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doc: Add android-spdy-proxy document
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doc/android-spdy-proxy.rst
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doc/android-spdy-proxy.rst
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SPDY Proxy with Firefox for Android
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===================================
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This document describes how to use SPDY proxy from Android device
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using Firefox for Android. No root privilege is required. It may be
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possible to use other Web browser/software if they provide the ability
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to specify HTTP proxy. Because we don't use the features only
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available in latest Android devices, this method works on relatively
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old but still used versions, e.g., Andriod 2.3 series.
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Setting up SPDY Proxy
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---------------------
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If you have VPS, then you can setup SPDY proxy there. You can use
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``shrpx`` with ``-s`` option + Squid as SPDY proxy. Alternatively,
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`node-spdyproxy <https://github.com/igrigorik/node-spdyproxy/>`_ may
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also work. If you don't have VPS, but your home internet connection
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has global IP address which can be accessible from Android device, you
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can use your home PC as SPDY proxy temporarily for the experiment.
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The self-signed certificate is OK because we will run ``shrpx`` with
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``-k`` option on Android. If you think this is insecure, obtain valid
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certificate.
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Building spdylay library and shrpx
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----------------------------------
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First Android NDK must be installed on your system. Refer
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:doc:`package_README` to see how to install NDK. In the following document, We
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use ``ANDROID_HOME`` environment variable.
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To make it easier to run Android cross-compiler tools (and for the
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sake of this document), include the path to those commands to
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``PATH``::
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$ export PATH=$ANDROID_HOME/toolchain/bin:$PATH
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We need to build dependent libraries: OpenSSL and libevent.
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To configure OpenSSL, use the following script::
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#!/bin/sh
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if [ -z "$ANDROID_HOME" ]; then
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echo 'No $ANDROID_HOME specified.'
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exit 1
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fi
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PREFIX=$ANDROID_HOME/usr/local
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TOOLCHAIN=$ANDROID_HOME/toolchain
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PATH=$TOOLCHAIN/bin:$PATH
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export CROSS_COMPILE=$TOOLCHAIN/bin/arm-linux-androideabi-
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./Configure --prefix=$PREFIX android
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Then run ``make install`` to build and install library.
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For libevent, use the following script to configure::
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#!/bin/sh
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if [ -z "$ANDROID_HOME" ]; then
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echo 'No $ANDROID_HOME specified.'
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exit 1
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fi
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PREFIX=$ANDROID_HOME/usr/local
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TOOLCHAIN=$ANDROID_HOME/toolchain
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PATH=$TOOLCHAIN/bin:$PATH
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./configure \
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--host=arm-linux-androideabi \
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--build=`dpkg-architecture -qDEB_BUILD_GNU_TYPE` \
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--prefix=$PREFIX \
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--disable-shared \
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--enable-static \
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CPPFLAGS=-I$PREFIX/include \
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LDFLAGS=-L$PREFIX/lib
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Then run ``make install`` to
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build and install library.
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To build spdylay, use ``android-config`` to configure and
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``android-make`` to build as described in :doc:`package_README`.
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If all went well, ``shrpx`` binary is created in src directory. Strip
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debugging information from the binary using the following command::
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$ arm-linux-androideabi-strip src/shrpx
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Setup shrpx on Android device
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-----------------------------
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There may be several ways to run ``shrpx`` on Android. I describe the
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way to use `Android Terminal Emulator
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<https://github.com/jackpal/Android-Terminal-Emulator>`_. It can be
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installed from Google Play. Copy ``shrpx`` binary to the location
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where the Android-Terminal-Emulator is installed (In case of my phone,
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it is ``/data/data/jackpal.androidterm``) and give the executable
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permission to ``shrpx`` using ``chmod``::
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$ chmod 755 shrpx
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Then run ``shrpx`` in client-mode like this::
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$ ./shrpx -k -p -f localhost,8000 -b SPDY-PROXY-ADDR,SPDY-PROXY-PORT
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Substitute ``SPDY-PROXY-ADDR`` and ``SPDY-PROXY-PORT`` with the SPDY
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proxy address and port you have setup respectively. The ``-k`` option
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tells ``shrpx`` not to complain the self-signed certificate for SPDY
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proxy. The ``-p`` option makes ``shrpx`` run so called client mode.
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In that mode, ``shrpx`` acts like ordinary HTTP forward proxy in
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frontend connection, it forwards the requests from the client to
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backend in encrypted SPDY connection. The ``-f`` option specify the
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address and port ``shrpx`` listens to. In this setup, the web browser
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should be setup to use HTTP proxy localhost:8000. The ``-b`` option
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specify the SPDY proxy address and port ``shrpx`` forwards the
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requests from the client. The configuration looks like this::
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+----Android------------------------+ +---SPDY-Proxy------+
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| [Firefox] <-- HTTP --> [shrpx] <--=-- SPDY --=-->[shrpx,squid]<--=-- SPDY --> ...
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+-----------------------------------+ +-------------------+ HTTP
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With the above command-line option, ``shrpx`` only opens 1 connection
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to SPDY proxy. Of course, Firefox will use multiple connections to
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neighboring ``shrpx``. ``shrpx`` coalesces all the requests in 1
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backend connection, that is the benefit SPDY proxy brings in.
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Setup Firefox to use SPDY proxy
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-------------------------------
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If you have not installed, Firefox for Android, install it. Enter
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``about:config`` in URL bar in Firefox and locate proxy
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settings. Setup those values like this::
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network.proxy.http = localhost
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network.proxy.http_port = 8000
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network.proxy.ssl = localhost
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network.proxy.ssl_port = 8000
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network.proxy.type = 1
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You also need to tweak the following settings to increase in-flight
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requests to circumvent latency::
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network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-proxy
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network.http.max-connections
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network.http.max-connections-per-server
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Since ``shrpx`` handles maximum 100 concurrent streams, it is
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reasonable to set
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``network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-proxy`` to ``100``.
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Now borwse the sites with Firefox. The all HTTP requests are now sent
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via internal ``shrpx`` to SPDY proxy in 1 connection. SPDY proxy will
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get resources on behalf of the client and sent back the response.
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@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ Contents:
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package_README
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apiref
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python
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android-spdy-proxy
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Resources
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---------
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