This basic documentation provides a good summary of all the things you need to know for a good experience with Proxy.sh.
The easiest way to connect securely with Proxy.sh is to download Safejumper, our custom VPN client at https://proxy.sh/software
You can also use our online wizard to get a recommendation about a simple method to connect at https://proxy.sh/start
Find out how to set up our proxy tunnels using our easy-to-follow illustrated guides are at https://proxy.sh/guides & https://proxy.sh/getstarted
For support, billing and sales related inquiries please submit a ticket at https://proxy.sh/help
Last but not least, you should always check your online security leaks at https://leaktest.online/
OpenVPN UDP Ports: 1443 (default), 53, 1194, 8080 or 9201
OpenVPN TCP Ports: 843 (default), 80, 110 or 443
You can download the openvpn.ovpn and .crt files at https://proxy.sh/configs
(The .crt file is in the same directory as the .ovpn ones)
OpenVPN UDP Port: 465
OpenVPN TCP Port: 465
You can download the openvpn.ovpn and .crt files at https://proxy.sh/configs
(The .crt file is in the same directory as the .ovpn ones)
OpenVPN UDP Port: 995
OpenVPN TCP Port: 995
You can download the openvpn.ovpn and .crt files at https://proxy.sh/configs
(The .crt file is in the same directory as the .ovpn ones)
OpenVPN UDP Port: 888 (obfs2), 898 (obfs3) or 988 (scramblesuit)
OpenVPN TCP Port: 888 (obfs2), 898 (obfs3) or 988 (scramblesuit)
You can download the openvpn.ovpn and .crt files at https://proxy.sh/configs
(The .crt file is in the same directory as the .ovpn ones)
PPTP TCP Port: 1723
You can download the PPTP pkb file (if needed) at https://proxy.sh/configs
L2TP Secret: security
L2TP UDP Port: 1701
You can download the L2TP pbk file (if needed) at https://proxy.sh/configs
SoftEther Secret: security
SoftEther Ports: 5555, 992 or 8787
You can download the OpenSSL .ssl file (if needed) at https://proxy.sh/proxysh.ssl
You can also generate any configuration files for OpenVPN at https://proxy.sh/config
We strongly recommend that you only use OpenVPN. All other protocols such as PPTP, L2TP, SOCKS or CGIProxy are using weak encryption methods, and it is rather simple to decrypt them. If you connected to them, change your VPN password. You should always prefer OpenVPN with the strongest encryption method whenever you can. We also invite you to protect yourself against any potential network leak.
https://proxy.sh/leaks + https://leaktest.online/
- OpenSSL
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/56/OpenSSL
- DNS & DNSCrypt
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/39/DNS https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/53/DNSCrypt
- SOCKS
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/40/SOCKS
- HTTP
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/41/HTTP
- ECC & ECC+XOR
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/58/ECC-Diffie-Hellman https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/59/ECC-plus-XOR-Scramble
- TOR & Obfsproxy
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/42/TOR https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/54/Obfsproxy-Stealth
- SoftEther
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/57/SoftEther
- Jabber
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/50/Jabber
- Cryptocat
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/51/Cryptocat
- Pastebin
- API
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/52/API
- Anonymous Tokens
https://proxy.sh/panel/knowledgebase/55/Tokens
You can check network status @ https://proxy.sh/status
You can generate an OpenVPN configuration @ https://proxy.sh/config
You can test your network speeds @ https://proxy.sh/speedtest
You can test your network security @ https://proxy.sh/check
You can whitelist your email server @ https://proxy.sh/email
You can input your custom domain @ https://proxy.sh/domains
Finally, you can check all extra products @ https://proxy.sh/extras