Proxy Auto-Configuration (PAC) file

A Proxy Auto-Configuration (PAC) file is a JavaScript function that determines whether web browser requests (HTTP, HTTPS, and FTP) go directly to the destination or are forwarded to a web proxy server. The JavaScript function contained in the PAC file defines the function:

Syntax

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  // …
}

Parameters

url

The URL being accessed. The path and query components of https:// URLs are stripped. In Chrome (versions 52 to 73), you can disable this by setting PacHttpsUrlStrippingEnabled to false in policy or by launching with the --unsafe-pac-url command-line flag (in Chrome 74, only the flag works, and from 75 onward, there is no way to disable path-stripping; as of Chrome 81, path-stripping does not apply to HTTP URLs, but there is interest in changing this behavior to match HTTPS); in Firefox, the preference is network.proxy.autoconfig_url.include_path.

host

The hostname extracted from the URL. This is only for convenience; it is the same string as between :// and the first : or / after that. The port number is not included in this parameter. It can be extracted from the URL when necessary.

Description

Returns a string describing the configuration. The format of this string is defined in return value format below.

Return value format

  • The JavaScript function returns a single string
  • If the string is null, no proxies should be used
  • The string can contain any number of the following building blocks, separated by a semicolon:
DIRECT

Connections should be made directly, without any proxies

PROXY host:port

The specified proxy should be used

SOCKS host:port

The specified SOCKS server should be used

Recent versions of Firefox support as well:

HTTP host:port

The specified proxy should be used

HTTPS host:port

The specified HTTPS proxy should be used

SOCKS4 host:port, SOCKS5 host:port

The specified SOCKS server (with the specified SOCK version) should be used

If there are multiple semicolon-separated settings, the left-most setting will be used, until Firefox fails to establish the connection to the proxy. In that case, the next value will be used, etc.

The browser will automatically retry a previously unresponsive proxy after 30 minutes. Additional attempts will continue beginning at one hour, always adding 30 minutes to the elapsed time between attempts.

If all proxies are down, and there was no DIRECT option specified, the browser will ask if proxies should be temporarily ignored, and direct connections attempted. After 20 minutes, the browser will ask if proxies should be retried, asking again after an additional 40 minutes. Queries will continue, always adding 20 minutes to the elapsed time between queries.

Examples

PROXY w3proxy.netscape.com:8080; PROXY mozilla.netscape.com:8081

Primary proxy is w3proxy:8080; if that goes down start using mozilla:8081 until the primary proxy comes up again.

PROXY w3proxy.netscape.com:8080; PROXY mozilla.netscape.com:8081; DIRECT

Same as above, but if both proxies go down, automatically start making direct connections. (In the first example above, Netscape will ask user confirmation about making direct connections; in this case, there is no user intervention.)

PROXY w3proxy.netscape.com:8080; SOCKS socks:1080

Use SOCKS if the primary proxy goes down.

The auto-config file should be saved to a file with a .pac filename extension: proxy.pac.

And the MIME type should be set to application/x-ns-proxy-autoconfig.

Next, you should configure your server to map the .pac filename extension to the MIME type.

Note:

  • The JavaScript function should always be saved to a file by itself but not be embedded in a HTML file or any other file.
  • The examples at the end of this document are complete. There is no additional syntax needed to save it into a file and use it. (Of course, the JavaScripts must be edited to reflect your site's domain name and/or subnets.)

Predefined functions and environment

These functions can be used in building the PAC file:

Note: pactester (part of the pacparser package) was used to test the following syntax examples.

  • The PAC file is named proxy.pac
  • Command line: pactester -p ~/pacparser-master/tests/proxy.pac -u https://www.mozilla.org (passes the host parameter www.mozilla.org and the url parameter https://www.mozilla.org)

isPlainHostName()

Syntax

js
isPlainHostName(host)

Parameters

host

The hostname from the URL (excluding port number).

Description

True if and only if there is no domain name in the hostname (no dots).

Examples

js
isPlainHostName("www.mozilla.org"); // false
isPlainHostName("www"); // true

dnsDomainIs()

Syntax

js
dnsDomainIs(host, domain)

Parameters

host

Is the hostname from the URL.

domain

Is the domain name to test the hostname against.

Description

Returns true if and only if the domain of hostname matches.

Examples

js
dnsDomainIs("www.mozilla.org", ".mozilla.org") // true
dnsDomainIs("www", ".mozilla.org") // false

localHostOrDomainIs()

Syntax

js
localHostOrDomainIs(host, hostDom)

Parameters

host

The hostname from the URL.

hostDom

Fully qualified hostname to match against.

Description

Is true if the hostname matches exactly the specified hostname, or if there is no domain name part in the hostname, but the unqualified hostname matches.

Examples

js
localHostOrDomainIs("www.mozilla.org", "www.mozilla.org") // true (exact match)
localHostOrDomainIs("www", "www.mozilla.org") // true (hostname match, domain not specified)
localHostOrDomainIs("www.google.com", "www.mozilla.org") // false (domain name mismatch)
localHostOrDomainIs("home.mozilla.org", "www.mozilla.org") // false (hostname mismatch)

isResolvable()

Syntax

js
isResolvable(host)

Parameters

host

is the hostname from the URL.

Tries to resolve the hostname. Returns true if succeeds.

Examples

js
isResolvable("www.mozilla.org") // true

isInNet()

Syntax

js
isInNet(host, pattern, mask)

Parameters

host

a DNS hostname, or IP address. If a hostname is passed, it will be resolved into an IP address by this function.

pattern

an IP address pattern in the dot-separated format.

mask

mask for the IP address pattern informing which parts of the IP address should be matched against. 0 means ignore, 255 means match.

True if and only if the IP address of the host matches the specified IP address pattern.

Pattern and mask specification is done the same way as for SOCKS configuration.

Examples

js
function alertEval(str) {
  alert(`${str} is ${eval(str)}`);
}
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  alertEval('isInNet(host, "192.0.2.172", "255.255.255.255")');
  // "PAC-alert: isInNet(host, "192.0.2.172", "255.255.255.255") is true"
}

dnsResolve()

js
dnsResolve(host)

Parameters

host

hostname to resolve.

Resolves the given DNS hostname into an IP address, and returns it in the dot-separated format as a string.

Example

js
dnsResolve("www.mozilla.org"); // returns the string "104.16.41.2"

convert_addr()

Syntax

js
convert_addr(ipaddr)

Parameters

ipaddr

Any dotted address such as an IP address or mask.

Concatenates the four dot-separated bytes into one 4-byte word and converts it to decimal.

Example

js
convert_addr("192.0.2.172"); // returns the decimal number 1745889538

myIpAddress()

Syntax

js
myIpAddress()

Parameters

(none)

Return value

Returns the server IP address of the machine Firefox is running on, as a string in the dot-separated integer format.

Warning: myIpAddress() returns the same IP address as the server address returned by nslookup localhost on a Linux machine. It does not return the public IP address.

Example

js
myIpAddress() //returns the string "127.0.1.1" if you were running Firefox on that localhost

dnsDomainLevels()

Syntax

js
dnsDomainLevels(host)

Parameters

host

is the hostname from the URL.

Returns the number (integer) of DNS domain levels (number of dots) in the hostname.

Examples

js
dnsDomainLevels("www") // 0
dnsDomainLevels("mozilla.org") // 1
dnsDomainLevels("www.mozilla.org"); // 2

shExpMatch()

Syntax

js
shExpMatch(str, shExp)

Parameters

str

is any string to compare (e.g. the URL, or the hostname).

shExp

is a shell expression to compare against.

Returns true if the string matches the specified shell glob expression.

Support for particular glob expression syntax varies across browsers: * (match any number of characters) and ? (match one character) are always supported, while [characters] and [^characters] are additionally supported by some implementations (including Firefox).

Note: If supported by the client, JavaScript regular expressions typically provide a more powerful and consistent way to pattern-match URLs (and other strings).

Examples

js
shExpMatch("http://home.netscape.com/people/ari/index.html", "*/ari/*"); // returns true
shExpMatch("http://home.netscape.com/people/montulli/index.html", "*/ari/*"); // returns false

weekdayRange()

Syntax

js
weekdayRange(wd1, wd2, [gmt])

Note: (Before Firefox 49) wd1 must be less than wd2 if you want the function to evaluate these parameters as a range. See the warning below.

Parameters

wd1 and wd2

One of the ordered weekday strings: "SUN", "MON", "TUE", "WED", "THU", "FRI", "SAT"

gmt

Is either the string "GMT" or is left out.

Only the first parameter is mandatory. Either the second, the third, or both may be left out.

If only one parameter is present, the function returns a value of true on the weekday that the parameter represents. If the string "GMT" is specified as a second parameter, times are taken to be in GMT. Otherwise, they are assumed to be in the local timezone.

If both wd1 and wd2 are defined, the condition is true if the current weekday is in between those two ordered weekdays. Bounds are inclusive, but the bounds are ordered. If the "GMT" parameter is specified, times are taken to be in GMT. Otherwise, the local timezone is used.

Warning: The order of the days matters. Before Firefox 49, weekdayRange("SUN", "SAT") will always evaluate to true. Now weekdayRange("WED", "SUN") will only evaluate to true if the current day is Wednesday or Sunday.

Examples

js
weekdayRange("MON", "FRI") // returns true Monday through Friday (local timezone)
weekdayRange("MON", "FRI", "GMT") // returns true Monday through Friday (GMT timezone)
weekdayRange("SAT") // returns true on Saturdays local time
weekdayRange("SAT", "GMT") // returns true on Saturdays GMT time
weekdayRange("FRI", "MON") // returns true Friday and Monday only (note, the order does matter!)

dateRange()

Syntax

js
dateRange(<day> | <month> | <year>, [gmt])  // ambiguity is resolved by assuming year is greater than 31
dateRange(<day1>, <day2>, [gmt])
dateRange(<month1>, <month2>, [gmt])
dateRange(<year1>, <year2>, [gmt])
dateRange(<day1>, <month1>, <day2>, <month2>, [gmt])
dateRange(<month1>, <year1>, <month2>, <year2>, [gmt])
dateRange(<day1>, <month1>, <year1>, <day2>, <month2>, <year2>, [gmt])

Note: (Before Firefox 49) day1 must be less than day2, month1 must be less than month2, and year1 must be less than year2 if you want the function to evaluate these parameters as a range. See the warning below.

Parameters

day

Is the ordered day of the month between 1 and 31 (as an integer).

1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8|9|10|11|12|13|14|15|16|17|18|19|20|21|22|23|24|25|26|27|28|29|30|31
month

Is one of the ordered month strings below.

"JAN"|"FEB"|"MAR"|"APR"|"MAY"|"JUN"|"JUL"|"AUG"|"SEP"|"OCT"|"NOV"|"DEC"
year

Is the ordered full year integer number. For example, 2016 (not 16).

gmt

Is either the string "GMT", which makes time comparison occur in GMT timezone, or is left out. If left unspecified, times are taken to be in the local timezone.

If only a single value is specified (from each category: day, month, year), the function returns a true value only on days that match that specification. If both values are specified, the result is true between those times, including bounds, but the bounds are ordered.

Warning: The order of the days, months, and years matter; Before Firefox 49, dateRange("JAN", "DEC") will always evaluate to true. Now dateRange("DEC", "JAN") will only evaluate true if the current month is December or January.

Examples

js
dateRange(1) // returns true on the first day of each month, local timezone
dateRange(1, "GMT") // returns true on the first day of each month, GMT timezone
dateRange(1, 15) // returns true on the first half of each month
dateRange(24, "DEC");// returns true on 24th of December each year
dateRange("JAN", "MAR"); // returns true on the first quarter of the year

dateRange(1, "JUN", 15, "AUG");
// returns true from June 1st until August 15th, each year
// (including June 1st and August 15th)

dateRange(1, "JUN", 1995, 15, "AUG", 1995);
// returns true from June 1st, 1995, until August 15th, same year

dateRange("OCT", 1995, "MAR", 1996);
// returns true from October 1995 until March 1996
// (including the entire month of October 1995 and March 1996)

dateRange(1995);
// returns true during the entire year of 1995

dateRange(1995, 1997);
// returns true from beginning of year 1995 until the end of year 1997

timeRange()

Syntax

js
// The full range of expansions is analogous to dateRange.
timeRange(<hour1>, <min1>, <sec1>, <hour2>, <min2>, <sec2>, [gmt])

Note: (Before Firefox 49) the category hour1, min1, sec1 must be less than the category hour2, min2, sec2 if you want the function to evaluate these parameters as a range. See the warning below.

Parameters

hour

Is the hour from 0 to 23. (0 is midnight, 23 is 11 pm.)

min

Minutes from 0 to 59.

sec

Seconds from 0 to 59.

gmt

Either the string "GMT" for GMT timezone, or not specified, for local timezone.

If only a single value is specified (from each category: hour, minute, second), the function returns a true value only at times that match that specification. If both values are specified, the result is true between those times, including bounds, but the bounds are ordered.

Warning: The order of the hour, minute, second matter; Before Firefox 49, timeRange(0, 23) will always evaluate to true. Now timeRange(23, 0) will only evaluate true if the current hour is 23:00 or midnight.

Examples

js
timerange(12); // returns true from noon to 1pm
timerange(12, 13) // returns true from noon to 1pm
timerange(12, "GMT") // returns true from noon to 1pm, in the GMT timezone
timerange(9, 17) // returns true from 9am to 5pm
timerange(8, 30, 17, 0) // returns true from 8:30am to 5:00pm
timerange(0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 30) // returns true between midnight and 30 seconds past midnight

alert()

Syntax

js
alert(message)

Parameters

message

The string to log

Logs the message in the browser console.

Examples

js
alert(`${host} = ${dnsResolve(host)}`) // logs the host name and its IP address
alert("Error: shouldn't reach this clause.") // log a simple message

Example 1

Use proxy for everything except local hosts

Note: Since all of the examples that follow are very specific, they have not been tested.

All hosts which aren't fully qualified, or the ones that are in local domain, will be connected to directly. Everything else will go through w3proxy.mozilla.org:8080. If the proxy goes down, connections become direct automatically:

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (isPlainHostName(host) || dnsDomainIs(host, ".mozilla.org")) {
    return "DIRECT";
  } else {
    return "PROXY w3proxy.mozilla.org:8080; DIRECT";
  }
}

Note: This is the simplest and most efficient autoconfig file for cases where there's only one proxy.

Example 2

As above, but use proxy for local servers which are outside the firewall

If there are hosts (such as the main Web server) that belong to the local domain but are outside the firewall and are only reachable through the proxy server, those exceptions can be handled using the localHostOrDomainIs() function:

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (
    (isPlainHostName(host) || dnsDomainIs(host, ".mozilla.org")) &&
    !localHostOrDomainIs(host, "www.mozilla.org") &&
    !localHostOrDomainIs(host, "merchant.mozilla.org")
  ) {
    return "DIRECT";
  } else {
    return "PROXY w3proxy.mozilla.org:8080; DIRECT";
  }
}

The above example will use the proxy for everything except local hosts in the mozilla.org domain, with the further exception that hosts www.mozilla.org and merchant.mozilla.org will go through the proxy.

Note: The order of the above exceptions for efficiency: localHostOrDomainIs() functions only get executed for URLs that are in local domain, not for every URL. Be careful to note the parentheses around the or expression before the and expression to achieve the above-mentioned efficient behavior.

Example 3

Use proxy only if cannot resolve host

This example will work in an environment where the internal DNS server is set up so that it can only resolve internal host names, and the goal is to use a proxy only for hosts that aren't resolvable:

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (isResolvable(host)) {
    return "DIRECT";
  }
  return "PROXY proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
}

The above requires consulting the DNS every time; it can be grouped intelligently with other rules so that DNS is consulted only if other rules do not yield a result:

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (
    isPlainHostName(host) ||
    dnsDomainIs(host, ".mydomain.com") ||
    isResolvable(host)
  ) {
    return "DIRECT";
  }
  return "PROXY proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
}

Example 4

Subnet based decisions

In this example all of the hosts in a given subnet are connected-to directly, others are connected through the proxy:

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (isInNet(host, "192.0.2.172", "255.255.0.0")) {
    return "DIRECT";
  }
  return "PROXY proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
}

Again, use of the DNS server in the above can be minimized by adding redundant rules in the beginning:

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (
    isPlainHostName(host) ||
    dnsDomainIs(host, ".mydomain.com") ||
    isInNet(host, "192.0.2.0", "255.255.0.0")
  ) {
    return "DIRECT";
  } else {
    return "PROXY proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
  }
}

Example 5

Load balancing/routing based on URL patterns

This example is more sophisticated. There are four (4) proxy servers; one of them is a hot stand-by for all of the other ones, so if any of the remaining three goes down the fourth one will take over. Furthermore, the three remaining proxy servers share the load based on URL patterns, which makes their caching more effective (there is only one copy of any document on the three servers - as opposed to one copy on each of them). The load is distributed like this:

Proxy Purpose
#1 .com domain
#2 .edu domain
#3 all other domains
#4 hot stand-by

All local accesses are desired to be direct. All proxy servers run on the port 8080 (they don't need to, you can just change your port but remember to modify your configurations on both side). Note how strings can be concatenated with the + operator in JavaScript.

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (isPlainHostName(host) || dnsDomainIs(host, ".mydomain.com")) {
    return "DIRECT";
  } else if (shExpMatch(host, "*.com")) {
    return "PROXY proxy1.mydomain.com:8080; PROXY proxy4.mydomain.com:8080";
  } else if (shExpMatch(host, "*.edu")) {
    return "PROXY proxy2.mydomain.com:8080; PROXY proxy4.mydomain.com:8080";
  } else {
    return "PROXY proxy3.mydomain.com:8080; PROXY proxy4.mydomain.com:8080";
  }
}

Example 6

Setting a proxy for a specific protocol

Most of the standard JavaScript functionality is available for use in the FindProxyForURL() function. As an example, to set different proxies based on the protocol the startsWith() function can be used:

js
function FindProxyForURL(url, host) {
  if (url.startsWith("http:")) {
    return "PROXY http-proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
  } else if (url.startsWith("ftp:")) {
    return "PROXY ftp-proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
  } else if (url.startsWith("gopher:")) {
    return "PROXY gopher-proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
  } else if (url.startsWith("https:") || url.startsWith("snews:")) {
    return "PROXY security-proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
  }
  return "DIRECT";
}

Note: The same can be accomplished using the shExpMatch() function described earlier.

For example:

js
if (shExpMatch(url, "http:*")) {
  return "PROXY http-proxy.mydomain.com:8080";
}

Note: The autoconfig file can be output by a CGI script. This is useful, for example, when making the autoconfig file act differently based on the client IP address (the REMOTE_ADDR environment variable in CGI).

Usage of isInNet(), isResolvable() and dnsResolve() functions should be carefully considered, as they require the DNS server to be consulted. All the other autoconfig-related functions are mere string-matching functions that don't require the use of a DNS server. If a proxy is used, the proxy will perform its DNS lookup which would double the impact on the DNS server. Most of the time these functions are not necessary to achieve the desired result.

History and implementation

Proxy auto-config was introduced into Netscape Navigator 2.0 in the late 1990s, at the same time when JavaScript was introduced. Open-sourcing Netscape eventually lead to Firefox itself.

The most "original" implementation of PAC and its JavaScript libraries is, therefore, nsProxyAutoConfig.js found in early versions of Firefox. These utilities are found in many other open-source systems including Chromium. Firefox later integrated the file into ProxyAutoConfig.cpp as a C++ string literal. To extract it into its own file, it suffices to copy the chunk into JavaScript with a console.log directive to print it.

Microsoft in general made its own implementation. There used to be some problems with their libraries, but most are resolved by now. They have defined some new "Ex" suffixed functions around the address handling parts to support IPv6. The feature is supported by Chromium, but not yet by Firefox (bugzilla #558253).