t3rse
t3rse

Reputation: 10124

Setting JVM/JRE to use Windows Proxy Automatically

I did see the question about setting the proxy for the JVM but what I want to ask is how one can utilize the proxy that is already configured (on Windows).

Here is a demonstration of my issue:

  1. Go to your Control Panel->Java and set a proxy address.
  2. Run the following simple applet code (I'm using the Eclipse IDE):
import java.awt.Graphics;
import javax.swing.JApplet;
import java.util.*;

public class Stacklet extends JApplet {
    private String message;
    public void init(){
        Properties props = System.getProperties();
        message = props.getProperty("http.proxyHost", "NONE");      
        message = (message.length() == 0)? "NONE": message;
    }

    public void paint(Graphics g)
    {
        g.drawString(message, 20, 20);
    }
}

The Applet displays "NONE" without regard to the settings you've placed in the Java Control Panel. What would be best would be if the Windows proxy settings (usually set in Internet Explorer) were what I could determine but doing an extra configuration step in the Java Control Panel would still be an acceptable solution.

Thanks!

Upvotes: 40

Views: 81632

Answers (6)

Juan Martin Lichowski
Juan Martin Lichowski

Reputation: 361

This might be a little late, but I ran into the same problem. The way I fixed it is by adding the following system property:

-Djava.net.useSystemProxies=true

Now, note that this property is set only once at startup, so it can't change when you run your application. From https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/net/doc-files/net-properties.html#Proxies:

java.net.useSystemProxies (default: false) ... Note that this property is checked only once at startup.

Upvotes: 25

Mahdi
Mahdi

Reputation: 65

try{
    System.setProperty("java.net.useSystemProxies", "true");
    String prx = ProxySelector.getDefault().select(new URI("http://www.google.com")).get(0).address().toString();
    JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, prx);
} catch(Exception e){
    JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, "no proxy");
}

Upvotes: 2

Alain O'Dea
Alain O'Dea

Reputation: 21686

UPDATE: you need to have the System Property java.net.useSystemProxies set to true for my solution below to work.

If you use java.net.URL.openStream() to get an InputStream for the web resource content you automatically get the same proxy used as Internet Explorer would use for that URL.

No need to go to the Java Control Panel or to display the proxy used.

Upvotes: 2

t3rse
t3rse

Reputation: 10124

It is possible to detect the proxy using the ProxySelector class and assign the system proxy by assigning environment variables with the setProperty method of the System class:

System.setProperty("java.net.useSystemProxies", "true");
System.out.println("detecting proxies");
List l = null;
try {
    l = ProxySelector.getDefault().select(new URI("http://foo/bar"));
} 
catch (URISyntaxException e) {
    e.printStackTrace();
}
if (l != null) {
    for (Iterator iter = l.iterator(); iter.hasNext();) {
        java.net.Proxy proxy = (java.net.Proxy) iter.next();
        System.out.println("proxy type: " + proxy.type());

        InetSocketAddress addr = (InetSocketAddress) proxy.address();

        if (addr == null) {
            System.out.println("No Proxy");
        } else {
            System.out.println("proxy hostname: " + addr.getHostName());
            System.setProperty("http.proxyHost", addr.getHostName());
            System.out.println("proxy port: " + addr.getPort());
            System.setProperty("http.proxyPort", Integer.toString(addr.getPort()));
        }
    }
}

Upvotes: 39

Hrvoje
Hrvoje

Reputation: 119

java.net.URL.openStream() is a shorthand for java.net.URL.openConnection().getInputStream().

Upvotes: 3

Flo
Flo

Reputation: 133

I found an odd behavior experimenting with the suggested code here.

It appears that, after a default ProxySelector has been set, regular socket code (e.g. creating a new Socket) does not work anymore, because it tries to use a socks server (not sure why it would do this, but for me it does).

So if you, when calling

Socket socket = new Socket(host, port);

you receive such a SocketException:

java.net.SocketException: Malformed reply from SOCKS server
    at java.net.SocksSocketImpl.readSocksReply(Unknown Source)
    at java.net.SocksSocketImpl.connect(Unknown Source)
    at java.net.Socket.connect(Unknown Source)
    at java.net.Socket.connect(Unknown Source)
    at java.net.Socket.<init>(Unknown Source)
    at java.net.Socket.<init>(Unknown Source)

then try setting the default ProxySelector back to null:

ProxySelector.setDefault(null);

For me this resulted in the following small Java class which I now use to simply retrieve the systems proxy settings without having it affect the further usage of Sockets() of the application, yet configuring the system properly to use the proxy:

public class ProxyConfig {

  private static String host;
  private static int port;

  public static void init() {
    System.setProperty("java.net.useSystemProxies", "true");
    Proxy proxy = getProxy();
    if (proxy != null) {
      InetSocketAddress addr = (InetSocketAddress) proxy.address();
      host = addr.getHostName();
      port = addr.getPort();

      System.setProperty("java.net.useSystemProxies", "false");
      System.setProperty("http.proxyHost", host);
      System.setProperty("http.proxyPort", ""+port);

    }
    System.setProperty("java.net.useSystemProxies", "false");
  }

  public static String getHost() {
    return host;
  }

  public static int getPort() {
    return port;
  }

  private static Proxy getProxy() {
    List<Proxy> l = null;
    try {
      ProxySelector def = ProxySelector.getDefault();

      l = def.select(new URI("http://foo/bar"));
      ProxySelector.setDefault(null);
    } catch (Exception e) {
      e.printStackTrace();
    }
    if (l != null) {
      for (Iterator<Proxy> iter = l.iterator(); iter.hasNext();) {
        java.net.Proxy proxy = iter.next();
        return proxy;
      }
    }
    return null;
  }
}

Upvotes: 11

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