Other Alias
ne_session_proxy, ne_session_socks_proxy, ne_session_system_proxySYNOPSIS
#include <ne_session.h>
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void ne_session_proxy(ne_session *session, const char *hostname, unsigned int port);
- void ne_session_system_proxy(ne_session *session, unsigned int flags);
- void ne_session_socks_proxy(ne_session *session, enum ne_sock_sversion version, const char *hostname, unsigned int port, const char *username, const char *password);
- void ne_set_addrlist(ne_session *session, const ne_inet_addr **addrlist, size_t count);
- void ne_session_system_proxy(ne_session *session, unsigned int flags);
DESCRIPTION
HTTP proxy specification
The ne_session_proxy function configures use of an HTTP proxy server for the session, the location of which is given by the hostname and port paramters. If the proxy requires authentication, ne_set_proxy_auth should be used.
System proxy configuration
The ne_session_system_proxy function configures the session to use any proxy servers specified by the system configuration. Support for this function is platform-specific; if unsupported, the function has no effect.
SOCKS proxy configuration
The ne_session_socks_proxy function configures the session to use a SOCKS proxy. The version indicates which version of the SOCKS protocol should be used. The hostname and port parameters specify the SOCKS proxy location. Note that a server with only an IPv6 address cannot be used with SOCKS v4 or v4A. The interpretation of the other arguments depends on the version specified:
NE_SOCK_SOCKSV4 (version 4)
- The username parameter must be non-NULL; the password parameter is ignored.
NE_SOCK_SOCKSV4A (version 4A)
- The username parameter must be non-NULL; the password parameter is ignored.
NE_SOCK_SOCKSV5 (version 5)
- The username parameter may be NULL; if it is non-NULL, the password parameter must also be non-NULL; otherwise, it is ignored..
Origin server address override
The ne_set_addrlist function forces use of an address and port the a specified list when establishing a TCP connection, ignoring the "real" hostname and port identifying the origin server for the session (as passed to ne_session_create). The origin server's "real" hostname and port will still be used in the Host header in HTTP requests. When a connection is required, the library will iterate through the addrlist list, attempting to connect to the address addrlist[0] through to addrlist[count-1] in turn, until a connection can be established.
RETURN VALUES
None of the functions described here has a return value.
EXAMPLES
Create and destroy a session:
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ne_session *sess; sess = ne_session_create("http", "host.example.com", 80); ne_session_proxy(sess, "proxy.example.com", 3128); /* ... use sess ... */ ne_session_destroy(sess);
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