How do you configure proxy settings in the Ubuntu Server or Minimal (CLI) versions using the terminal?
3 Answers
System-wide proxies in CLI Ubuntu/Server must be set as environment variables.
- Open the
/etc/environmentfile withvi(or your favorite editor). This file stores the system-wide variables initialized upon boot. Add the following lines, modifying appropriately. You must duplicate in both upper-case and lower-case because (unfortunately) some programs only look for one or the other:
http_proxy="" https_proxy="" ftp_proxy="" no_proxy="localhost,127.0.0.1,localaddress,.localdomain.com" HTTP_PROXY="" HTTPS_PROXY="" FTP_PROXY="" NO_PROXY="localhost,127.0.0.1,localaddress,.localdomain.com"
apt-get,aptitude, etc. will not obey the environment variables when used normally withsudo. So separately configure them; create a file called95proxiesin/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/, and include the following:Acquire::http::proxy ""; Acquire::ftp::proxy "ftp://myproxy.server.com:8080/"; Acquire::https::proxy "";
Finally, logout and reboot to make sure the changes take effect.
Sources: 1, 2. See 1 in particular for additional help, including a script to quickly turn on/off the proxies.
11If you have an authenticating proxy, then the URLs will be different. Instead of:
""You'll have:
""Note that these are still URLs, so passwords (and possibly usernames) will have to be URL encoded.
For example, a username of muru and a password of )qv3TB3LBm7EkP} would look like:
"):8080/"This can be done in various ways:
- There several websites for encoding:
- etc.
- Programmatic:
In a pinch, you can use man url to see which characters need to be encoded:
An escaped octet is encoded as a character triplet,
consisting of the percent character "%" followed by
the two hexadecimal digits representing the octet code...And the octet codes are available on man ascii.
Proxy Environment Variables:http_proxy: Proxy server for HTTP Traffic
https_proxy: Proxy server for HTTPS traffic
ftp_proxy: Proxy server for FTP traffic
no_proxy: Patterns for IP addresses or domain names that shouldn’t use the proxy
The value for every proxy setting, except for no_proxy, uses the same template. proxy_http=username:password@proxy-host:port
Temporary setting proxy:export HTTP_PROXY=user::8080
Persistent Proxy Settings:
use vim ~/.bash_profile to open bash setup file, then put following lines inside it
export http_proxy=username::8080
export https_proxy=username::8081
export no_proxy=localhost, 127.0.0.1, *.my.lanuse source ~/.bash_profile to apply the changes