Awesome
<p align="center"> <img height="300" src="https://sr.ht/2mc0.png"> </p> <h1 align="center">tor-controller</h1>Tor is an anonymity network that provides:
- privacy
- enhanced tamperproofing
- freedom from network surveillance
- NAT traversal
tor-controller allows you to create OnionService
resources in kubernetes.
These services are used similarly to standard kubernetes services, but they
only serve traffic on the tor network (available on .onion
addresses).
See this page for more information about onion services.
tor-controller creates the following resources for each OnionService:
- a service, which is used to send traffic to application pods
- tor pod, which contains a tor daemon to serve incoming traffic from the tor network, and a management process that watches the kubernetes API and generates tor config, signaling the tor daemon when it changes
- rbac rules
Install
Install tor-controller:
$ kubectl apply -f hack/install.yaml
Quickstart with random address
Create an onion service, onionservice.yaml
:
apiVersion: tor.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: OnionService
metadata:
name: basic-onion-service
spec:
version: 2
selector:
app: example
ports:
- publicPort: 80
targetPort: 80
Apply it:
$ kubectl apply -f onionservice.yaml
View it:
$ kubectl get onionservices -o=custom-columns=NAME:.metadata.name,HOSTNAME:.status.hostname
NAME HOSTNAME
basic-onion-service h7px2yyugjqkztrb.onion
Exposing a deployment with a fixed address
Create some deployment to test against, in this example we'll deploy an echoserver. Create echoserver.yaml
:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: http-app
spec:
replicas: 2
selector:
matchLabels:
app: http-app
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: http-app
spec:
containers:
- name: http-app
image: gcr.io/google_containers/echoserver:1.8
ports:
- containerPort: 8080
Apply it:
$ kubectl apply -f echoserver.yaml
For a fixed address, we need a private key. This should be kept safe, since someone can impersonate your onion service if it is leaked. Generate an RSA private key (only valid for v2 onion services, v3 services use Ed25519 instead):
$ openssl genrsa -out private_key 1024
Put your private key into a secret:
$ kubectl create secret generic example-onion-key --from-file=private_key
Create an onion service, onionservice.yaml
, referencing the private key we just created:
apiVersion: tor.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: OnionService
metadata:
name: example-onion-service
spec:
version: 2
selector:
app: http-app
ports:
- targetPort: 8080
publicPort: 80
privateKeySecret:
name: example-onion-key
key: private_key
Apply it:
$ kubectl apply -f onionservice.yaml
List active OnionServices:
$ kubectl get onionservices -o=custom-columns=NAME:.metadata.name,HOSTNAME:.status.hostname
NAME HOSTNAME
example-onion-service s2c6qry5bj57vyms.onion
This service should now be accessable from any tor client, for example Tor Browser:
<p align="center"> <img src="https://sr.ht/FLbP.png"> </p>Random service names
If spec.privateKeySecret
is not specified, tor-controller will start a service with a random name.
This will remain in use until the tor-daemon pod restarts or is terminated for some other reason.
Onion service versions
The spec.version
field specifies which onion protocol to use.
v2 is the classic and well supported, v3 is the new replacement.
The biggest difference from a user's point of view is the length of addresses. v2
service names are short, like x3yvl2svtqgzhcyz.onion
. v3 are longer, like
ljgpby5ba3xi5osslpdvqsumdb4sbclb2amxtm6a3cwnq7w7sj72noid.onion
.
tor-controller defaults to using v3 if spec.version
is not specified.
Using with nginx-ingress
tor-controller on its own simply directs TCP traffic to a backend service. If you want to serve HTTP stuff, you'll probably want to pair it with nginx-ingress or some other ingress controller.
To do this, first install nginx-ingress normally. Then point an onion service at the nginx-ingress-controller, for example:
apiVersion: tor.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: OnionService
metadata:
name: nginx-onion-service
spec:
version: 2
selector:
app: nginx-ingress-controller
name: nginx-ingress-controller
ports:
- publicPort: 80
targetPort: 80
name: http
privateKeySecret:
name: nginx-onion-key
key: private_key
This can then be used in the same way any other ingress is. Here's a full example, with a default backend and a subdomain:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: http-app
spec:
replicas: 2
selector:
matchLabels:
app: http-app
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: http-app
spec:
containers:
- name: http-app
image: gcr.io/google_containers/echoserver:1.8
ports:
- containerPort: 8080
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: http-app
labels:
app: http-app
spec:
ports:
- port: 80
protocol: TCP
targetPort: 8080
selector:
app: http-app
---
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: http-app
annotations:
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
spec:
backend:
serviceName: default-http-backend
servicePort: 80
rules:
- host: echoserver.h7px3yyugjqkztrb.onion
http:
paths:
- path: /
backend:
serviceName: http-app
servicePort: 8080