The “TLS Protocols” tab allows you to specify which TLS protocols you want Burp to support. The “Certificate” tab is used to configure which certificate is presented. If a specific certificate is required, you can import it with the “custom certificate” option. Specifying a “specific hostname” is only useful when performing invisible proxying to a single domain. “Self-signed” certificates will always generate certificate error messages. “Generate CA-signed per-host certificates” is the default setting and should generally be used. The “Certificate” tab allows you to configure how the HTTPS certificate works. The “Request handling” tab allows burp to work with other proxies. “Invisible proxying” enables support for devices that don’t support traditional proxy settings. This option can break some websites if they don’t support HTTPS. “Force TLS” automatically upgrades all web requests to use HTTPS. This option is used to forward traffic through another proxy. The “Request handling” tab allows you to configure a host and port number to where all requests will be redirected to the specified location regardless of what resource they requested. Other proxies, custom certificates, and TLS protocols The “Binding” tab allows you to set the IP address and port number used by the proxy. Please note that you need permission from the owner of the device to legally be able to do this and any users should be aware that you’re monitoring their network usage and will be able to see their passwords etc.
Remember that you’ll have to install the Burp certificate on those devices to monitor their HTTPS traffic. Tip: Using IP addresses other than the loopback can allow you to configure other devices to proxy their traffic through your Burp instance. Selecting “All interfaces” will make the proxy visible on all of the IP addresses your computer has. Alternatively, you can bind it to another IP address your computer has via the drop-down box, although it won’t explain what physical interface this relates to and whether other devices will be able to access it. You should use a port number should be between 105 as port numbers below 1000 can require extra permissions.īinding to the loopback address means that the proxy is only available to the local computer.
When editing the proxy listener, the “Binding” tab allows you to configure which port number and which interface it binds to in the binding tab.
Select a listener then click edit or add a new one. Tip: To be operational the proxy listener must have the “running” checkbox on the left ticked. In the “Proxy Listeners” section you can edit the current proxy listener, by selecting a listener and clicking “Edit”, or set up a second one by clicking “Add”. To configure the proxy settings, you want to go to the “Options” sub-tab in the “Proxy” tab.
For address and port, simply remove what you previously typed so that those fields are empty.How to configure a proxy listener in Burp When you want to turn off the proxy, repeat steps 1-5 again.To confirm it’s working, visit and ensure it says a different location and IP address than you expect. You can also view your account details here.
That’s it! When prompted by Vivaldi to enter a username/password, enter the username and password provided to you at checkout. Check “Use the same proxy server for all protocols”, then click “OK”Ĩ. Enter the Server/IP address and Port number that was displayed at checkout and in your welcome email. Click on the Network Section in the left column and then click the ‘Proxy Settings’ button.Ħ. Click the Vivaldi Menu icon shown belowģ.