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Smokescreen is a HTTP CONNECT proxy. It proxies most traffic from Stripe to the external world (e.g., webhooks).

Smokescreen restricts which URLs it connects to:

  • It uses a pre-configured hostname ACL to only allow requests addressed to certain allow-listed hostnames, to ensure that no malicious code is attempting to make requests to unexpected services.
  • It also resolves each domain name that is requested, and ensures that it is a publicly routable IP address and not an internal IP address. This prevents a class of attacks where, for instance, our own webhooks infrastructure is used to scan Stripe’s internal network. Smokescreen can also be further configured to allow or deny specific IP addresses or ranges.

Smokescreen also allows us to centralize egress from Stripe, allowing us to give financial partners stable egress IP addresses and abstracting away the details of which Stripe service is making the request.

In typical usage, clients contact Smokescreen over mTLS. Upon receiving a connection, Smokescreen authenticates the client's certificate against a configurable set of CAs and CRLs, extracts the client's identity, and checks the client's requested CONNECT destination against a configurable per-client ACL.

By default, Smokescreen will identify clients by the "common name" in the TLS certificate they present, if any. The client identification function can also be easily replaced; more on this in the usage section.

Dependencies

Smokescreen uses go modules to manage dependencies. The linked page contains documentation, but some useful commands are reproduced below:

  • Adding a dependency: go build go test go mod tidy will automatically fetch the latest version of any new dependencies. Running go mod vendor will vendor the dependency.
  • Updating a dependency: go get [email protected] or go get dep@commit-hash will bring in specific versions of a dependency. The updated dependency should be vendored using go mod vendor.

Smokescreen uses a custom fork of goproxy to allow us to support context passing and setting granular timeouts on proxy connections.

Generally, Smokescreen will only support the two most recent Go versions. See the test configuration for details.

Usage

CLI

Here are the options you can give Smokescreen:

   --help                                      Show this help text.
   --config-file FILE                          Load configuration from FILE.  Command line options override values in the file.
   --listen-ip IP                              Listen on interface with address IP.
                                                 This argument is ignored when running under Einhorn. (default: any)
   --listen-port PORT                          Listen on port PORT.
                                                 This argument is ignored when running under Einhorn. (default: 4750)
   --timeout DURATION                          Time out after DURATION when connecting. (default: 10s)
   --proxy-protocol                            Enable PROXY protocol support.
   --deny-range RANGE                          Add RANGE(in CIDR notation) to list of blocked IP ranges.  Repeatable.
   --allow-range RANGE                         Add RANGE (in CIDR notation) to list of allowed IP ranges.  Repeatable.
   --deny-address value                        Add IP[:PORT] to list of blocked IPs.  Repeatable.
   --allow-address value                       Add IP[:PORT] to list of allowed IPs.  Repeatable.
   --egress-acl-file FILE                      Validate egress traffic against FILE
   --expose-prometheus-metrics                 Exposes metrics via a Prometheus scrapable endpoint.
   --prometheus-endpoint ENDPOINT              Specify endpoint to host Prometheus metrics on. (default: "/metrics")
                                                 Requires `--expose-prometheus-metrics` to be set.
   --prometheus-port PORT                      Specify port to host Prometheus metrics on. (default "9810")
                                                 Requires `--expose-prometheus-metrics` to be set.
   --resolver-address ADDRESS                  Make DNS requests to ADDRESS (IP:port).  Repeatable.
   --statsd-address ADDRESS                    Send metrics to statsd at ADDRESS (IP:port). (default: "127.0.0.1:8200")
   --tls-server-bundle-file FILE               Authenticate to clients using key and certs from FILE
   --tls-client-ca-file FILE                   Validate client certificates using Certificate Authority from FILE
   --tls-crl-file FILE                         Verify validity of client certificates against Certificate Revocation List from FILE
   --additional-error-message-on-deny MESSAGE  Display MESSAGE in the HTTP response if proxying request is denied
   --disable-acl-policy-action POLICY ACTION   Disable usage of a POLICY ACTION such as "open" in the egress ACL
   --stats-socket-dir DIR                      Enable connection tracking. Will expose one UDS in DIR going by the name of "track-{pid}.sock".
                                                 This should be an absolute path with all symlinks, if any, resolved.
   --stats-socket-file-mode FILE_MODE          Set the filemode to FILE_MODE on the statistics socket (default: "700")
   --version, -v                               print the version

Client Identification

In order to override how Smokescreen identifies its clients, you must:

  • Create a new go project
  • Import Smokescreen
  • Create a Smokescreen configuration using cmd.NewConfiguration
  • Replace smokescreen.Config.RoleFromRequest with your own func(request *http.Request) (string, error)
  • Call smokescreen.StartWithConfig
  • Build your new project and use the resulting executable through its CLI

Here is a fictional example that would split a client certificate's OrganizationalUnit on commas and use the first particle as the service name.

package main

import (...)

func main() {
	// Here is an opportunity to pass your logger
	conf, err := cmd.NewConfiguration(nil, nil)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	if conf == nil {
		os.Exit(1)
	}

	conf.RoleFromRequest = func(request *http.Request) (string, error) {
		fail := func(err error) (string, error) { return "", err }

		subject := request.TLS.PeerCertificates[0].Subject
		if len(subject.OrganizationalUnit) == 0 {
			fail(fmt.Errorf("warn: Provided cert has no 'OrganizationalUnit'. Can't extract service role."))
		}
		return strings.SplitN(subject.OrganizationalUnit[0], ".", 2)[0], nil
	}

	smokescreen.StartWithConfig(conf, nil)
}

IP Filtering

To control the routing of requests to specific IP addresses or IP blocks, use the deny-address, allow-address, deny-range, and allow-range options in the config.

Hostname ACLs

A hostname ACL can be described in a YAML formatted file. The ACL, at its top-level, contains a list of services as well as a default behavior.

Three policies are supported:

Policy Behavior
Open Allows all traffic for this service
Report Allows all traffic for this service and warns if client accesses a remote host which is not in the list
Enforce Only allows traffic to remote hosts provided in the list. Will warn and deny if remote host is not in the list

⚠️ The ACL is only applied to hostnames as they appear in the request! If you want to allow or deny traffic based on the destination IP address after DNS resolution, you should be using the config options instead (see the IP Filtering section above).

A host can be specified with or without a globbing prefix. The host (without the globbing prefix) must be in Punycode to prevent ambiguity.

host valid
example.com yes
*.example.com yes
api.*.example.com no
*example.com no
ex*ample.com no
éxämple.com no
example.* hell no

Here is a sample ACL.

Global Hostname Allow/Deny Lists

Optionally, you may specify a global allow list and a global deny list for hostnames in your ACL config.

These lists override the policy, but do not override the allowed_domains list for each role.

For example, specifying example.com in your global_allow_list will allow traffic for that domain on that role, even if that role is set to enforce and does not specify example.com in its allowed domains.

Similarly, specifying malicious.com in your global_deny_list will deny traffic for that domain on a role, even if that role is set to report or open. However, if the host specifies malicious.com in its allowed_domains, traffic to malicious.com will be allowed on that role, regardless of policy.

⚠️ The global_deny_list will only block specific hostnames, not entire destinations. For example, if malicious.com is in the global_deny_list but the IP address that it resolves to is not, roles with an open policy will still be able to access the destination by using its IP address directly. For this reason, we recommend using allowlists instead of denylists whenever it is possible to do so, and blocking IP addresses via config options, not the ACL (see the IP Filtering section above).

If a domain matches both the global_allow_list and the global_deny_list, the global_deny_list behavior takes priority.

Here is a sample ACL specifying these options.

Development and Testing

See Development.md

Contributors

  • Aditya Mukerjee
  • Andreas Fuchs
  • Andrew Dunham
  • Andrew Metcalf
  • Aniket Joshi
  • Ben Ransford
  • Carl Jackson
  • Craig Shannon
  • Evan Broder
  • Marc-André Tremblay
  • Ryan Koppenhaver
  • Harold Simpson

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A simple HTTP proxy that fogs over naughty URLs

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