
#
# Type of value:
#
#
# Notes:
#
-# This option is only there for debug purposes and you should
-# never need to use it. It will drastically reduce performance.
+# This option is only there for debugging purposes. It will
+# drastically reduce performance.
#
#single-threaded
-
+#
#
# 4. ACCESS CONTROL AND SECURITY
-# ==============================
#
# This section of the config file controls the security-relevant
# aspects of Privoxy's configuration.
#
-
+#
#
# 4.1. listen-address
-# ===================
#
# Specifies:
#
# from the Internet. In that case, consider using access control
# lists (ACL's, see below), and/or a firewall.
#
-# If you open Privoxy to untrusted users, you will also want
-# to turn off the enable-edit-actions and enable-remote-toggle
-# options!
+# If you open Privoxy to untrusted users, you will also
+# want to make sure that the following actions are disabled:
+# enable-edit-actions and enable-remote-toggle
#
# Example:
#
#
# listen-address 192.168.0.1:8118
#
+#
listen-address 127.0.0.1:8118
-
+#
#
# 4.2. toggle
-# ===========
#
# Specifies:
#
# Notes:
#
# If set to 0, Privoxy will start in "toggled off" mode,
-# i.e. behave like a normal, content-neutral proxy where all ad
-# blocking, filtering, etc are disabled. See enable-remote-toggle
-# below. This is not really useful anymore, since toggling is
-# much easier via the web interface than via editing the conf file.
+# i.e. mostly behave like a normal, content-neutral proxy
+# with both ad blocking and content filtering disabled. See
+# enable-remote-toggle below.
#
# The windows version will only display the toggle icon in the
# system tray if this option is present.
#
toggle 1
-
+#
#
# 4.3. enable-remote-toggle
-# =========================
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Default value:
#
-# 1
+# 0
#
# Effect if unset:
#
#
# Notes:
#
-# When toggled off, Privoxy acts like a normal, content-neutral
-# proxy, i.e. it acts as if none of the actions applied to
-# any URL.
+# When toggled off, Privoxy mostly acts like a normal,
+# content-neutral proxy, i.e. doesn't block ads or filter content.
#
-# For the time being, access to the toggle feature can not be
-# controlled separately by "ACLs" or HTTP authentication, so that
-# everybody who can access Privoxy (see "ACLs" and listen-address
-# above) can toggle it for all users. So this option is not
-# recommended for multi-user environments with untrusted users.
+# Access to the toggle feature can not be controlled separately by
+# "ACLs" or HTTP authentication, so that everybody who can access
+# Privoxy (see "ACLs" and listen-address above) can toggle it
+# for all users. So this option is not recommended for multi-user
+# environments with untrusted users.
+#
+# Note that malicious client side code (e.g Java) is also capable
+# of using this option.
+#
+# As a lot of Privoxy users don't read documentation, this feature
+# is disabled by default.
#
# Note that you must have compiled Privoxy with support for this
# feature, otherwise this option has no effect.
#
-enable-remote-toggle 1
-
+enable-remote-toggle 0
+#
#
# 4.4. enable-remote-http-toggle
-# ==============================
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Default value:
#
-# 1
+# 0
#
# Effect if unset:
#
# the ongoing request, even if it is enabled in one of the
# action files.
#
-# If you are using Privoxy in a multi-user environment or with
-# untrustworthy clients and want to enforce filtering, you will
-# have to disable this option, otherwise you can ignore it.
+# This feature is disabled by default. If you are using Privoxy in
+# a environment with trusted clients, you may enable this feature
+# at your discretion. Note that malicious client side code (e.g
+# Java) is also capable of using this feature.
+#
+# This option will be removed in future releases as it has been
+# obsoleted by the more general header taggers.
+#
+enable-remote-http-toggle 0
#
-enable-remote-http-toggle 1
-
#
# 4.5. enable-edit-actions
-# ========================
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Default value:
#
-# 1
+# 0
#
# Effect if unset:
#
#
# Notes:
#
-# For the time being, access to the editor can not be controlled
-# separately by "ACLs" or HTTP authentication, so that everybody
-# who can access Privoxy (see "ACLs" and listen-address above)
-# can modify its configuration for all users. So this option is
-# not recommended for multi-user environments with untrusted users.
+# Access to the editor can not be controlled separately by
+# "ACLs" or HTTP authentication, so that everybody who can access
+# Privoxy (see "ACLs" and listen-address above) can modify its
+# configuration for all users.
+#
+# This option is not recommended for environments with untrusted
+# users and as a lot of Privoxy users don't read documentation,
+# this feature is disabled by default.
+#
+# Note that malicious client side code (e.g Java) is also capable
+# of using the actions editor and you shouldn't enable this
+# options unless you understand the consequences and are sure
+# your browser is configured correctly.
#
# Note that you must have compiled Privoxy with support for this
# feature, otherwise this option has no effect.
#
-enable-edit-actions 1
-
+enable-edit-actions 0
+#
+#
+# 4.6. enforce-blocks
+#
+# Specifies:
+#
+# Whether the user is allowed to ignore blocks and can "go there
+# anyway".
+#
+# Type of value:
+#
+# 0 or 1
+#
+# Default value:
+#
+# 0
+#
+# Effect if unset:
+#
+# Blocks are not enforced.
+#
+# Notes:
#
-# 4.6. ACLs: permit-access and deny-access
-# ========================================
+# Privoxy is mainly used to block and filter requests as a service
+# to the user, for example to block ads and other junk that clogs
+# the pipes. Privoxy's configuration isn't perfect and sometimes
+# innocent pages are blocked. In this situation it makes sense to
+# allow the user to enforce the request and have Privoxy ignore
+# the block.
+#
+# In the default configuration Privoxy's "Blocked" page contains
+# a "go there anyway" link to adds a special string (the force
+# prefix) to the request URL. If that link is used, Privoxy
+# will detect the force prefix, remove it again and let the
+# request pass.
+#
+# Of course Privoxy can also be used to enforce a network
+# policy. In that case the user obviously should not be able to
+# bypass any blocks, and that's what the "enforce-blocks" option
+# is for. If it's enabled, Privoxy hides the "go there anyway"
+# link. If the user adds the force prefix by hand, it will not
+# be accepted and the circumvention attempt is logged.
+#
+# Examples:
+#
+# enforce-blocks 1
+#
+enforce-blocks 0
+#
+#
+# 4.7. ACLs: permit-access and deny-access
#
# Specifies:
#
# or internal (home) network address by means of the listen-address
# option.
#
-# Please see the warnings in the FAQ that this proxy is not
-# intended to be a substitute for a firewall or to encourage
-# anyone to defer addressing basic security weaknesses.
+# Please see the warnings in the FAQ that Privoxy is not intended
+# to be a substitute for a firewall or to encourage anyone to
+# defer addressing basic security weaknesses.
#
-# Multiple ACL lines are OK. If any ACLs are specified, then
-# the Privoxy talks only to IP addresses that match at least one
-# permit-access line and don't match any subsequent deny-access
-# line. In other words, the last match wins, with the default
-# being deny-access.
+# Multiple ACL lines are OK. If any ACLs are specified, Privoxy
+# only talks to IP addresses that match at least one permit-access
+# line and don't match any subsequent deny-access line. In other
+# words, the last match wins, with the default being deny-access.
#
# If Privoxy is using a forwarder (see forward below) for a
# particular destination URL, the dst_addr that is examined is
#
# Denying access to particular sites by ACL may have undesired
# side effects if the site in question is hosted on a machine
-# which also hosts other sites.
+# which also hosts other sites (most sites are).
#
# Examples:
#
#
# permit-access localhost
#
+#
# Allow any host on the same class C subnet as www.privoxy.org
-# access to nothing but www.example.com:
+# access to nothing but www.example.com (or other domains hosted
+# on the same system):
#
-# permit-access www.privoxy.org/24 www.example.com/32
+# permit-access www.privoxy.org/24 www.example.com/32
#
-# Allow access from any host on the 26-bit subnet 192.168.45.64
-# to anywhere, with the exception that 192.168.45.73 may not
-# access www.dirty-stuff.example.com:
#
-# permit-access 192.168.45.64/26
-# deny-access 192.168.45.73 www.dirty-stuff.example.com
+# Allow access from any host on the 26-bit subnet 192.168.45.64 to
+# anywhere, with the exception that 192.168.45.73 may not access
+# the IP address behind www.dirty-stuff.example.com:
+#
+# permit-access 192.168.45.64/26
+# deny-access 192.168.45.73 www.dirty-stuff.example.com
#
-
#
-# 4.7. buffer-limit
-# =================
+#
+# 4.8. buffer-limit
#
# Specifies:
#
# Kbytes each, unless you have enabled "single-threaded" above.
#
buffer-limit 4096
-
+#
#
# 5. FORWARDING
-# =============
#
-# This feature allows routing of HTTP requests through a chain
-# of multiple proxies. It can be used to better protect privacy
-# and confidentiality when accessing specific domains by routing
-# requests to those domains through an anonymous public proxy.
-# Or to use a caching proxy to speed up browsing. Or chaining to
-# a parent proxy may be necessary because the machine that Privoxy
-# runs on has no direct Internet access.
+# This feature allows routing of HTTP requests through a chain of
+# multiple proxies.
+#
+# Forwarding can be used to chain Privoxy with a caching proxy to
+# speed up browsing. Using a parent proxy may also be necessary if
+# the machine that Privoxy runs on has no direct Internet access.
+#
+# Note that parent proxies can severely decrease your privacy
+# level. For example a parent proxy could add your IP address to the
+# request headers and if it's a caching proxy it may add the "Etag"
+# header to revalidation requests again, even though you configured
+# Privoxy to remove it. It may also ignore Privoxy's header time
+# randomization and use the original values which could be used by
+# the server as cookie replacement to track your steps between visits.
#
# Also specified here are SOCKS proxies. Privoxy supports the SOCKS
# 4 and SOCKS 4A protocols.
#
-
+#
#
# 5.1. forward
-# ============
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Examples:
#
-# Everything goes to an example anonymizing proxy, except SSL on
-# port 443 (which it doesn't handle):
+# Everything goes to an example parent proxy, except SSL on port
+# 443 (which it doesn't handle):
#
-# forward / anon-proxy.example.org:8080
+# forward / parent-proxy.example.org:8080
# forward :443 .
#
+#
# Everything goes to our example ISP's caching proxy, except for
# requests to that ISP's sites:
#
-# forward / caching-proxy.example-isp.net:8000
-# forward .example-isp.net .
+# forward / caching-proxy.isp.example.net:8000
+# forward .isp.example.net .
+#
+#
#
-
#
# 5.2. forward-socks4 and forward-socks4a
-# =======================================
#
# Specifies:
#
-# Through which SOCKS proxy (and to which parent HTTP proxy)
-# specific requests should be routed.
+# Through which SOCKS proxy (and optionally to which parent HTTP
+# proxy) specific requests should be routed.
#
# Type of value:
#
# ISP's proxy by way of example.com's corporate SOCKS 4A gateway
# to the Internet.
#
-# forward-socks4a / socks-gw.example.com:1080 www-cache.example-isp.net:8080
-# forward .example.com .
+# forward-socks4a / socks-gw.example.com:1080 www-cache.isp.example.net:8080
+# forward .example.com .
+#
#
# A rule that uses a SOCKS 4 gateway for all destinations but no
# HTTP parent looks like this:
#
# forward-socks4 / socks-gw.example.com:1080 .
#
+#
# To chain Privoxy and Tor, both running on the same system,
-# you should use the rule:
+# you would use something like:
+#
+# forward-socks4a / 127.0.0.1:9050 .
#
-# forward-socks4a / 127.0.0.1:9050 .
#
# The public Tor network can't be used to reach your local network,
-# therefore it's a good idea to make some exceptions:
+# if you need to access local servers you therefore might want
+# to make some exceptions:
+#
+# forward 192.168.*.*/ .
+# forward 10.*.*.*/ .
+# forward 127.*.*.*/ .
#
-# forward 192.168.*.*/ .
-# forward 10.*.*.*/ .
-# forward 127.*.*.*/ .
#
# Unencrypted connections to systems in these address ranges will
-# be as (un)secure as the local network is, but the alternative is
-# that you can't reach the network at all.
+# be as (un) secure as the local network is, but the alternative
+# is that you can't reach the local network through Privoxy at
+# all. Of course this may actually be desired and there is no
+# reason to make these exceptions if you aren't sure you need them.
#
# If you also want to be able to reach servers in your local
-# network by using their names, you will need additional
-# exceptions that look like this:
+# network by using their names, you will need additional exceptions
+# that look like this:
+#
+# forward localhost/ .
+#
#
-# forward localhost/ .
#
-
#
# 5.3. forwarded-connect-retries
-# ==============================
#
# Specifies:
#
#
# Effect if unset:
#
-# Forwarded connections are treated like direct connections and
-# no retry attempts are made.
+# Connections forwarded through other proxies are treated like
+# direct connections and no retry attempts are made.
#
# Notes:
#
# case the retry will just delay the appearance of Privoxy's
# error message.
#
-# Only use this option, if you are getting many forwarding related
-# error messages, that go away when you try again manually. Start
-# with a small value and check Privoxy's logfile from time to time,
-# to see how many retries are usually needed.
+# Note that in the context of this option, "forwarded connections"
+# includes all connections that Privoxy forwards through other
+# proxies. This option is not limited to the HTTP CONNECT method.
+#
+# Only use this option, if you are getting lots of
+# forwarding-related error messages that go away when you try again
+# manually. Start with a small value and check Privoxy's logfile
+# from time to time, to see how many retries are usually needed.
#
# Examples:
#
# forwarded-connect-retries 1
#
forwarded-connect-retries 0
-
+#
+#
+# 5.4. accept-intercepted-requests
+#
+# Specifies:
+#
+# Whether intercepted requests should be treated as valid.
+#
+# Type of value:
+#
+# 0 or 1
+#
+# Default value:
+#
+# 0
+#
+# Effect if unset:
+#
+# Only proxy requests are accepted, intercepted requests are
+# treated as invalid.
+#
+# Notes:
+#
+# If you don't trust your clients and want to force them to use
+# Privoxy, enable this option and configure your packet filter
+# to redirect outgoing HTTP connections into Privoxy.
+#
+# Make sure that Privoxy's own requests aren't redirected as well.
+# Additionally take care that Privoxy can't intentionally connect
+# to itself, otherwise you could run into redirection loops if
+# Privoxy's listening port is reachable by the outside or an
+# attacker has access to the pages you visit.
+#
+# Examples:
+#
+# accept-intercepted-requests 1
+#
+accept-intercepted-requests 0
+#
+#
+# 5.5. allow-cgi-request-crunching
+#
+# Specifies:
+#
+# Whether requests to Privoxy's CGI pages can be blocked or
+# redirected.
+#
+# Type of value:
+#
+# 0 or 1
+#
+# Default value:
+#
+# 0
+#
+# Effect if unset:
+#
+# Privoxy ignores block and redirect actions for its CGI pages.
+#
+# Notes:
+#
+# By default Privoxy ignores block or redirect actions for
+# its CGI pages. Intercepting these requests can be useful in
+# multi-user setups to implement fine-grained access control,
+# but it can also render the complete web interface useless and
+# make debugging problems painful if done without care.
+#
+# Don't enable this option unless you're sure that you really
+# need it.
+#
+# Examples:
+#
+# allow-cgi-request-crunching 1
+#
+allow-cgi-request-crunching 0
+#
+#
+# 5.6. split-large-forms
+#
+# Specifies:
+#
+# Whether the CGI interface should stay compatible with broken
+# HTTP clients.
+#
+# Type of value:
+#
+# 0 or 1
+#
+# Default value:
+#
+# 0
+#
+# Effect if unset:
+#
+# The CGI form generate long GET URLs.
+#
+# Notes:
+#
+# Privoxy's CGI forms can lead to rather long URLs. This isn't
+# a problem as far as the HTTP standard is concerned, but it can
+# confuse clients with arbitrary URL length limitations.
+#
+# Enabling split-large-forms causes Privoxy to divide big forms
+# into smaller ones to keep the URL length down. It makes editing
+# a lot less convenient and you can no longer submit all changes
+# at once, but at least it works around this browser bug.
+#
+# If you don't notice any editing problems, there is no reason
+# to enable this option, but if one of the submit buttons appears
+# to be broken, you should give it a try.
+#
+# Examples:
+#
+# split-large-forms 1
+#
+split-large-forms 0
+#
#
# 6. WINDOWS GUI OPTIONS
-# ======================
#
# Privoxy has a number of options specific to the Windows GUI
# interface:
# and hide the command console.
#
#hide-console
-
+#
#