AJ ONeal 07965d8eac | ||
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bin | ||
dist/etc/systemd/system | ||
lib | ||
snippets | ||
.gitignore | ||
.jshintrc | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
handlers.js | ||
package.json | ||
wstunneld.js |
README.md
| Sponsored by ppl | tunnel-server.js | tunnel-client.js |
stunneld.js
A server that works in combination with stunnel.js to allow you to serve http and https from any computer, anywhere through a secure tunnel.
CLI
Installs as stunnel.js
with the alias jstunnel
(for those that regularly use stunnel
but still like commandline completion).
Install
npm install -g stunneld
Then dist/etc/systemd/system/stunneld.service
should be copied to /etc/systemd/system/stunneld.service
and
the ARGUMENTS, such as SECRET, MUST BE CHANGED.
TODO: make --config /path/to/config
the only argument (and have the secret auto-generated on first run?)
Note: Use node.js v8.x
There is a bug in node v9.x that causes stunneld to crash.
https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/20241
Advanced Usage
How to use stunnel.js
with your own instance of stunneld.js
:
stunneld.js --servernames tunnel.example.com --protocols wss --secret abc123
Options
--secret the same secret used by stunnel client (used for authentication)
--serve comma separated list of <proto>:<servername>:<port> to which
incoming http and https should be forwarded
Privileged Ports without sudo
# Linux
sudo setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' $(which node)
Alterntive Methods
NOT YET IMPLEMENTED
We created this for anyone to use on their own server or VPS, but those generally cost $5 - $20 / month and so it's probably cheaper to purchase data transfer (which we supply, obviously), which is only $1/month for most people.
Just use the client (stunnel.js) with this tunneling service (the default) and save yourself the monthly fee by only paying for the data you need.
* Node WS Tunnel (zero setup)
* Heroku (zero cost)
* Chunk Host (best deal per TB/month)
Security
The bottom line: As with everything in life, there is no such thing as anonymity or absolute security. Only use stunneld services that you trust. :D
Even though the traffic is encrypted end-to-end, you can't just trust any stunneld service willy-nilly.
A man-in-the-middle attack is possible using Let's Encrypt since an evil stunneld service would be able to complete the http-01 and tls-sni-01 challenges without a problem (since that's where your DNS is pointed when you use the service).
Also, the traffic could still be copied and stored for decryption is some era when quantum computers exist (probably never).