# slowloris.py - Simple slowloris in Python ## What is Slowloris? Slowloris is basically an HTTP Denial of Service attack that affects threaded servers. It works like this: 1. We start making lots of HTTP requests. 2. We send headers periodically (every ~15 seconds) to keep the connections open. 3. We never close the connection unless the server does so. If the server closes a connection, we create a new one keep doing the same thing. This exhausts the servers thread pool and the server can't reply to other people. ## How to install and run? You can clone the git repo or install using **pip**. Here's how you run it. * `sudo pip3 install slowloris` * `slowloris example.com` That's all it takes to install and run slowloris.py. If you want to clone using git instead of pip, here's how you do it. * `git clone https://github.com/gkbrk/slowloris.git` * `cd slowloris` * `python3 slowloris.py example.com` ### SOCKS5 proxy support However, if you plan on using the `-x` option in order to use a SOCKS5 proxy for connecting instead of a direct connection over your IP address, you will need to install the `PySocks` library (or any other implementation of the `socks` library) as well. [`PySocks`](https://github.com/Anorov/PySocks) is a fork from [`SocksiPy`](http://socksipy.sourceforge.net/) by GitHub user @Anorov and can easily be installed by adding `PySocks` to the `pip` command above or running it again like so: * `sudo pip3 install PySocks` You can then use the `-x` option to activate SOCKS5 support and the `--proxy-host` and `--proxy-port` option to specify the SOCKS5 proxy host and its port, if they are different from the standard `127.0.0.1:8080`. ## Configuration options It is possible to modify the behaviour of slowloris with command-line arguments. ## License The code is licensed under the MIT License.