GoodbyeDPI — Deep Packet Inspection circumvention utility
This software designed to bypass Deep Packet Inspection systems found in many Internet Service Providers which block access to certain websites.
It handles DPI connected using optical splitter or port mirroring (Passive DPI) which do not block any data but just replying faster than requested destination, and Active DPI connected in sequence.
Windows 7, 8, 8.1, 10 or 11 with administrator privileges required.
Quick start
These scripts launch GoodbyeDPI in recommended mode with DNS resolver redirection to Yandex DNS on non-standard port (to prevent DNS poisoning).
If it works — congratulations! You can use it as-is or configure further.
How to use
Download latest version from Releases page and run.
Supported arguments
To get relevant information about your version of the program, use the -h (--help) argument at startup.
Usage: goodbyedpi.exe [OPTION...]
-p block passive DPI
-q block QUIC/HTTP3
-r replace Host with hoSt
-s remove space between host header and its value
-m mix Host header case (test.com -> tEsT.cOm)
-f set HTTP fragmentation to value
-k enable HTTP persistent (keep-alive) fragmentation and set it to value
-n do not wait for first segment ACK when -k is enabled
-e set HTTPS fragmentation to value
-a additional space between Method and Request-URI (enables -s, may break sites)
-w try to find and parse HTTP traffic on all processed ports (not only on port 80)
--port additional TCP port to perform fragmentation on (and HTTP tricks with -w)
--ip-id handle additional IP ID (decimal, drop redirects and TCP RSTs with this ID).
This option can be supplied multiple times.
--dns-addr redirect UDP DNS requests to the supplied IP address (experimental)
--dns-port redirect UDP DNS requests to the supplied port (53 by default)
--dnsv6-addr redirect UDPv6 DNS requests to the supplied IPv6 address (experimental)
--dnsv6-port redirect UDPv6 DNS requests to the supplied port (53 by default)
--dns-verb print verbose DNS redirection messages
--blacklist perform circumvention tricks only to host names and subdomains from
supplied text file (HTTP Host/TLS SNI).
This option can be supplied multiple times.
--allow-no-sni perform circumvention if TLS SNI can't be detected with --blacklist enabled.
--frag-by-sni if SNI is detected in TLS packet, fragment the packet right before SNI value.
--set-ttl activate Fake Request Mode and send it with supplied TTL value.
DANGEROUS! May break websites in unexpected ways. Use with care (or --blacklist).
--auto-ttl [a1-a2-m] activate Fake Request Mode, automatically detect TTL and decrease
it based on a distance. If the distance is shorter than a2, TTL is decreased
by a2. If it's longer, (a1; a2) scale is used with the distance as a weight.
If the resulting TTL is more than m(ax), set it to m.
Default (if set): --auto-ttl 1-4-10. Also sets --min-ttl 3.
DANGEROUS! May break websites in unexpected ways. Use with care (or --blacklist).
--min-ttl minimum TTL distance (128/64 - TTL) for which to send Fake Request
in --set-ttl and --auto-ttl modes.
--wrong-chksum activate Fake Request Mode and send it with incorrect TCP checksum.
May not work in a VM or with some routers, but is safer than set-ttl.
--wrong-seq activate Fake Request Mode and send it with TCP SEQ/ACK in the past.
--native-frag fragment (split) the packets by sending them in smaller packets, without
shrinking the Window Size. Works faster (does not slow down the connection)
and better.
--reverse-frag fragment (split) the packets just as --native-frag, but send them in the
reversed order. Works with the websites which could not handle segmented
HTTPS TLS ClientHello (because they receive the TCP flow "combined").
--fake-from-hex Load fake packets for Fake Request Mode from HEX values (like 1234abcDEF).
This option can be supplied multiple times, in this case each fake packet
would be sent on every request in the command line argument order.
--fake-with-sni Generate fake packets for Fake Request Mode with given SNI domain name.
The packets mimic Mozilla Firefox 130 TLS ClientHello packet
(with random generated fake SessionID, key shares and ECH grease).
Can be supplied multiple times for multiple fake packets.
--fake-gen Generate random-filled fake packets for Fake Request Mode, value of them
(up to 30).
--fake-resend Send each fake packet value number of times.
Default: 1 (send each packet once).
--max-payload [value] packets with TCP payload data more than [value] won't be processed.
Use this option to reduce CPU usage by skipping huge amount of data
(like file transfers) in already established sessions.
May skip some huge HTTP requests from being processed.
Default (if set): --max-payload 1200.
LEGACY modesets:
-1 -p -r -s -f 2 -k 2 -n -e 2 (most compatible mode)
-2 -p -r -s -f 2 -k 2 -n -e 40 (better speed for HTTPS yet still compatible)
-3 -p -r -s -e 40 (better speed for HTTP and HTTPS)
-4 -p -r -s (best speed)
Modern modesets (more stable, more compatible, faster):
-5 -f 2 -e 2 --auto-ttl --reverse-frag --max-payload
-6 -f 2 -e 2 --wrong-seq --reverse-frag --max-payload
-7 -f 2 -e 2 --wrong-chksum --reverse-frag --max-payload
-8 -f 2 -e 2 --wrong-seq --wrong-chksum --reverse-frag --max-payload
-9 -f 2 -e 2 --wrong-seq --wrong-chksum --reverse-frag --max-payload -q (this is the default)
Note: combination of --wrong-seq and --wrong-chksum generates two different fake packets.