107 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
107 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown
# How to use Composer behind a proxy
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Composer, like many other tools, uses environment variables to control the use of a proxy server and
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supports:
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- `http_proxy` - the proxy to use for HTTP requests
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- `https_proxy` - the proxy to use for HTTPS requests
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- `CGI_HTTP_PROXY` - the proxy to use for HTTP requests in a non-CLI context
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- `no_proxy` - domains that do not require a proxy
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These named variables are a convention, rather than an official standard, and their evolution and
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usage across different operating systems and tools is complex. Composer prefers the use of lowercase
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names, but accepts uppercase names where appropriate.
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## Usage
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Composer requires specific environment variables for HTTP and HTTPS requests. For example:
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```
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http_proxy=http://proxy.com:80
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https_proxy=http://proxy.com:80
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```
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Uppercase names can also be used.
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### Non-CLI usage
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Composer does not look for `http_proxy` or `HTTP_PROXY` in a non-CLI context. If you are running it
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this way (i.e. integration into a CMS or similar use case) you must use `CGI_HTTP_PROXY` for HTTP
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requests:
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```
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CGI_HTTP_PROXY=http://proxy.com:80
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https_proxy=http://proxy.com:80
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# cgi_http_proxy can also be used
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```
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> **Note:** CGI_HTTP_PROXY was introduced by Perl in 2001 to prevent request header manipulation and
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was popularized in 2016 when this vulnerability was widely reported: https://httpoxy.org
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## Syntax
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Use `scheme://host:port` as in the examples above. Although a missing scheme defaults to http and a
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missing port defaults to 80/443 for http/https schemes, other tools might require these values.
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The host can be specified as an IP address using dotted quad notation for IPv4, or enclosed in
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square brackets for IPv6.
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### Authorization
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Composer supports Basic authorization, using the `scheme://user:pass@host:port` syntax. Reserved url
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characters in either the user name or password must be percent-encoded. For example:
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```
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user: me@company
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pass: p@ssw$rd
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proxy: http://proxy.com:80
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# percent-encoded authorization
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me%40company:p%40ssw%24rd
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scheme://me%40company:p%40ssw%24rd@proxy.com:80
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```
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> **Note:** The user name and password components must be percent-encoded individually and then
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combined with the colon separator. The user name cannot contain a colon (even if percent-encoded),
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because the proxy will split the components on the first colon it finds.
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## HTTPS proxy servers
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Composer supports HTTPS proxy servers, where HTTPS is the scheme used to connect to the proxy, but
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only from PHP 7.3 with curl version 7.52.0 and above.
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```
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http_proxy=https://proxy.com:443
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https_proxy=https://proxy.com:443
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```
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## Bypassing the proxy for specific domains
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Use the `no_proxy` (or `NO_PROXY`) environment variable to set a comma-separated list of domains
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that the proxy should **not** be used for.
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```
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no_proxy=example.com
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# Bypasses the proxy for example.com and its sub-domains
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no_proxy=www.example.com
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# Bypasses the proxy for www.example.com and its sub-domains, but not for example.com
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```
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A domain can be restricted to a particular port (e.g. `:80`) and can also be specified as an IP
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address or an IP address block in CIDR notation.
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IPv6 addresses do not need to be enclosed in square brackets, like they are for
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http_proxy/https_proxy values, although this format is accepted.
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Setting the value to `*` will bypass the proxy for all requests.
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> **Note:** A leading dot in the domain name has no significance and is removed prior to processing.
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## Deprecated environment variables
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Composer originally provided `HTTP_PROXY_REQUEST_FULLURI` and `HTTPS_PROXY_REQUEST_FULLURI` to help
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mitigate issues with misbehaving proxies. These are no longer required or used.
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