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I am confused as to how to set up username/password restrictions on tinyproxy (so that not all the world can access it - ip alow/block has limited use in my setup). Any pointers?

Thank you!

4 Answers 4

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Tinyproxy doesn't support authentication yet, there's a ticket in their bug tracker, but it doesn't look too lively: https://banu.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13

There's an unofficial (and possibly unstable patch) patch for tinyproxy 1.7.0 posted on their mailing list: https://banu.com/pipermail/tinyproxy-list/2006-January/000606.html

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+25

I don't believe it yet supports authentication: the man pages for the latest version make no indication of authentication being an option.

Have a look at Squid Proxy: it's a full-featured proxy and with a minimal config, is quite lightweight.

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My solution to this problem is to configure tinyproxy to allow connections only from localhost (127.0.0.1) and then use ssh with port forwarding to access the proxy from a remote machine. In the remote machine you need to configure the proxy address as localhost and use whatever port you forwarded with ssh to to the remote machine.

This solves 2 problems: strong authentication from random IP addresses as well as encryption of all requests between the client and tinyproxy. The downside is that you have to open the ssh session in the remote machine.

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  • Thank you for your input! While this is good for internal use, this way does not help in cases you want to provide standard proxy access to others.
    – john
    Aug 2, 2011 at 10:51
  • With SSH connection, SOCKS can be used (if server supports dynamic port forwarding) directly without the need for Tinyproxy.
    – Mohnish
    Sep 27, 2017 at 14:34
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The new 2018 release now DOES HAVE basic http AUTH support, find on github https://github.com/tinyproxy/tinyproxy/releases

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