Reputation: 3037
How do I configure sbt to use a proxy?
For example, my build definition needs to connect to GitHub, specifying connection parameters for http.proxy
, http.proxyPort
, user
, and password
.
How would I pass in these settings to sbt?
Is there an easy way to switch between proxy/no-proxy settings for when I work from home?
Upvotes: 90
Views: 113449
Reputation: 69
Try providing the proxy details as parameters
sbt compile -Dhttps.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttps.proxyPort=port -Dhttp.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=port
If that is not working then try with JAVA_OPTS (non windows)
export JAVA_OPTS = "-Dhttps.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttps.proxyPort=port -Dhttp.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=port"
sbt compile
or (windows)
set JAVA_OPTS = "-Dhttps.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttps.proxyPort=port -Dhttp.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=port"
sbt compile
if nothing works then set SBT_OPTS
(non windows)
export SBT_OPTS = "-Dhttps.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttps.proxyPort=port -Dhttp.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=port"'
sbt compile
or (windows)
set SBT_OPTS = "-Dhttps.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttps.proxyPort=port -Dhttp.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=port"
sbt compile
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 72
For those still landing on this thread trying to find where/how to configure HTTP proxy in IntelliJ, here's how I managed to get it to work for me. I hope this helps!
(Note: specify your network username and password in the corresponding boxes):-
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 11
If you are using a Proxy which requires authentication, I have a solution for you :)
As @Faiz explained above, SBT has a very hard time handling proxy requiring authentication. The solution is to bypass this authentication, if you cannot turn off your proxy on demand (corporate proxy for example). To do so, I suggest you use a squid proxy, and configure it with your username and password to access your corporate proxy. See : https://doc.ubuntu-fr.org/squid Then, you can set JAVA_OPTS or SBT_OPTS environment variables so that SBT connects to your own local squid proxy instead of your corporate proxy :
export JAVA_OPTS = "-Dhttps.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttps.proxyPort=3128 -Dhttp.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=3128"
(just c/c this in your bashrc without modifying anything and it should work fine).
The trick is that Squid Proxy does not require any authentication, and acts as an intermediate between SBT and your other proxy.
If you have troubles in applying this advise, please let me know.
Regards,
Edgar
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1541
I found that starting IntelliJ IDEA from terminal let me connect and download over the internet. To start from terminal, type in:
$ idea
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 186
In windows environment simply add following line in the sbt/sbtconfig.txt
-Dhttp.proxyHost=PROXYHOST
-Dhttp.proxyPort=PROXYPORT
-Dhttp.proxyUser=USERNAME
-Dhttp.proxyPassword=XXXX
or the Https equivalent (thanks to comments)
-Dhttps.proxyHost=PROXYHOST
-Dhttps.proxyPort=PROXYPORT
-Dhttps.proxyUser=USERNAME
-Dhttps.proxyPassword=XXXX
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 21
SBT use both HTTP/HTTPS/SFTP/SSH and other kind of connections to a repository. so when behind a proxy, these protocols should be available.
In most simple cases on Windows, you just need to pass proxy parameters options to JVM, like:
java -Dhttp.proxyHost=myproxy -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080
That will do.
But if not, there are few things you should be aware of:
to solve first, you should pass https proxy parameter to jvm, like:
java -Dhttps.proxyHost=myproxy -Dhttps.proxyPort=8080 -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStore=${TRUST_STORE_PATH}
to solve the second, you should import the ca. there are a lot of tips.
to solve the third, you maybe could considering using a authentication proxy.
to Simplify the config of SBT, it provide sbtconfig.txt and sbtops in the conf directory, look into it.
Reference:
http://www.scala-sbt.org/0.13/docs/Setup-Notes.html
http://www.scala-sbt.org/1.0/docs/Publishing.html
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 16265
sbt
respects the usual environment variables for http proxy settings:
export JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dhttp.proxyHost=yourserver -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080 -Dhttp.proxyUser=username -Dhttp.proxyPassword=password"
(That's of course, assuming Unix (Linux/OSX etc). On windows you could just set the same environment variable (%JAVA_OPTS%
) as usual in the Windows way.)
Then run sbt
as usual:
sbt
Switching between proxy/no-proxy should be a matter of setting up a little script that you can 'slurp' in whenever you need it.
yourserver
valueyourserver
valuehttps.proxyHost
and https.proxyPort
since a lot of stuff works over httpsshred
or srm
the entire file). If you are on Windows, don't worry about it, your security is already messed up you can't do any more harm.Upvotes: 142
Reputation: 20792
I found an item on the FAQ section of Lightbend Activator useful. I am using Activator, which in turn uses SBT, so not sure if this helps users with just SBT, but if you use Activator, like me, and are behind a proxy, follow the instructions in the "Behind A Proxy" section of the FAQ:
https://www.lightbend.com/activator/docs
Just in case the content disappears, here's a copy-paste:
When running activator behind a proxy, some additional configuration is needed. First, open the activator configuration file, found in your user home directory under ~/.activator/activatorconfig.txt. Note that this file may not exist. Add the following lines (one option per line):
-Dhttp.proxyHost=PUT YOUR PROXY HOST HERE
-Dhttp.proxyPort=PUT YOUR PROXY PORT HERE
-Dhttp.nonProxyHosts="localhost|127.0.0.1"
-Dhttps.proxyHost=PUT YOUR HTTPS PROXY HOST HERE
-Dhttps.proxyPort=PUT YOUR HTTPS PROXY PORT HERE
-Dhttps.nonProxyHosts="localhost|127.0.0.1"
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 123
Using
sbt -Dhttp.proxyHost=yourServer-Dhttps.proxyHost=yourServer -Dhttp.proxyPort=yourPort -Dhttps.proxyPort=yourPort
works in Ubuntu 15.10 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux.
Replace yourServer by the proper address without the http:// nor https:// prefixes in Dhttp and Dhttps, respectively. Remember to avoid the quotation marks. No usr/pass included in the code-line, to include that just add -Dhttp.proxyUser=usr -Dhttp.proxyPassword=pass with the same typing criteria. Thanks @Jacek Laskowski!. Cheers
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 2656
On Mac OS X / El Capitan you can set java environment variables:
$launchctl setenv _JAVA_OPTIONS "-Dhttp.proxyHost=192.168.1.54 -Dhttp.proxyPort=9999"
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 574
To provide one answer that will work for all Windows-users:
Add the following to your sbtconfig.txt (C:\Program Files (x86)\sbt\conf)
-Dhttp.proxyHost=XXXXXXX -Dhttp.proxyPort=YYYY -Dhttp.proxySet=true -Dhttps.proxyHost=XXXXXXX -Dhttps.proxyPort=YYYY -Dhttps.proxySet=true
Replace both XXXXXXX with your proxyHost, and both YYYY with your proxyPort.
If you get the error "Could not find or load main class" you need to set your JAVA_HOME:
set JAVA_HOME=C:\Progra~1\Java\jdkxxxxxx
When on 64-bit windows, use:
Progra~1 = 'Program Files'
Progra~2 = 'Program Files(x86)'
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 41
Add both http and https configuration:
export JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dhttp.proxyHost=yourserver -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080 -Dhttp.proxyUser=username -Dhttp.proxyPassword=password"
export JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dhttps.proxyHost=yourserver -Dhttps.proxyPort=8080 -Dhttps.proxyUser=username -Dhttps.proxyPassword=password"
(https config is must, since many urls referred by the sbt libraries are https)
In fact, I even had an extra setting 'http.proxySet'
to 'true'
in both configuration entries.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 74709
sbt
works in a fairly standard way comparing to the way other JVM-based projects are usually configured.
sbt is in fact two "subsystems" - the launcher and the core. It's usually xsbt.boot.Boot
that gets executed before the core starts up with the features we all know (and some even like).
It's therefore a matter of how you execute sbt that says how you could set up a proxy for HTTP, HTTPS and FTP network traffic.
The following is the entire list of the available properties that can be set for any Java application, sbt including, that instruct the Java API to route communication through a proxy:
Replace http
above with https
and ftp
to get the list of the properties for the services.
Some sbt
scripts use JAVA_OPTS
to set up the proxy settings with -Dhttp.proxyHost
and -Dhttp.proxyPort
amongst the others (listed above). See Java Networking and Proxies.
Some scripts come with their own way of setting up proxy configuration using the SBT_OPTS
property, .sbtopts
or (only on Windows) %SBT_HOME%\conf\sbtconfig.txt
. You can use them to specifically set sbt to use proxies while the other JVM-based applications are not affected at all.
From the sbt
command line tool:
# jvm options and output control
JAVA_OPTS environment variable, if unset uses "$java_opts"
SBT_OPTS environment variable, if unset uses "$default_sbt_opts"
.sbtopts if this file exists in the current directory, it is
prepended to the runner args
/etc/sbt/sbtopts if this file exists, it is prepended to the runner args
-Dkey=val pass -Dkey=val directly to the java runtime
-J-X pass option -X directly to the java runtime
(-J is stripped)
-S-X add -X to sbt's scalacOptions (-S is stripped)
And here comes an excerpt from sbt.bat
:
@REM Envioronment:
@REM JAVA_HOME - location of a JDK home dir (mandatory)
@REM SBT_OPTS - JVM options (optional)
@REM Configuration:
@REM sbtconfig.txt found in the SBT_HOME.
Be careful with sbtconfig.txt
that just works on Windows only. When you use cygwin
the file is not consulted and you will have to resort to using the other approaches.
I'm using sbt with the following script:
$JAVA_HOME/bin/java $SBT_OPTS -jar /Users/jacek/.ivy2/local/org.scala-sbt/sbt-launch/$SBT_LAUNCHER_VERSION-SNAPSHOT/jars/sbt-launch.jar "$@"
The point of the script is to use the latest version of sbt built from the sources (that's why I'm using /Users/jacek/.ivy2/local/org.scala-sbt/sbt-launch/$SBT_LAUNCHER_VERSION-SNAPSHOT/jars/sbt-launch.jar
) with $SBT_OPTS
property as a means of passing JVM properties to the JVM sbt uses.
The script above lets me to set proxy on command line on MacOS X as follows:
SBT_OPTS="-Dhttp.proxyHost=proxyhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=9999" sbt
As you can see, there are many approaches to set proxy for sbt that all pretty much boil down to set a proxy for the JVM sbt uses.
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 1121
For Windows users, enter the following command :
set JAVA_OPTS=-Dhttp.proxySet=true -Dhttp.proxyHost=[Your Proxy server] -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 53866
I used (this is a unix environment) :
export SBT_OPTS="$SBT_OPTS -Dhttp.proxyHost=myproxy-Dhttp.proxyPort=myport"
This did not work for my setup :
export JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Dhttp.proxyHost=myproxy-Dhttp.proxyPort=myport"
In sbt.sh file :
JAVA_OPTS environment variable, if unset uses "$java_opts"
SBT_OPTS environment variable, if unset uses "$default_sbt_opts"
But apparently SBT_OPTS is used instead of JAVA_OPTS
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 31
When I added the proxy info to the %JAVA_OPTS%, I got an error "-Dhttp.proxyHost=yourserver was unexpected at this time". I put the proxy info in %SBT_OPTS% and it worked.
Upvotes: 3