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IPv6 backconnect proxy server /64 and /48 subnet for any debian-based distro

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IPv6 Proxy Server License: MIT

Create your own IPv6 backconnect proxy server with only one script on any Linux distribution. Any number of random IPs on the subnet, ideal for parsing and traffic arbitrage (Google/Facebook/Youtube/Instagram and many others support IPv6).

Ask questions in issues, if you have some.

Tutorial

Assuming you already have an entire IPv6 subnet (/48 or /64) routed to your server.

Just run:

#sudo su
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/phungthelam1996/ipv6-proxy-server/master/ipv6-proxy-server.sh && chmod +x ipv6-proxy-server.sh
./ipv6-proxy-server.sh -s 64 -c 100 -u username -p password -t http -r 10

Uncomment first line or run all commands with sudo if you`re not under root.

If script already installed, you can just run one command to reconfigure parameters, for example:

./ipv6-proxy-server.sh -s 64 -c 20 -u username2 -p password2 -t socks5 -r 2

Old instance will be disabled and new starts without reinstallation very quickly.

If you want to uninstall proxy server, just run:

./ipv6-proxy-server.sh --uninstall

Proxy server will stopped, all configuration files, firewalls, shedulers and so on will be reset to initial state.

Command line arguments:

  • -s or --subnet - IPv6 subnet, fully allocated on your server. Any subnet divisible by 4 (for example, 48 or 56), default 64
  • -c or --proxy-count - The total number of proxies you want to have (from 1 to 10000)
  • -t or --proxies-type - Proxies type - http or socks5. Default http, if no value provided
  • -u or --username - All proxies auth login
  • -p or --password - All proxies auth password (if you specify neither username not password, proxy will run without authentication)
  • --random - bool parameter without value, if used, each backconnect proxy will have random username and password, that will be written in backconnect proxies file (-f argument)
  • --start-port - backconnect IPv4 start port. If you create 1500 proxies and start-port is 20000, and server external IPv4 is, e.g,180.113.14.28 you can connect to proxies using 180.113.14.28:20000, 180.113.14.28:20001 and so on until 180.113.14.28:21500
  • -r or --rotating-interval - rotation interval of entire proxy pool in minutes. At the end of each interval, output (external IPv6) addresses of all proxies are changed and proxy server is restarted, which breaks existing connections for a few seconds. From 0 to 59, default value - 0 (rotating disabled)
  • --allowed-hosts - list of allowed hosts, to which user can connect via proxy (comma-separated, without spaces, for example - "google.com,*.google.com,fb.com"). All other hosts will be denied, if this parameter is provided
  • --denied-hosts - list of denied hosts (comma-separated, without spaces, for example - "google.com,*.google.com,fb.com"). All others hosts will be allowed, if this parameter is provided
  • -l or --localhost - bool parameter without value, if used, all backconnect proxy will be available only on localhost (127.0.0.1:30000 instead of 180.113.14.28:30000)
  • -d or --disable-inet6-ifaces-check - disable /etc/network/interfaces configuration check & exit when error. Use only if configuration handled by cloud-init or something like this (for example, on Vultr servers), rarely used parameter, check your VPS documentation
  • -b or --backconnect-ip - server IPv4 backconnect address for proxies, use ONLY if script cannot parse IP correctly and your server has non-standard IP configuration
  • -f or --backconnect-proxies-file - path to file, in which backconnect proxies list will be written when proxies start working (default ~/proxyserver/backconnect_proxies.list). You can just copy all proxies from this file and use them in your soft as list of IPv6 proxies.
  • -m or --ipv6-mask - first blocks on server subnet, unchanged part, use ONLY if script cannot parse ipv6 mask automatically. For example, if the external ipv6 address on server is 2a03:6f01:5::1da6 and you want to use entire /64 subnet, script cannot parse ipv6 gateway because of address zero-field replacement with ::. Real mask for /64 subnet is first four blocks - 2a03:6f01:5:0
  • -i or --interface - ethernet interface name, to which IPv6 subnet is allocated and where all proxies will be raised. Automatically parsed from system info by default, use ONLY if you have non-standard/additional interfaces on your server.
  • --uninstall - uninstall proxy server, you don't need to provide any other parameters with it.
  • --info - get info about running proxy server (proxy count, rotating, auth, etc.)

Quick errors FAQ:

  • If you got an error like /etc/network/interfaces has no inet6 (IPv6) configuration and you are really sure that you set up network configuration remotely or you're using Netplan, just add -d argument without value to script startup command.
  • If your proxies simply don't work, do these few steps and write an issue only if none of this worked:
    • Run ./ipv6-proxy-server.sh --info
    • Check that backconnect addresses parsed correctly (the file name on your server in first step).
    • Check that outgoing addresses generated correctly (the file name on your server in first step).
    • Check connection from proxy server: select one of outgoing IPv6 addresses from previous step and run command curl --interface <ipv6-address> <website>. If it works correctly, but proxy doesn't work - write an issue right now.
    • Check if the site you want to access has an AAAA record in DNS. If no, you cannot reach this site via any IPv6 proxies.
    • Verify that your VPS provider allocated a full IPv6 subnet to the server (DigitalOcean and many other providers don't do this).

License

MIT

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