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README.md
Telebit™ Remote
Because friends don't let friends localhost™
| Sponsored by ppl | Telebit Remote | Telebit Relay |
Break out of localhost.
If you need to get bits from here to there, Telebit gets the job done.
Install Telebit Remote on any device - your laptop, raspberry pi, whatever - and now you can access that device from anywhere, even securely in a web browser.
How does it work? It's a net server that uses a relay to allow multiplexed incoming connections on any external port.
Features
- Show your mom the web app you're working on
- Access your Raspberry Pi from behind a firewall
- Watch Netflix without region restrictions while traveling
- SSH over HTTPS on networks with restricted ports or protocols
- Access your wife's laptop while she's on a flight
Examples
telebit http /path/to/root
telebit http 3000
telebit http /path/to/handler.js
telebit ssh 22
telebit tcp 3000
telebit tcp echo
telebit tcp /path/to/handler.js
Install
Mac & Linux
Open Terminal and run this install script:
curl -fsSL https://get.telebit.cloud/ | bash
Of course, feel free to inspect the install script before you run it.
This will install Telebit Remote to /opt/telebit
and
put a symlink to /opt/telebit/bin/telebit
in /usr/local/bin/telebit
for convenience.
You can customize the installation:
export NODEJS_VER=v10.2
export TELEBIT_PATH=/opt/telebit
curl -fsSL https://get.telebit.cloud/
That will change the bundled version of node.js is bundled with Telebit Relay and the path to which Telebit Relay installs.
You can get rid of the tos + email and server domain name prompts by providing them right away:
curl -fsSL https://get.telebit.cloud/ | bash -- jon@example.com example.com telebit.example.com xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Windows & Node.js
- Install node.js
- Open Node.js
- Run the command
npm install -g telebit
Note: Use node.js v8.x or v10.x
There is a bug in node v9.x that causes telebit to crash.
Usage
telebit --config /etc/telebit/telebit.yml
Options
/etc/telebit/telebit.yml:
email: 'jon@example.com' # must be valid (for certificate recovery and security alerts)
agree_tos: true # agree to the Telebit, Greenlock, and Let's Encrypt TOSes
community_member: true # receive infrequent relevant but non-critical updates
telemetry: true # contribute to project telemetric data
secret: '' # Secret with which to sign Tokens for authorization
token: '' # A signed Token for authorization
servernames: # servernames that will be forwarded here
example.com: {}
dynamic_ports: []
Important Defaults
The default behaviors work great for newbies, but can be confusing or annoying to experienced networking veterans.
See the Advanced Configuration section below for more details.
Using Telebit with node.js
Telebit has two parts:
- the local server
- the relay service
This repository is for the local server, which you run on the computer or device that you would like to access.
This is the portion that runs on your computer You will need both Telebit (this, telebit.js) and a Telebit Relay (such as telebitd.js).
You can integrate telebit.js into your existing codebase or use the standalone CLI.
- CLI
- Node.js Library
- Browser Library
Telebit CLI
Installs Telebit Remote as telebit
(for those that regularly use telebit
but still like commandline completion).
Install
npm install -g telebit
npm install -g 'https://git.coolaj86.com/coolaj86/telebit.js.git#v1'
Or if you want to bow down to the kings of the centralized dictator-net:
How to use Telebit Remote with your own instance of Telebit Relay:
telebit \
--locals <<external domain name>> \
--relay wss://<<tunnel domain>>:<<tunnel port>> \
--secret <<128-bit hex key>>
telebit --locals john.example.com --relay wss://tunnel.example.com:443 --secret abc123
telebit \
--locals <<protocol>>:<<external domain name>>:<<local port>> \
--relay wss://<<tunnel domain>>:<<tunnel port>> \
--secret <<128-bit hex key>>
telebit \
--locals http:john.example.com:3000,https:john.example.com \
--relay wss://tunnel.example.com:443 \
--secret abc123
--secret the same secret used by the Telebit Relay (for authentication)
--locals comma separated list of <proto>:<servername>:<port> to which
incoming http and https should be forwarded
--relay the domain or ip address at which you are running Telebit Relay
-k, --insecure ignore invalid ssl certificates from relay
Node.js Library
Example
var Telebit = require('telebit');
Telebit.connect({
relay: 'wss://tunnel.example.com'
, token: '...'
, locals: [
// defaults to sending http to local port 80 and https to local port 443
{ hostname: 'doe.net' }
// sends both http and https to local port 3000 (httpolyglot)
, { protocol: 'https', hostname: 'john.doe.net', port: 3000 }
// send http to local port 4080 and https to local port 8443
, { protocol: 'https', hostname: 'jane.doe.net', port: 4080 }
, { protocol: 'https', hostname: 'jane.doe.net', port: 8443 }
]
, net: require('net')
, insecure: false
});
- You can get sneaky with
net
and provide acreateConnection
that returns astream.Duplex
.
Token
var tokenData = { domains: [ 'doe.net', 'john.doe.net', 'jane.doe.net' ] }
var secret = 'shhhhh';
var token = jwt.sign(tokenData, secret);
net
Let's say you want to handle http requests in-process or decrypt https before passing it to the local http handler.
You'll need to create a pair of streams to connect between the local handler and the tunnel handler.
You could do a little magic like this:
Telebit.connect({
// ...
, net: {
createConnection: function (info, cb) {
// data is the hello packet / first chunk
// info = { data, servername, port, host, remoteAddress: { family, address, port } }
var streamPair = require('stream-pair');
// here "reader" means the socket that looks like the connection being accepted
var writer = streamPair.create();
// here "writer" means the remote-looking part of the socket that driving the connection
var reader = writer.other;
// duplex = { write, push, end, events: [ 'readable', 'data', 'error', 'end' ] };
reader.remoteFamily = info.remoteFamily;
reader.remoteAddress = info.remoteAddress;
reader.remotePort = info.remotePort;
// socket.local{Family,Address,Port}
reader.localFamily = 'IPv4';
reader.localAddress = '127.0.01';
reader.localPort = info.port;
httpsServer.emit('connection', reader);
if (cb) {
process.nextTick(cb);
}
return writer;
}
});
Advanced Configuration
There is no configuration for these yet, but we believe it is important to add them.
http to https
By default http connections are redirected to https.
If for some reason you need raw access to unencrypted http you'll need to set it manually.
Proposed configuration:
insecure_http:
proxy: true # add X-Forward-* headers
port: 3000 # connect to port 3000
hostnames: # only these hostnames will be left insecure
- example.com
Note: In the future unencrypted connections will only be allowed on self-hosted and paid-hosted Telebit Relays. We don't want the legal liability of transmitting your data in the clear, thanks. :p
TLS Termination (Secure SSL decryption)
Telebit is designed for end-to-end security.
For convenience the Telebit Remote client uses Greenlock to handle all HTTPS connections and then connect to a local webserver with the correct proxy headers.
However, if you want to handle the encrypted connection directly, you can:
Proposed Configuration:
tls:
example.com: 3000 # specific servername
'*': 3000 # all servernames
'!': 3000 # missing servername
TODO
Install for user
- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Systemd/User
- https://developer.apple.com/library/content/documentation/MacOSX/Conceptual/BPSystemStartup/Chapters/CreatingLaunchdJobs.html
sudo launchctl load -w ~/Library/LaunchAgents/cloud.telebit.remote
- https://serverfault.com/questions/194832/how-to-start-stop-restart-launchd-services-from-the-command-line
Browser Library
This is implemented with websockets, so you should be able to
LICENSE
Copyright 2016 AJ ONeal