One hidden gem.<p>The closest free alternative is <a href="https://www.mitmproxy.org/" rel="nofollow">https://www.mitmproxy.org/</a> that is not even close.<p>And off course, <a href="https://www.wireshark.org/" rel="nofollow">https://www.wireshark.org/</a> but that is too generic and with a bigger learning curve.<p>Worth the money. And no subscription (or there weren't a subscription back then)
I built a bad clone of Charles Proxy over the summer as part of another project (iOS VPN -> mitm with custom root certificate -> logging). It's surprisingly simple. It basically goes App -> Packet tunnel -> SOCKS -> a child process (I used <a href="https://github.com/AdguardTeam/gomitmproxy" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/AdguardTeam/gomitmproxy</a>) to handle the sniffing and reencryption.<p>Did post the source somewhere at some point but my git server got corrupted and I haven't gone and fixed it. <a href="https://github.com/acheong08/apple-corelocation-experiments/tree/main/data-collection/mitm" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/acheong08/apple-corelocation-experiments/...</a><p>I wonder if AI is good enough to vibe code my horrible hacks into a full clone of Charles Proxy these days.<p>Annoying fact: Apple requires you to have a paid developer account to access the Packet Tunnel APIs. You can't even test it in XCode simulator because of how networking works in there. It's insane that I can't even develop for my own phone without paying an extra fee to Apple. The error message when you sideload without a paid account doesn't make it obvious at all and it took me a good day or two before realizing .
mitmproxy/mitmweb offer a WireGuard server implementation to do pretty much this. You can grab any existing WireGuard VPN, scan a QR code to import the VPN config, and start monitoring (after installing the MITM certificate, of course).<p>The packet tunnel story is crazy. I'm glad Android allows you to just use network APIs without question as a developer.
> It's insane that I can't even develop for my own phone without paying an extra fee to Apple.<p>A Linux phone can’t come fast enough. Yes there is at least one, on ancient hardware. IMO a viable Linux phone requires hardware at most one generation old.
That Linux phone is called Android. It runs plenty fine enough even without GApps (or with shims like microg), and the sheer amount of engineering needed to make baseline linux even usable as a phone system is over a dozen years away.<p>Android with binder is a strictly superior architecture that anything else that has come for strict isolation. As a bonus, it's battle tested, and latest Android phones just... run linux. You can have a shell and GTK if you so desire.
I do a lot of work in similar areas here.<p>While vibe coding will get you something that potentially works, I've noticed LLMs are really bad at cleanly abstracting across multiple layers in this area. They usually will insist on parsing and serializing every field at every layer.<p>If you have the protocols/interfaces well defined up front it is very fast at building extensions, analytics or visualizations though.
> I've noticed LLMs are really bad at cleanly abstracting across multiple layers<p>Which makes sense, as most developers are too (it’s a particular non-trivial skill and rarely modeled wrll), so LLMs are more likely to be trained on muddled multiple layers.
What I really like about mitmproxy is that it runs on my server with a certificate I trusted on my phone.<p>I then flip on WireGuard on my phone, pointed to mitmproxy, and seamlessly all traffic from my phone is decrypted and viewable through the website on my computer.<p>Except of-course all the applications these days that do certificate pinning, which is annoying, but for that we have Frida.
mitmproxy isn't the gold standard; it is Burp Suite, sadly.<p>Burp Suite uses a subscription model. Charles a model like Sublime Text: you buy it and get to keep the version forever, major upgrades available for a discount.<p>I had to chuckle at this one:<p>> If you purchased a Charles license prior to 1 May 2008 your existing license key is still valid for Charles 5.<p>So I guess in past they used a model where you'd have lifetime upgrades.<p>Which also made me think: I recognize this name! This has to be an older piece of software. Was it published on Freshmeat in the start of this century?<p>There's also some TUI for Wireshark, such as frontends for tshark. I think [1] looks interesting, since it can be used with a local LLM (via Ollama).<p>[1] <a href="https://github.com/kspviswa/pktai" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/kspviswa/pktai</a>
I'd used mitmproxy to reverse engineer browser extensions and mobile apps and it did the trick. It was quite some time ago.
I had excellent experiences w mitmproxy (and mitmdump) in 2016-17. At that point it was powerful and easily scriptable, making it far superior to charles for my purposes.
mitmproxy supports quite a few features that Charles doesn't and vice versa. You could use them as alternatives for basic browser traffic analysis (where they're both fine), but their features and capabilities cover different areas. Charles is user friendly and robust, mitmproxy has advanced scripting capabilities with a decent amount of community examples available. They complement each other.
Burp is free too (community edition)<p><a href="https://portswigger.net/burp/communitydownload" rel="nofollow">https://portswigger.net/burp/communitydownload</a>
What about ZAP? <a href="https://www.zaproxy.org/" rel="nofollow">https://www.zaproxy.org/</a>
Wireshark is extremely powerful and useful but it lives in a completely different category of tools. It's not a proxy so it can't modify traffic or inspect HTTPS [1], it's used to passively capture and analyze general network traffic and troubleshoot networking issues.<p>[1] without an elaborate setup, your program needs to be instructed to dump TLS encryption keys for Wireshark to read
I was a daily user of mitmproxy, until they changed all they keybindings around version 2. Tried a couple of times to get used to the new “TMUX” style, but switched to Charles Proxy.<p>Have mitmproxy gotten any better in usability over the years?<p>Just based on the images, is seems to have the same problems?
> Have mitmproxy gotten any better in usability over the years?<p>The new-ish "Local Capture" and "WireGuard"-mode are quite nice.<p>And running e.g. `mitmproxy --ignore-hosts '.*' --show-ignored-hosts` [1] for monitoring apps with certificate pinning also a new feature<p>[1] cmd will turn mitmproxy into a "non-MITM proxy" but do show domains (SNI) the app is connecting to.
I generally prefer mitmweb, the web frontend for mitmproxy. I don't have much of a problem with their tmux-like UI, but I find mitmweb a lot easier to use than the keyboard shortcut based terminal navigation.
I feel obliged to mention Fiddler. The tool I loved almost 20 years back and felt like it came from future. IIRC it was/is more powerful than Charles. Fiddler was Windows only but at one time they had builds for other platforms in works. Sadly they got acquired which changed their roadmap, and I had also moved on from Windows.<p><a href="https://www.telerik.com/fiddler" rel="nofollow">https://www.telerik.com/fiddler</a>
A much better alternative for MacOS folks <a href="https://proxyman.com/" rel="nofollow">https://proxyman.com/</a>
For my rather simple needs I've been using <a href="https://httptoolkit.com" rel="nofollow">https://httptoolkit.com</a> free edition, I like that it launches a independent Firefox window on its own for the intercepting so I don't have to touch my working browser or deal with configuring a proxy anywhere
I don't have elaborate needs and have used Charles for many years. A few years ago I switched to <a href="https://proxyman.com" rel="nofollow">https://proxyman.com</a> and found it easier to use.
Proxyman is 100x value for 2x the price. I am not even kidding. Native UI, shortcuts, cert installation helper tools. And script editor to programmatically edit requests is so much better and powerful than Charles' request editor.
Likewise. I was a dedicated user of Charles for about a decade. It’s great, but if you are a macOS user, Proxyman is better, easier, and more macOS friendly.
At a previous workplace, Charles Proxy was not in the list of approved software. I don't recall the reason - it might have been cost, but we used lots of paid tools, and since it was in the restricted category, we couldn't pick and use (we handled a copious amount of Western PII, from reading, working on it, to storing it). Two were approved: Requestly and another was a link to an internal wiki with a really "interesting" process involving Wireshark and whatnot. Needless to say, that doc was one of the most clicked and least read. I tried Charles at a later place that offered a license, and I went back to Requestly, which I really found to be more straightforward or simpler to use.
If the devs behind Charles would just tweak their UI a bit, it would be the absolute perfect tool. Functionally it pretty much already is. Mainly being able to turn on and off and configuring features I use all the time (rewrite, map local, map remote) is always a journey through menu's that don't always make sense. The only functional thing I'm missing is some DNS stuff (e.g. throttling or breaking DNS specifically).<p>I tried using proxyman for a while, and while definitely powerful and more modern, it honestly didn't feel "better" or more powerful so I didn't go for yet another license.
Same. At some point there was a new Charles version and I could not figure out how to use it the way I had used the old version (I admit I forget exactly what I was trying to do), and it was trivial in Proxyman. Proxyman also has a great app.
I frequently use them both. The main reason why I can't leave Charles is the lack of session grouping in Proxyman. Seeing a huge list of irrelevant items is annoying after some point. In Charles, I can save that session with a name and move on to something else. It's almost impossible to leave one for the other at this point for me.<p>This goes without saying, but huge thanks to the both developers for making these available.
I went from charles to mitmproxy to proxyman and am currently using Reqable. Something all of these miss imo is a way to modify TLS handshakes.
Is anyone else having trouble loading the proxyman website? (Firefox, Windows 11) - it freezes the entire browser..
Pretty nice.<p>Does it work for Xcode simulators?<p>I use Charles extensively (I am using it for the development I’m doing right now), and it needs to work on simulators.<p>Cost isn’t an issue for me. Fitness to purpose is important. I won’t cripple my development capacity, in order to save $50.
It makes working with Xcode simulators even easier by having a dedicated UI workflow to install the proxy certificates and restart the sim.
I used to face issues from time to time doing this with Charles having to restart my machine at times and not getting the certificates to work.
Proxyman makes this way nicer to work with and since switching I never faced certificate issues again.<p>Not trying to do an ad, but really glad I don‘t have to think about that anymore :)
Yes, Proxyman has great sim integration, including the ability to filter by apps within the sim. It's a far better macOS app than Charles, and I've never found it to be lacking a feature I used in Charles.
When I was still working with iOS, all of us on the team switched to Proxyman and found it much better than Charles. Developer experience wise that is (features, ui/ux, etc.) We ran into some issues with Charles and found Proxyman as the alternative. Don't remember the issues but we never looked back.
It does. I find the UI better and setting it up easier too
Looks much better, thanks for that tip
That it's an osx ONLY app.
Burp Suite can do much of this as well, but the intent feels different.
Charles is very much about observing and understanding raw HTTP(S) traffic with minimal friction, which makes it handy for quick debugging, mobile app inspection, or client-side issues.
Burp leans heavily into security workflows: interception, replay, automation, and attack surface exploration. That power comes with more setup and a more opinionated UI.
I’ve found Charles useful when I want visibility without switching into “pentest mode,” whereas Burp shines when security analysis is the goal.
You can also check out Caido as an alternative, we are a newer player in the space but catching up very fast. Most of the Burp new features of the last 2 years are basically copying what we innovated in Caido.
That’s fair. I mostly stick with Burp because I’m very familiar with its workflows and tooling, and that familiarity matters a lot in day-to-day work.
That said, I genuinely appreciate having credible competitors to Burp. New tools entering the space tend to challenge long-standing assumptions, especially around UX and ergonomics, and that pressure usually benefits everyone.
Even if I don’t switch immediately, competition is healthy and often the reason established tools keep improving.
Just to mention an alternative option, ZAP (aka. Zed Attack Proxy) covers much of the same ground as Burp and is entirely free and Open Source.
Wait why is this on the front page? I thought this is a very established and well-known tool
Wow. Charles was indispensable tool for working with HTTP apis back when I got started as an iOS dev in 2011. Great to see it still going strong.
I found Charles Proxy last year and it's fantastic. They have a mobile app too (if you need the ssl proxying for mobile apps).
Alltime great software<p>I’m on proxyman <a href="https://proxyman.com/" rel="nofollow">https://proxyman.com/</a>
Is this "breaking TLS", as referred to here:<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46214950">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46214950</a>
This is a totally different class of software than what that post is ranting about. Charles is a local developer tool intended for temporary use when debugging. It only inspects TLS connections if 1) you enable that feature and 2) you add the domain being connected to the list to be inspected.<p>That being said, the mechanism is the same. Charles generates a root certificate that it uses to issue certificates for each domain in intercepts a TLS connection for and you need to install that root certificate in your OS such that your clients will trust that certificate. If you have a client that doesn’t use the Mac OS certificate store you may have to do some extra per client configuration.<p>I also despise “security” tools that intercept and inspect TLS traffic (such as ZAcaler for example), but I find a Charles to be very useful for what it does and the TLS inspection support is easy to use and really helpful/necessary in some cases.
Fantastic software that I've used for over a decade. Interacted with Karl a few years ago about Adobe's AMF format; very generous with his time.
I was surprised to learn that it's over 20 years old! <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Proxy" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Proxy</a>
I once used Charles Proxy to change all the game configs for Candy Crush Saga on my phone back in 2013 by intercepting and replacing the API requests - I made all the puzzles have 1-2 colors and infinite powerups. I guess they didn't care much about the security because I ended up spending way more time in the game
I’ve found tools like Charles really useful for understanding what’s happening on the wire. When I need something more repeatable (tests, offline work), I usually reach for a mock server instead. I ended up building a small one for my own use and later open-sourced it:<p><a href="https://dhuan.github.io/mock/latest/examples.html" rel="nofollow">https://dhuan.github.io/mock/latest/examples.html</a>
I am a Burp guy, but lately Caido[1] has been trending, pretty lightweight and can be ran in headless mode. It's still very security-oriented (as Burp Suite is), but might be worth your time, notably as you can run it on a VPS/container to proxy all your traffic through it (which is by-design, contrary to my beloved burp/zap)<p>[1] <a href="https://caido.io/" rel="nofollow">https://caido.io/</a>
The combination of Charles + Postman is great for reverse engineering mobile API's. Inspect traffic w/ Charles, export request to cUrl, import cUrl into Postman, play around with request headers / params / etc, export to py, use Cursor to create reusable library.
I loved Charles, I used it for many years. It only stopped when an update changed the UI in ways that were confusing, and also the chrome network tab really did everything I need in terms of inspecting requests / responses.
Ugh these comments - every time it's just people spewing alternatives they like better
Used it heavily as my AS3 dev times from 2008 to 2011. Crazy that is still around.
Used this all of the time back in the day. Great tool.
This one is truly a gem:<p><a href="https://httptoolkit.com" rel="nofollow">https://httptoolkit.com</a><p>It even bypasses SSL pinning on Android using 1 click.
I'd say Reqable is a worthy mention as well.
More narrow cmdline http inspection tool <a href="https://github.com/signeen/inspect-http-proxy" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/signeen/inspect-http-proxy</a>
I like Burp Suite better for intercept and Squid better for a persistent proxy but maybe I'll give Charles another shot.
How come a reverse-proxy, better than the network tab in dev tools ?
Just upgraded my license today, so I guess Charles is my new Baader-Meinhof token. Great tool! The ssl proxying is especially handy.
Tool that can't be beaten
How does "Zed Attack Proxy" (ZAP - <a href="https://www.zaproxy.org/" rel="nofollow">https://www.zaproxy.org/</a>) which is opensource and part of OWASP (<a href="https://owasp.org/www-community/Free_for_Open_Source_Application_Security_Tools" rel="nofollow">https://owasp.org/www-community/Free_for_Open_Source_Applica...</a>) compare with this and other similar proxies?
Even after using it for years I could never recognize all its unlabeled icons without hovering for tooltip<p>I emailed the author about it a decade ago but he didn’t seem convinced
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Even better SIP bullshit off kext tap nic mitm intermed. certs. Fuck all the phone home stuff it’s enough.
Never learnt the use of this tool. The certificate configuration tripped my head during my work.
This gives brain damage because it doesn't make sense.<p>Why to check network payload when you are sure the data was sent.<p>-frontend developer