Manage system-wide proxy settings
npm install os-proxy --save
Get it into your program.
const osProxy = require('os-proxy');
Set the system proxy.
Tip: This is a url.format()
compatible object.
osProxy.set({
// Proxy configuration.
hostname : 'example.com'.
port : 1234
})
.then(() => {
console.log('Proxy onfiguration has finished saving.');
});
At any time, you may retrieve the current proxy configuration.
osProxy.get({
device : 'Wi-Fi'
})
.then((config) => {
console.log('Proxy config:', config);
})
Because proxies can also be set through system menus, osProxy
has been made aware of the platform-specific configuration store and knows how to monitor its changes at the file system level. All of that is abstracted away into opt-in signals.
// Register a listener for config store changes.
osProxy.changed.always((event) => {
console.log(
'Someone changed the proxy settings at:', event.path,
'That is where', process.platform, 'keeps them.'
);
});
// Begin monitoring the config store.
osProxy.watch();
It is just as easy to stop monitoring the config store.
osProxy.unwatch();
Returns a promise for the current system configuration.
Type: object
Type: string
Default: Wi-Fi
The device whose proxy configuration should be returned.
Returns a promise for modifying the system configuration.
Type: object
Type: string
The hostname of the proxy to use.
Type: number
The port number of the proxy to use.
Type: string
Default: Wi-Fi
The device that should use the proxy.
Type: boolean
Default: true
Whether the proxy should be enabled or disabled after the configuration is saved.
Returns a promise for turning on proxy mode.
Returns a promise for turning off proxy mode.
Returns a promise for reversing the on/off state of proxy mode.
Returns a promise for erasing the configuration data and disabling proxy mode.
Type: Signal
An event emitter with methods like .always()
and .never()
for adding and removing listeners that are called when changes to the system configuration are detected, either via this library or by other means. You must call watch()
in order to begin receiving events.
Start monitoring for changes to the system configuration. Events will be emitted as a changed
signal.
Similar to chokidar.watch()
, except path
defaults to the operating system's proxy configuration file.
Stop monitoring for changes to the system configuration. Events will no longer be emitted.
Similar to chokidar.unwatch()
, except path
defaults to the operating system's proxy configuration file.
See os-proxy-cli to use this on the command line.
See our contributing guidelines for more details.
git checkout -b my-new-feature
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
git push origin my-new-feature
Go make something, dang it.