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http-frontend e5d57647f0 [WIP] Split broker into components il y a 3 ans
README.md fcc274ac68 Use Manager.HTTPHandler for automatic TLS support. il y a 6 ans
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geoip.go 3cfceb3755 Handle generated errors in broker il y a 5 ans
ipc.go e5d57647f0 [WIP] Split broker into components il y a 3 ans
metrics.go 7ef49272fa Remove sync.Once from around logMetrics il y a 3 ans
prometheus.go 92bd900bc5 Implement binned counts for polling metrics il y a 3 ans
snowflake-broker_test.go e5d57647f0 [WIP] Split broker into components il y a 3 ans
snowflake-heap.go 270eb21803 Encode client-broker messages as json in HTTP body il y a 3 ans
test_geoip 171c55a9b1 Implemented geoip lookups for the snowflake broker. This heavily based off of how tor maps IP addresses to country codes, and relies on the provided ipv4 and ipv6 files. il y a 5 ans
test_geoip6 171c55a9b1 Implemented geoip lookups for the snowflake broker. This heavily based off of how tor maps IP addresses to country codes, and relies on the provided ipv4 and ipv6 files. il y a 5 ans

README.md

This is the Broker component of Snowflake.

Overview

The Broker handles the rendezvous by matching Snowflake Clients with Proxies, and passing their WebRTC Session Descriptions (the "signaling" step). This allows Clients and Proxies to establish a Peer connection.

It is analogous to Flashproxy's Facilitator, but bidirectional and domain-fronted.

The Broker expects:

  • Clients to send their SDP offer in a POST request, which will then block until the Broker responds with the answer of the matched Proxy.
  • Proxies to announce themselves with a POST request, to which the Broker responds with some Client's SDP offer. The Proxy should then send a second POST request soon after containing its SDP answer, which the Broker passes back to the same Client.

Running your own

The server uses TLS by default. There is a --disable-tls option for testing purposes, but you should use TLS in production.

The server automatically fetches certificates from Let's Encrypt as needed. Use the --acme-hostnames option to tell the server what hostnames it may request certificates for. You can optionally provide a contact email address, using the --acme-email option, so that Let's Encrypt can inform you of any problems.

In order to fetch certificates automatically, the server needs to open an additional HTTP listener on port 80. On Linux, you can use the setcap program, part of libcap2, to enable the broker to bind to low-numbered ports without having to run as root:

setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' /usr/local/bin/broker

You can control the listening broker port with the --addr option. Port 443 is the default.

You'll need to provide the URL of the custom broker to the client plugin using the --url $URL flag.