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  1. # shadowsocks-libev
  2. ## Intro
  3. [Shadowsocks-libev](http://shadowsocks.org) is a lightweight secured SOCKS5
  4. proxy for embedded devices and low-end boxes.
  5. It is a port of [Shadowsocks](https://github.com/shadowsocks/shadowsocks)
  6. created by [@clowwindy](https://github.com/clowwindy), which is maintained by
  7. [@madeye](https://github.com/madeye) and [@linusyang](https://github.com/linusyang).
  8. Current version: 2.4.5 | [Changelog](debian/changelog)
  9. Travis CI: [![Travis CI](https://travis-ci.org/shadowsocks/shadowsocks-libev.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/shadowsocks/shadowsocks-libev) | Jenkins Matrix: [![Jenkins](https://jenkins.shadowvpn.org/buildStatus/icon?job=Shadowsocks-libev)](https://jenkins.shadowvpn.org/job/Shadowsocks-libev/)
  10. ## Features
  11. Shadowsocks-libev is written in pure C and only depends on
  12. [libev](http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libev.html) and
  13. [OpenSSL](http://www.openssl.org/) or [PolarSSL](https://polarssl.org/).
  14. The use of [mbedTLS](https://tls.mbed.org/) is added but still for testing, and
  15. it is not officially supported yet.
  16. In normal usage, the memory footprint is about 600KB and the CPU utilization is
  17. no more than 5% on a low-end router (Buffalo WHR-G300N V2 with a 400MHz MIPS CPU,
  18. 32MB memory and 4MB flash).
  19. For a full list of feature comparison between different versions of shadowsocks,
  20. refer to the [Wiki page](https://github.com/shadowsocks/shadowsocks/wiki/Feature-Comparison-across-Different-Versions).
  21. ## Installation
  22. ### Distribution-specific guide
  23. - [Debian & Ubuntu](#debian--ubuntu)
  24. + [Install from repository](#install-from-repository)
  25. + [Build deb package from source](#build-deb-package-from-source)
  26. + [Configure and start the service](#configure-and-start-the-service)
  27. - [Fedora & RHEL](#fedora--rhel)
  28. + [Install from repository](#install-from-repository-1)
  29. - [OpenSUSE](#opensuse)
  30. + [Install from repository](#install-from-repository-2)
  31. + [Build from source](#build-from-source)
  32. - [Archlinux](#archlinux)
  33. - [Directly build and install on UNIX-like system](#linux)
  34. - [FreeBSD](#freebsd)
  35. - [OpenWRT](#openwrt)
  36. - [OS X](#os-x)
  37. - [Windows](#windows)
  38. * * *
  39. ### Pre-build configure guide
  40. For a complete list of avaliable configure-time option,
  41. try `configure --help`.
  42. #### Using alternative crypto library
  43. There are three crypto libraries available:
  44. - OpenSSL (**default**)
  45. - PolarSSL
  46. - mbedTLS (__NOT__ officially supported)
  47. ##### PolarSSL
  48. To build against PolarSSL, specify `--with-crypto-library=polarssl`
  49. and `--with-polarssl=/path/to/polarssl` when running `./configure`.
  50. * PolarSSL __1.2.5 or newer__ is required. Currently, PolarSSL does __NOT__ support
  51. CAST5-CFB, DES-CFB, IDEA-CFB, RC2-CFB and SEED-CFB.
  52. * RC4 is only support by PolarSSL __1.3.0 or above__.
  53. ##### mbedTLS
  54. To build against mbedTLS, specify `--with-crypto-library=mbedtls`
  55. and `--with-mbedtls=/path/to/mbedtls` when running `./configure`.
  56. Please note that we do **NOT** officially support mbedTLS right now,
  57. and you should use it at your own risk.
  58. Windows users will need extra work when compiling mbedTLS library,
  59. see [this issue](https://github.com/shadowsocks/shadowsocks-libev/issues/422) for detail info.
  60. #### Using shared library from system
  61. Please specify `--enable-system-shared-lib`. This will replace the bundled
  62. `libev`, `libsodium` and `libudns` with the corresponding libraries installed
  63. in the system during compilation and linking.
  64. ### Debian & Ubuntu
  65. #### Install from repository
  66. **Note: The repository doesn't always contain the latest version. Please build from source if you want the latest version (see below)**
  67. Add GPG public key:
  68. ```bash
  69. wget -O- http://shadowsocks.org/debian/1D27208A.gpg | sudo apt-key add -
  70. ```
  71. Add either of the following lines to your /etc/apt/sources.list:
  72. ```
  73. # Ubuntu 14.04 or above
  74. deb http://shadowsocks.org/ubuntu trusty main
  75. # Debian Wheezy, Ubuntu 12.04 or any distribution with libssl > 1.0.1
  76. deb http://shadowsocks.org/debian wheezy main
  77. ```
  78. Then:
  79. ``` bash
  80. sudo apt-get update
  81. sudo apt-get install shadowsocks-libev
  82. ```
  83. #### Build deb package from source
  84. Supported Platforms:
  85. * Debian 7 (see below), 8, unstable
  86. * Ubuntu 14.04 (see below), Ubuntu 14.10, 15.04, 15.10 or higher
  87. **Note for Ubuntu 14.04 users**:
  88. Packages built on Ubuntu 14.04 may be used in later Ubuntu versions. However,
  89. packages built on Debian 7/8/9 or Ubuntu 14.10+ **cannot** be installed on
  90. Ubuntu 14.04.
  91. **Note for Debian 7.x users**:
  92. To build packages on Debian 7 (Wheezy), you need to enable `debian-backports`
  93. to install systemd-compatibility packages like `dh-systemd` or `init-system-helpers`.
  94. Please follow the instructions on [Debian Backports](http://backports.debian.org).
  95. This also means that you can only install those built packages on systems that have
  96. `init-system-helpers` installed.
  97. Otherwise, try to build and install directly from source. See the [Linux](#linux)
  98. section below.
  99. ``` bash
  100. cd shadowsocks-libev
  101. sudo apt-get install build-essential autoconf libtool libssl-dev \
  102. gawk debhelper dh-systemd init-system-helpers pkg-config
  103. dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -i
  104. cd ..
  105. sudo dpkg -i shadowsocks-libev*.deb
  106. ```
  107. #### Configure and start the service
  108. ```
  109. # Edit the configuration file
  110. sudo vim /etc/shadowsocks-libev/config.json
  111. # Edit the default configuration for debian
  112. sudo vim /etc/default/shadowsocks-libev
  113. # Start the service
  114. sudo /etc/init.d/shadowsocks-libev start # for sysvinit, or
  115. sudo systemctl start shadowsocks-libev # for systemd
  116. ```
  117. ### Fedora & RHEL
  118. Supported distributions include
  119. - Fedora 20, 21, rawhide
  120. - RHEL 6, 7 and derivatives (including CentOS, Scientific Linux)
  121. #### Install from repository
  122. Enable repo via `dnf`:
  123. ```
  124. su -c 'dnf copr enable librehat/shadowsocks'
  125. ```
  126. Or download yum repo on [Fedora Copr](https://copr.fedoraproject.org/coprs/librehat/shadowsocks/) and put it inside `/etc/yum.repos.d/`. The release `Epel` is for RHEL and its derivatives.
  127. Then, install `shadowsocks-libev` via `dnf`:
  128. ```bash
  129. su -c 'dnf update'
  130. su -c 'dnf install shadowsocks-libev'
  131. ```
  132. or `yum`:
  133. ```bash
  134. su -c 'yum update'
  135. su -c 'yum install shadowsocks-libev'
  136. ```
  137. ### OpenSUSE
  138. #### Install from repository
  139. Use the following command to install from repository.
  140. ```bash
  141. sudo zypper install shadowsocks-libev
  142. ```
  143. #### Build from source
  144. You should install `zlib-devel` and `libopenssl-devel` first.
  145. ```bash
  146. sudo zypper update
  147. sudo zypper install zlib-devel libopenssl-devel
  148. ```
  149. Then download the source package and compile.
  150. ```bash
  151. git clone https://github.com/shadowsocks/shadowsocks-libev.git
  152. cd shadowsocks-libev
  153. ./configure && make
  154. sudo make install
  155. ```
  156. ### Archlinux
  157. ```bash
  158. sudo pacman -S shadowsocks-libev
  159. ```
  160. Please refer to downstream [PKGBUILD](https://projects.archlinux.org/svntogit/community.git/tree/trunk?h=packages/shadowsocks-libev)
  161. script for extra modifications and distribution-specific bugs.
  162. ### Linux
  163. For Unix-like systems, especially Debian-based systems,
  164. e.g. Ubuntu, Debian or Linux Mint, you can build the binary like this:
  165. ```bash
  166. sudo apt-get install build-essential autoconf libtool libssl-dev
  167. ./configure && make
  168. sudo make install
  169. ```
  170. ### FreeBSD
  171. ```bash
  172. su
  173. cd /usr/ports/net/shadowsocks-libev
  174. make install
  175. ```
  176. Edit your config.json file. By default, it's located in /usr/local/etc/shadowsocks-libev.
  177. To enable shadowsocks-libev, add the following rc variable to your /etc/rc.conf file:
  178. ```
  179. shadowsocks_libev_enable="YES"
  180. ```
  181. Start the Shadowsocks server:
  182. ```bash
  183. service shadowsocks_libev start
  184. ```
  185. ### OpenWRT
  186. **Note**: You may want to use [openwrt-shadowsocks](https://github.com/shadowsocks/openwrt-shadowsocks)
  187. , which is developed specifically for OpenWRT.
  188. ```bash
  189. # At OpenWRT build root
  190. pushd package
  191. git clone https://github.com/shadowsocks/shadowsocks-libev.git
  192. popd
  193. # Enable shadowsocks-libev in network category
  194. make menuconfig
  195. # Optional
  196. make -j
  197. # Build the package
  198. make V=99 package/shadowsocks-libev/openwrt/compile
  199. ```
  200. ### OS X
  201. For OS X, use [Homebrew](http://brew.sh) to install or build.
  202. Install Homebrew:
  203. ```bash
  204. ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
  205. ```
  206. Install shadowsocks-libev:
  207. ```bash
  208. brew install shadowsocks-libev
  209. ```
  210. ### Windows
  211. For Windows, use either MinGW (msys) or Cygwin to build.
  212. At the moment, only `ss-local` is supported to build against MinGW (msys).
  213. If you are using MinGW (msys), please download OpenSSL or PolarSSL source tarball
  214. to the home directory of msys, and build it like this (may take a few minutes):
  215. #### OpenSSL
  216. ```bash
  217. tar zxf openssl-1.0.1e.tar.gz
  218. cd openssl-1.0.1e
  219. ./config --prefix="$HOME/prebuilt" --openssldir="$HOME/prebuilt/openssl"
  220. make && make install
  221. ```
  222. #### PolarSSL
  223. ```bash
  224. tar zxf polarssl-1.3.2-gpl.tgz
  225. cd polarssl-1.3.2
  226. make lib WINDOWS=1
  227. make install DESTDIR="$HOME/prebuilt"
  228. ```
  229. Then, build the binary using the commands below, and all `.exe` files
  230. will be built at `$HOME/ss/bin`:
  231. #### OpenSSL
  232. ```bash
  233. ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ss" --with-openssl="$HOME/prebuilt"
  234. make && make install
  235. ```
  236. #### PolarSSL
  237. ```bash
  238. ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ss" --with-crypto-library=polarssl --with-polarssl=$HOME/prebuilt
  239. make && make install
  240. ```
  241. ## Usage
  242. For a detailed and complete list of all supported arguments, you may refer to the
  243. man pages of the applications, respectively.
  244. ```
  245. ss-[local|redir|server|tunnel]
  246. -s <server_host> host name or ip address of your remote server
  247. -p <server_port> port number of your remote server
  248. -l <local_port> port number of your local server
  249. -k <password> password of your remote server
  250. [-m <encrypt_method>] encrypt method: table, rc4, rc4-md5,
  251. aes-128-cfb, aes-192-cfb, aes-256-cfb,
  252. bf-cfb, camellia-128-cfb, camellia-192-cfb,
  253. camellia-256-cfb, cast5-cfb, des-cfb, idea-cfb,
  254. rc2-cfb, seed-cfb, salsa20 ,chacha20 and
  255. chacha20-ietf
  256. [-f <pid_file>] the file path to store pid
  257. [-t <timeout>] socket timeout in seconds
  258. [-c <config_file>] the path to config file
  259. [-i <interface>] network interface to bind,
  260. not available in redir mode
  261. [-b <local_address>] local address to bind,
  262. not available in server mode
  263. [-u] enable udprelay mode,
  264. TPROXY is required in redir mode
  265. [-U] enable UDP relay and disable TCP relay,
  266. not available in local mode
  267. [-A] enable onetime authentication
  268. [-L <addr>:<port>] specify destination server address and port
  269. for local port forwarding,
  270. only available in tunnel mode
  271. [-d <addr>] setup name servers for internal DNS resolver,
  272. only available in server mode
  273. [--fast-open] enable TCP fast open,
  274. only available in local and server mode,
  275. with Linux kernel > 3.7.0
  276. [--acl <acl_file>] config file of ACL (Access Control List)
  277. only available in local and server mode
  278. [--manager-address <addr>] UNIX domain socket address
  279. only available in server and manager mode
  280. [--executable <path>] path to the executable of ss-server
  281. only available in manager mode
  282. [-v] verbose mode
  283. notes:
  284. ss-redir provides a transparent proxy function and only works on the
  285. Linux platform with iptables.
  286. ```
  287. ## Advanced usage
  288. The latest shadowsocks-libev has provided a *redir* mode. You can configure your Linux-based box or router to proxy all TCP traffic transparently.
  289. # Create new chain
  290. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -N SHADOWSOCKS
  291. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t mangle -N SHADOWSOCKS
  292. # Ignore your shadowsocks server's addresses
  293. # It's very IMPORTANT, just be careful.
  294. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 123.123.123.123 -j RETURN
  295. # Ignore LANs and any other addresses you'd like to bypass the proxy
  296. # See Wikipedia and RFC5735 for full list of reserved networks.
  297. # See ashi009/bestroutetb for a highly optimized CHN route list.
  298. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 0.0.0.0/8 -j RETURN
  299. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 10.0.0.0/8 -j RETURN
  300. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 127.0.0.0/8 -j RETURN
  301. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 169.254.0.0/16 -j RETURN
  302. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 172.16.0.0/12 -j RETURN
  303. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 192.168.0.0/16 -j RETURN
  304. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 224.0.0.0/4 -j RETURN
  305. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -d 240.0.0.0/4 -j RETURN
  306. # Anything else should be redirected to shadowsocks's local port
  307. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A SHADOWSOCKS -p tcp -j REDIRECT --to-ports 12345
  308. # Add any UDP rules
  309. root@Wrt:~# ip rule add fwmark 0x01/0x01 table 100
  310. root@Wrt:~# ip route add local 0.0.0.0/0 dev lo table 100
  311. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t mangle -A SHADOWSOCKS -p udp --dport 53 -j TPROXY --on-port 12345 --tproxy-mark 0x01/0x01
  312. # Apply the rules
  313. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp -j SHADOWSOCKS
  314. root@Wrt:~# iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -j SHADOWSOCKS
  315. # Start the shadowsocks-redir
  316. root@Wrt:~# ss-redir -u -c /etc/config/shadowsocks.json -f /var/run/shadowsocks.pid
  317. ## Security Tips
  318. Although shadowsocks-libev can handle thousands of concurrent connections nicely, we still recommend
  319. setting up your server's firewall rules to limit connections from each user:
  320. # Up to 32 connections are enough for normal usage
  321. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --syn --dport ${SHADOWSOCKS_PORT} -m connlimit --connlimit-above 32 -j REJECT --reject-with tcp-reset
  322. ## License
  323. Copyright (C) 2016 Max Lv <max.c.lv@gmail.com>
  324. This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  325. it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  326. the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  327. (at your option) any later version.
  328. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  329. but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  330. MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  331. GNU General Public License for more details.
  332. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  333. along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.