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FlareSolverr

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FlareSolverr is a proxy server to bypass Cloudflare and DDoS-GUARD protection.

How it works

FlareSolverr starts a proxy server, and it waits for user requests in an idle state using few resources. When some request arrives, it uses Selenium with the undetected-chromedriver to create a web browser (Chrome). It opens the URL with user parameters and waits until the Cloudflare challenge is solved (or timeout). The HTML code and the cookies are sent back to the user, and those cookies can be used to bypass Cloudflare using other HTTP clients.

NOTE: Web browsers consume a lot of memory. If you are running FlareSolverr on a machine with few RAM, do not make many requests at once. With each request a new browser is launched.

It is also possible to use a permanent session. However, if you use sessions, you should make sure to close them as soon as you are done using them.

Installation

Docker

It is recommended to install using a Docker container because the project depends on an external browser that is already included within the image.

Docker images are available in:

Supported architectures are:

Architecture Tag
x86 linux/386
x86-64 linux/amd64
ARM32 linux/arm/v7
ARM64 linux/arm64

We provide a docker-compose.yml configuration file. Clone this repository and execute docker-compose up -d to start the container.

If you prefer the docker cli execute the following command.

docker run -d \
  --name=flaresolverr \
  -p 8191:8191 \
  -e LOG_LEVEL=info \
  --restart unless-stopped \
  ghcr.io/flaresolverr/flaresolverr:latest

If your host OS is Debian, make sure libseccomp2 version is 2.5.x. You can check the version with sudo apt-cache policy libseccomp2 and update the package with sudo apt install libseccomp2=2.5.1-1~bpo10+1 or sudo apt install libseccomp2=2.5.1-1+deb11u1. Remember to restart the Docker daemon and the container after the update.

Precompiled binaries

Warning Precompiled binaries are only available for x64 architecture. For other architectures see Docker images.

This is the recommended way for Windows users.

  • Download the FlareSolverr executable from the release's page. It is available for Windows x64 and Linux x64.
  • Execute FlareSolverr binary. In the environment variables section you can find how to change the configuration.

From source code

Warning Installing from source code only works for x64 architecture. For other architectures see Docker images.

  • Install Python 3.11.
  • Install Chrome (all OS) or Chromium (just Linux, it doesn't work in Windows) web browser.
  • (Only in Linux / macOS) Install Xvfb package.
  • Clone this repository and open a shell in that path.
  • Run pip install -r requirements.txt command to install FlareSolverr dependencies.
  • Run python src/flaresolverr.py command to start FlareSolverr.

From source code (FreeBSD/TrueNAS CORE)

  • Run pkg install chromium python39 py39-pip xorg-vfbserver command to install the required dependencies.
  • Clone this repository and open a shell in that path.
  • Run python3.9 -m pip install -r requirements.txt command to install FlareSolverr dependencies.
  • Run python3.9 src/flaresolverr.py command to start FlareSolverr.

Systemd service

We provide an example Systemd unit file flaresolverr.service as reference. You have to modify the file to suit your needs: paths, user and environment variables.

Usage

Example Bash request:

curl -L -X POST 'http://localhost:8191/v1' \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{
  "cmd": "request.get",
  "url": "http://www.google.com/",
  "maxTimeout": 60000
}'

Example Python request:

import requests

url = "http://localhost:8191/v1"
headers = {"Content-Type": "application/json"}
data = {
    "cmd": "request.get",
    "url": "http://www.google.com/",
    "maxTimeout": 60000
}
response = requests.post(url, headers=headers, json=data)
print(response.text)

Example PowerShell request:

$body = @{
    cmd = "request.get"
    url = "http://www.google.com/"
    maxTimeout = 60000
} | ConvertTo-Json

irm -UseBasicParsing 'http://localhost:8191/v1' -Headers @{"Content-Type"="application/json"} -Method Post -Body $body

Commands

+ sessions.create

This will launch a new browser instance which will retain cookies until you destroy it with sessions.destroy. This comes in handy, so you don't have to keep solving challenges over and over and you won't need to keep sending cookies for the browser to use.

This also speeds up the requests since it won't have to launch a new browser instance for every request.

Parameter Notes
session Optional. The session ID that you want to be assigned to the instance. If isn't set a random UUID will be assigned.
proxy Optional, default disabled. Eg: "proxy": {"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8888"}. You must include the proxy schema in the URL: http://, socks4:// or socks5://. Authorization (username/password) is supported. Eg: "proxy": {"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8888", "username": "testuser", "password": "testpass"}

+ sessions.list

Returns a list of all the active sessions. More for debugging if you are curious to see how many sessions are running. You should always make sure to properly close each session when you are done using them as too many may slow your computer down.

Example response:

{
  "sessions": [
    "session_id_1",
    "session_id_2",
    "session_id_3..."
  ]
}

+ sessions.destroy

This will properly shutdown a browser instance and remove all files associated with it to free up resources for a new session. When you no longer need to use a session you should make sure to close it.

Parameter Notes
session The session ID that you want to be destroyed.

+ request.get

Parameter Notes
url Mandatory
session Optional. Will send the request from and existing browser instance. If one is not sent it will create a temporary instance that will be destroyed immediately after the request is completed.
session_ttl_minutes Optional. FlareSolverr will automatically rotate expired sessions based on the TTL provided in minutes.
maxTimeout Optional, default value 60000. Max timeout to solve the challenge in milliseconds.
cookies Optional. Will be used by the headless browser. Eg: "cookies": [{"name": "cookie1", "value": "value1"}, {"name": "cookie2", "value": "value2"}].
returnOnlyCookies Optional, default false. Only returns the cookies. Response data, headers and other parts of the response are removed.
proxy Optional, default disabled. Eg: "proxy": {"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8888"}. You must include the proxy schema in the URL: http://, socks4:// or socks5://. Authorization (username/password) is not supported. (When the session parameter is set, the proxy is ignored; a session specific proxy can be set in sessions.create.)

Warning If you want to use Cloudflare clearance cookie in your scripts, make sure you use the FlareSolverr User-Agent too. If they don't match you will see the challenge.

Example response from running the curl above:

{
    "solution": {
        "url": "https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl",
        "status": 200,
        "headers": {
            "status": "200",
            "date": "Thu, 16 Jul 2020 04:15:49 GMT",
            "expires": "-1",
            "cache-control": "private, max-age=0",
            "content-type": "text/html; charset=UTF-8",
            "strict-transport-security": "max-age=31536000",
            "p3p": "CP=\"This is not a P3P policy! See g.co/p3phelp for more info.\"",
            "content-encoding": "br",
            "server": "gws",
            "content-length": "61587",
            "x-xss-protection": "0",
            "x-frame-options": "SAMEORIGIN",
            "set-cookie": "1P_JAR=2020-07-16-04; expires=Sat..."
        },
        "response":"<!DOCTYPE html>...",
        "cookies": [
            {
                "name": "NID",
                "value": "204=QE3Ocq15XalczqjuDy52HeseG3zAZuJzID3R57...",
                "domain": ".google.com",
                "path": "/",
                "expires": 1610684149.307722,
                "size": 178,
                "httpOnly": true,
                "secure": true,
                "session": false,
                "sameSite": "None"
            },
            {
                "name": "1P_JAR",
                "value": "2020-07-16-04",
                "domain": ".google.com",
                "path": "/",
                "expires": 1597464949.307626,
                "size": 19,
                "httpOnly": false,
                "secure": true,
                "session": false,
                "sameSite": "None"
            }
        ],
        "userAgent": "Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/5..."
    },
    "status": "ok",
    "message": "",
    "startTimestamp": 1594872947467,
    "endTimestamp": 1594872949617,
    "version": "1.0.0"
}

+ request.post

This is the same as request.get but it takes one more param:

Parameter Notes
postData Must be a string with application/x-www-form-urlencoded. Eg: a=b&c=d

Environment variables

Name Default Notes
LOG_LEVEL info Verbosity of the logging. Use LOG_LEVEL=debug for more information.
LOG_HTML false Only for debugging. If true all HTML that passes through the proxy will be logged to the console in debug level.
CAPTCHA_SOLVER none Captcha solving method. It is used when a captcha is encountered. See the Captcha Solvers section.
TZ UTC Timezone used in the logs and the web browser. Example: TZ=Europe/London.
LANG none Language used in the web browser. Example: LANG=en_GB.
HEADLESS true Only for debugging. To run the web browser in headless mode or visible.
BROWSER_TIMEOUT 40000 If you are experiencing errors/timeouts because your system is slow, you can try to increase this value. Remember to increase the maxTimeout parameter too.
TEST_URL https://www.google.com FlareSolverr makes a request on start to make sure the web browser is working. You can change that URL if it is blocked in your country.
PORT 8191 Listening port. You don't need to change this if you are running on Docker.
HOST 0.0.0.0 Listening interface. You don't need to change this if you are running on Docker.
PROMETHEUS_ENABLED false Enable Prometheus exporter. See the Prometheus section below.
PROMETHEUS_PORT 8192 Listening port for Prometheus exporter. See the Prometheus section below.

Environment variables are set differently depending on the operating system. Some examples:

  • Docker: Take a look at the Docker section in this document. Environment variables can be set in the docker-compose.yml file or in the Docker CLI command.
  • Linux: Run export LOG_LEVEL=debug and then start FlareSolverr in the same shell.
  • Windows: Open cmd.exe, run set LOG_LEVEL=debug and then start FlareSolverr in the same shell.

Prometheus exporter

The Prometheus exporter for FlareSolverr is disabled by default. It can be enabled with the environment variable PROMETHEUS_ENABLED. If you are using Docker make sure you expose the PROMETHEUS_PORT.

Example metrics:

# HELP flaresolverr_request_total Total requests with result
# TYPE flaresolverr_request_total counter
flaresolverr_request_total{domain="nowsecure.nl",result="solved"} 1.0
# HELP flaresolverr_request_created Total requests with result
# TYPE flaresolverr_request_created gauge
flaresolverr_request_created{domain="nowsecure.nl",result="solved"} 1.690141657157109e+09
# HELP flaresolverr_request_duration Request duration in seconds
# TYPE flaresolverr_request_duration histogram
flaresolverr_request_duration_bucket{domain="nowsecure.nl",le="0.0"} 0.0
flaresolverr_request_duration_bucket{domain="nowsecure.nl",le="10.0"} 1.0
flaresolverr_request_duration_bucket{domain="nowsecure.nl",le="25.0"} 1.0
flaresolverr_request_duration_bucket{domain="nowsecure.nl",le="50.0"} 1.0
flaresolverr_request_duration_bucket{domain="nowsecure.nl",le="+Inf"} 1.0
flaresolverr_request_duration_count{domain="nowsecure.nl"} 1.0
flaresolverr_request_duration_sum{domain="nowsecure.nl"} 5.858
# HELP flaresolverr_request_duration_created Request duration in seconds
# TYPE flaresolverr_request_duration_created gauge
flaresolverr_request_duration_created{domain="nowsecure.nl"} 1.6901416571570296e+09

Captcha Solvers

Warning At this time none of the captcha solvers work. You can check the status in the open issues. Any help is welcome.

Sometimes CloudFlare not only gives mathematical computations and browser tests, sometimes they also require the user to solve a captcha. If this is the case, FlareSolverr will return the error Captcha detected but no automatic solver is configured.

FlareSolverr can be customized to solve the CAPTCHA automatically by setting the environment variable CAPTCHA_SOLVER to the file name of one of the adapters inside the /captcha directory.

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