8.8 KiB
Instructions
Website is using Cloudflare
Cloudflare users | List Directory
List name | Description |
---|---|
/domain/cloudflare_?.txt | Split files (base domain) |
ex_cloudflare_users.txt | Domains which used Cloudflare in the past, not anymore |
cloudflare_supporter.txt | who is using Cloudflare or endorsing Cloudflare. (URL only) |
Cloudflare Corporation | List Directory
List name | Description |
---|---|
cloudflare_CIDR_v4.txt | IPv4 CIDR owned by Cloudflare |
cloudflare_CIDR_v6.txt | IPv6 CIDR owned by Cloudflare |
cloudflare_range_v4.txt | IPv4 range owned by Cloudflare |
cloudflare_owned_ASN.txt | AS network owned by Cloudflare |
cloudflare_owned_NS.txt | Name Server owned by Cloudflare |
cloudflare_owned_domains.txt | Domains owned by Cloudflare |
cloudflare_owned_onions.txt | Tor .onions owned by Cloudflare |
cloudflare_members.txt | Cloudflare employer & employee |
- How to detect Cloudflare
There are many ways to detect it:
- These add-ons will help your Cloudflare collection.
- Visit a website via Tor or VPN, and you will be greeted by "Attention Required! Cloudflare" webpage.
- Use "Is MITM?" webpage.
- Dig "NS record" of the domain.
emsisoft.com. 21599 IN NS bella.ns.cloudflare.com.
emsisoft.com. 21599 IN NS dom.ns.cloudflare.com.
- Dig "A record" of the FQDN, then check the IP's owner.
dev.qubes-os.org. 299 IN A 104.18.228.122
ASN AS13335 Cloudflare, Inc.
Organization Cloudflare, Inc.
Route 104.18.224.0/20
- How to add your data (A or B)
Type A: Push to Codeberg.org
- Log in to Codeberg.org.
- Click "Fork" button. (top-left corner)
- Edit text file.
- Click Double-arrow button to create a new pull request.
Type B: Just scan the FQDN on "Is MITM?" webpage.
IMPORTANT: Please add only "Base Domain"
if "community.example.com" is using Cloudflare
add "example.com"
if "www.example.co.uk" is using Cloudflare
add "example.co.uk"
if "example.net" is using Cloudflare
add "example.net"
... to /split/cloudflare_e.txt
- If the website no longer using Cloudflare, remove it from /split/ list and add to "ex_cloudflare_users.txt".
Website is NOT using Cloudflare (& blocking you)
Anti-Tor users (formerly "TorBlocker Hall of Shame Part I") | List Directory
List name | Description |
---|---|
/cidr_data/?.txt | other CDN IPv4 CIDR files |
list_othercdn_domain.txt | domains behind these CDN (Not Cloudflare) |
list_http_error.txt | Websites that instantly and unconditionally deny service to Tor visitors by returning an HTTP error. HTTP 403 is the most common but this list catalogs all HTTP responses that entail DoS (i.e. not HTTP 200). File format is: <FQDN> <http error code> |
list_customerror.txt | Custom error message renders for Tor visitors generally without HTTP error. |
list_other.txt | Any other form of tor-hostility or mistreatment. This includes sites somewhat functional for Tor users to some extent but sneaky and unexpected adverse retalitory actions are taken against Tor visitors. |
list_formerly_tor-hostile.txt | was previously on one of the above tor-hostile lists |
Above is how Siteground-hosted(INAP) sites often appear to Tor visitors when timeouts/tarpitting doesn't occur.
If you see this please update list_othercdn_domain.txt
. (CDN ID: Z7)
list_othercdn_domain.txt
{domain} {CDN code}
{CDN code}:
'amazon.txt':'Z1'
'akamai.txt':'Z2'
'imperva.txt':'Z4'
'google.txt':'Z5'
'microsoft.txt':'Z6'
'inap.txt':'Z7'
'sucuri.txt':'Z8'
IMPORTANT: Please add only "FQDN" or "FQDN[space](comment here)"
if "community.example.com" is blocking Tor
add "community.example.com"
if "example.co.uk" is blocking Tor
add "example.co.uk Error message: Anonymous not allowed"
Some websites use other companies with the CloudFlare business model.
This is a collection of websites that ban Tor exits, other than through Cloudflare(e.g. showing access denied pages, systematic timing out connections, ...).
How to setup git
This procedure will give you a cloudflare-tor fork with a privacy-respecting configuration to do pushes with SSH over Tor using codeberg.org ("CDB"). This procedure is designed for linux. The first step covers Windows too, but these instructions probably need more adaptations for Windows and other platforms.
- Linux:
aptitude install git tor ssh
- Windows: Download
https://github.com/git-for-windows/git/releases/PortableGit-2.21.0-64-bit.7z
& rungit-bash.exe
- install Git, SSH(Not Windows), and Tor (if you haven't already)
- create a
codeberg.org
account (username "snowden" will be used for this example) - create an SSH key pair
$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -N '' -C 'snowden at codeberg' -f "$HOME"/.ssh/id_rsa_codeberg-snowden
- edit
$HOME/.ssh/config
:
host codeberg-*
hostname codeberg.org
ForwardX11 no
ProxyCommand connect -4 -S 127.0.0.1:9050 $(tor-resolve %h 127.0.0.1:9050) %p
host codeberg-snowden
IdentityFile /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa_codeberg-snowden
- copy
"$HOME"/.ssh/id_rsa_codeberg-snowden.pub
to clipboard - codeberg.org > settings > SSH/GPG Keys > add key (paste from clipboard)
- $
firefox https://codeberg.org/crimeflare/cloudflare-tor
- fork it (top right corner)
- go to the directory you want the project to be rooted in (hereafter we'll call it
$project_root
). - anonymously download your fork: $
git clone git@codeberg-snowden:crimeflare/cloudflare-tor.git
- edit
$project_root/cloudflare-tor/.git/config
to include the account name and email address that will be on every commit, as well as the URL:
[user]
email = BM-yadayadayada6fgnLfybVnCcWf25AGZcgg@bitmessage.ch
name = snowden
[remote "origin"]
url = git@codeberg-snowden:snowden/cloudflare-tor.git
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
[remote "upstream"]
url = git@codeberg-snowden:crimeflare/cloudflare-tor.git
fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
[branch "master"]
remote = origin
merge = refs/heads/master
- make your first change
- (from
$project_root
) $git add . -u -n
- check that the files listed are what you changed and intend to push upstream
- if yes:
$ git add . -u
- $
git commit -m 'description of first change'
- $
git push origin master
- $
firefox https://codeberg.org/crimeflare/cloudflare-tor
- make a new pull request
Whenever git operates on the cloudflare-tor project, all connections
to codeberg are automatically over Tor with this configuration
(because the url
in .git/config
references the virtual host
codeberg-snowden
in ~/.ssh/config
).
About Cloudflare base domain
list
Our mission is clear - stay away from Cloudflare
.
If the subdomain.example.com
is cloudflared, we add example.com
to the database. (subdomain.example.com
is the sub-domain of example.com
. Only the owner
of example.com
can create sub-domain)
Even if whatever.example.com
is not behind cloudflare we will raise a warning, because the base domain example.com
is cloudflare user
.
The owner
of example.com
can enable Cloudflare to whatever.example.com
at any time without user's notice. It can be done from dash.cloudflare.com
webpage or hitting Cloudflare API
. The owner
is supporting Cloudflare
and this is severe security risk
.
Until the owner
completely stop using Cloudflare service for example.com
, we do not remove example.com
from the database.
There is no exception
.
If the owner
moved away from cloudflare
completely, you are welcome to add example.com
to the "ex_cloudflare_users.txt" - after checking example.com
with online tool below.
-
Open "Is MITM?" webpage.
-
Input
gitlab.com
and clickSkanu
. -
Click
testo
for detailed scan. -
If you got
---Finish---
, the domain might stopped using Cloudflare. We'll investigate and remove it - or not. (wait some days and scan again to see whether the domain is removed)
Only a few Cloudflare user leave Cloudflare. False positive is uncommon.