zapret/docs/windows.eng.md

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tpws

Using WSL (Windows subsystem for Linux) it's possible to run tpws in socks mode under rather new builds of windows 10 and windows server. Its not required to install any linux distributions as suggested in most articles. tpws is static binary. It doesn't need a distribution.

Install WSL : dism.exe /online /enable-feature /featurename:Microsoft-Windows-Subsystem-Linux /all

Copy binaries/x86_64/tpws_wsl.tgz to the target system. Run : wsl --import tpws "%USERPROFILE%\tpws" tpws_wsl.tgz

Run tpws : wsl -d tpws --exec /tpws --uid=1 --no-resolve --socks --bind-addr=127.0.0.1 --port=1080 <fooling_options>

Configure socks as 127.0.0.1:1080 in a browser or another program.

Cleanup : wsl --unregister tpws

Tested in windows 10 build 19041 (20.04).

--oob , --mss and --disorder do not work. RST detection in autohostlist scheme may not work. WSL may glitch with splice. --nosplice may be required.

winws

winws is nfqws version for windows. It's based on windivert. Most functions are working. Large ip filters (ipsets) are not possible. Forwarded traffic and connection sharing are not supported. Administrator rights are required.

Working with packet filter consists of two parts

  1. In-kernel packet selection and passing selected packets to a packet filter in user mode. In *nix it's done by iptables, nftables, pf, ipfw.
  2. User mode packet filter processes packets and does DPI bypass magic.

Windows does not have part 1. No iptables exist. That's why 3rd party packet redirector is used. It's called windivert. It works starting from windows 7. Kernel driver is signed but it may require to disable secure boot or update windows 7.

Task of iptables is done inside winws through windivert filters. Windivert has it's own filter language. winws can automate filter construction using simple ip version and port filter. Raw filters are also supported.

 --wf-iface=<int>[:<int>]                       ; numeric network interface and subinterface indexes
 --wf-l3=ipv4|ipv6                              ; L3 protocol filter. multiple comma separated values allowed.
 --wf-tcp=[~]port1[-port2]                      ; TCP port filter. ~ means negation. multiple comma separated values allowed.
 --wf-udp=[~]port1[-port2]                      ; UDP port filter. ~ means negation. multiple comma separated values allowed.
 --wf-raw=<filter>|@<filename>                  ; raw windivert filter string or filename
 --wf-save=<filename>                           ; save windivert filter string to a file and exit

--wf-l3, --wf-tcp, --wf-udp can take multiple comma separated arguments.

Interface indexes can be discovered using this command : netsh int ip show int

If you can't find index this way use winws --debug to see index there. Subinterface index is almost always 0 and you can omit it.

Multiple winws processes are allowed. However, it's discouraged to intersect their filters.

Cygwin shell does not run binaries if their directory has it's own copy of cygwin1.dll. That's why exists separate standalone version in binaries/win64/zapret-tpws. Cygwin is required for blockcheck.sh support but winws itself can be run standalone without cygwin.

How to get windows 7 and winws compatible cygwin :

curl -O https://www.cygwin.com/setup-x86_64.exe
setup-x86_64.exe --allow-unsupported-windows --no-verify --site http://ctm.crouchingtigerhiddenfruitbat.org/pub/cygwin/circa/64bit/2024/01/30/231215

You must choose to install curl. To compile from sources install gcc-core,make,zlib-devel.

winws requires cygwin1.dll, windivert.dll, windivert64.sys. You can take them from binaries/win64/zapret-winws.

It's possible to build x86 32-bit version but this version is not shipped. You have to build it yourself. 32-bit windivert can be downloaded from it's developer github. Required version is 2.2.2. There's no arm64 signed windivert driver. You can compile it yourself but it will run only with disabled driver signature checks.

blockcheck

blockcheck.sh is written in posix shell and uses some standard posix utilites. Windows does not have them. To execute blockcheck.sh use cygwin command prompt run as administrator. It's not possible to use WSL. It's not the same as cygwin. First run once install_bin.sh then blockcheck.sh.

Backslashes in windows paths shoud be doubled. Or use cygwin path notation.

cd "C:\\Users\\vasya"
cd "/cygdrive/c/Users/vasya"

Cygwin is required only for blockcheck.sh. Standalone winws can be run without it.

auto start

To start winws with windows use windows task scheduler. There are task_*.cmd batch files in binaries/win64/zapret-winws. They create, remove, start and stop scheduled task winws1. They must be run as administrator.

Edit task_create.cmd and write your winws parameters to %WINWS1% variable. If you need multiple winws instances clone the code in all cmd files to support multiple tasks winws1,winws2,winws3,....

Tasks can also be controlled from GUI taskschd.msc.