You might be curious about how proxy servers work and how they serve data over the internet. In this blog, I am going to implement a proxy server using core NodeJs.I achieved this using a core NodeJs package called net which already comes with NodeJs.
a proxy server is an agent between the client and the server. When a
client sends a request to a server it is forwarded to a target proxy
server. The targeted proxy server processes the request and sends it
to the main server and the main server sends the back request to the
proxy server and the proxy server sends the request to the client.
Before, starting programming you know little about socket and NodeJs.You know what a is socket and how they work.
In NodeJs There are two methods to implement a proxy server. First I custom method and second in-build. Both are easy to understand.
To test your proxy server you can run your local HTTP serve on your local machine and then target the host machine.
const net = require('net'); // Define the target host and port const targetHost = 'localhost'; // Specify the hostname of the target server. For Ex: (12.568.45.25) const targetPort = 80; // Specify the port of the target server
const server = net.createServer((clientSocket) => { }); // Start listening for incoming connections on the specified port const proxyPort = 3000; // Specify the port for the proxy server server.listen(proxyPort, () => { console.log(`Reverse proxy server is listening on port ${proxyPort}`); });
In server function callback we have one parameter clientSocket it's the user connection that we received for the connection.
accept and receive data from the user
const targetHost = 'localhost'; // Specify the hostname of the target server. For Ex: (12.568.45.25) const targetPort = 80; // Specify the port of the target server // Create a TCP server const server = net.createServer((clientSocket) => { // Establish a connection to the target host net.createConnection({host: targetHost, port: targetPort}, () => { // When data is received from the client, write it to the target server clientSocket.on("data", (data) => { targetSocket.write(data); }); // When data is received from the target server, write it back to the client targetSocket.on("data", (data) => { clientSocket.write(data); }); }); });
clientSocket.on("data", (data) => { targetSocket.write(data); });
targetSocket.on("data", (data) => { clientSocket.write(data); });
While exploring the functionality of the proxy server is exciting, ensuring reliability requires robust error-handling methods to handle unexpected issues gracefully. To handle those types of errors we have an event called an error. It's very easy to implement.
const server = net.createServer((clientSocket) => { // Establish a connection to the target host const targetSocket = net.createConnection({host: targetHost,port: targetPort}, () => { // Handle errors when connecting to the target server targetSocket.on('error', (err) => { console.error('Error connecting to target:', err); clientSocket.end(); // close connection }); // Handle errors related to the client socket clientSocket.on('error', (err) => { console.error('Client socket error:', err); targetSocket.end(); // close connection }); }); });
const net = require('net'); // Define the target host and port const targetHost = 'localhost'; // Specify the hostname of the target server const targetPort = 80; // Specify the port of the target server // Create a TCP server const server = net.createServer((clientSocket) => { // Establish a connection to the target host const targetSocket = net.createConnection({ host: targetHost, port: targetPort }, () => { // When data is received from the target server, write it back to the client targetSocket.on("data", (data) => { clientSocket.write(data); }); // When data is received from the client, write it to the target server clientSocket.on("data", (data) => { targetSocket.write(data); }); }); // Handle errors when connecting to the target server targetSocket.on('error', (err) => { console.error('Error connecting to target:', err); clientSocket.end(); }); // Handle errors related to the client socket clientSocket.on('error', (err) => { console.error('Client socket error:', err); targetSocket.end(); }); }); // Start listening for incoming connections on the specified port const proxyPort = 3000; // Specify the port for the proxy server server.listen(proxyPort, () => { console.log(`Reverse proxy server is listening on port ${proxyPort}`); });
To reduce client and server connection complexity we have built-in method pipe.I will replace this syntax
// Handle errors when connecting to the target server targetSocket.on("data", (data) => { clientSocket.write(data); }); // When data is received from the client, write it to the target server clientSocket.on("data", (data) => { targetSocket.write(data); });
Into this syntax
// Pipe data from the client to the target clientSocket.pipe(targetSocket); // When data is received from the client, write it to the target server targetSocket.pipe(clientSocket);
const net = require('net'); // Define the target host and port const targetHost = 'localhost'; const targetPort = 80; // Create a TCP server const server = net.createServer((clientSocket) => { // Establish a connection to the target host const targetSocket = net.createConnection({ host: targetHost, port: targetPort }, () => { // Pipe data from the client to the target clientSocket.pipe(targetSocket); // Pipe data from the target to the client targetSocket.pipe(clientSocket); }); // Handle errors targetSocket.on('error', (err) => { console.error('Error connecting to target:', err); clientSocket.end(); }); clientSocket.on('error', (err) => { console.error('Client socket error:', err); targetSocket.end(); }); }); // Start listening for incoming connections const proxyPort = 3000; server.listen(proxyPort, () => { console.log(`Reverse proxy server is listening on port ${proxyPort}`); });
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