44

RTCTunnel, build network tunnels over WebRTC

 5 years ago
source link: https://www.tuicool.com/articles/hit/3MVvAb7
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.

RTCTunnel

RTCTunnel builds network tunnels over WebRTC.

WARNING: this is a proof of concept and should not be used in production. Things like disconnects and invalid data are not handled gracefully and will result in the program crashing.

An overview of the application and how and why it was built is available here: RTCTunnel: Building a WebRTC Proxy with Go .

Installation

RTCTunnel can be installed via go get :

go get github.com/rtctunnel/rtctunnel/cmd/rtctunnel

Or downloaded from the releases page (for linux). Currently the pions/webrtc library requires libopenssl to compile.

Usage

RTCTunnel creates a network tunnel over WebRTC between two peers. Those peers are identified by a public key.

To use RTCTunnel first create a config with:

rtctunnel init

You can see info with:

rtctunnel info

Once you've done that on both peers, copy the two public keys and add a route. A route has four components: a local peer, a local port, a remote peer and a remote port. All network connections and data sent to the local port will be forwarded to the remote peer. For example:

export CLIENT_KEY=
export SERVER_KEY=
rtctunnel add-route \
    --local-peer=$CLIENT_KEY \
    --local-port=6379 \
    --remote-peer=$SERVER_KEY \
    --remote-port=6379

The route must be added on both peers and the CLIENT_KEY and SERVER_KEY should be set to the peer keys.

Once the routes are added you can run rtctunnel with:

rtctunnel run

Typically it would be run in the background.

A docker-compose example is available in examples/redis .


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK