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onionize

Make an onion site (aka HTTP over onion services) up and running from a directory, a file, zip archive contents or another HTTP server.

Onion services are end-to-end encrypted, metadata-free and forward-secure (see design overview). Much love to onion services.

Install

You have to have Go 1.8+ installed to build onionize.

CLI-only version:

$ go get github.com/nogoegst/onionize/cmd/onionize

CLI + GUI version (reqiures GTK3 installed):

$ go get -tags gui github.com/nogoegst/onionize/cmd/onionize

If you have troubles setting up GUI version straight away, try to build it using Docker (see /dockerfiles). Also you may look into Dockerfiles themselves to reproduce building steps on your host OS.

Usage

To onionize things pass the path to them with optional aliases:

$ onionize /path/to/thing:/things/thing1 /path/to/another/thing:/things/thing2

or the URL:

$ onionize https://example.com/

Pass -zip flag to serve from the zip archive.

Grab the onion link from stdout and errors/info from stderr.

That's it.

GUI mode

To run onionize in GUI mode just don't specify any path. Select target type, open your file/directory and click onionize:

onionize GUI screenshot

Then you can grab the link from a text field:

onionize GUI screenshot

You can find more screenshots in docs.

Identity passphrase

You may also specify a passphrase from which onion service identity key will be derived. Thus you can preserve same .onion address across setups.

Identity passphrase can be specified on stdin by setting -p flag in CLI or in corresponding field in GUI.

Private key file

One may load a typical onion private key from a file:

$ onionize -id-key onion.key /path/to/the-thing

TLS

You can specify tlspin private key via -tlspin-key flag.

When running with -local flag TLS enabled by default via tlspin with a generated ephemeral key.

One can also specifying paths to X.509 key and certificate:

$ onionize -tls-cert server.crt -tls-key server.key /path/to/the-thing

To disabe TLS run onionize with -no-tls.

Thanks

I want to thank Micah Lee for OnionShare tool by which onionize was inspired.