Awesome
turnproxy
turn
serverinto something you cansee
through
a small script that
- tests TCP connectivity between your turn-server and any peer-destination
- uses your turn-server as TCP proxy with SOCKS interface
usage
➜ python turnproxy.py --help
usage: turnproxy command
test your turn-server tcp relay and use it as a proxy with socks interface
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
command:
test ask turn server to create a tcp connection to your peer host
run run a socks proxy via your turn server
- test connection to good peer
8.8.8.8:53
➜ python turnproxy.py test -t <turn_host>:<turn_port> -u username -p password -c 8.8.8.8:53
Turn server == <turn_host>:<turn_port>
Connecting to peer --> 8.8.8.8:53
Connection OK
- test connection to bad peer
8.8.8.8:54
➜ python turnproxy.py test -t <turn_host>:<turn_port> -u username -p password -c 8.8.8.8:54
Turn server == <turn_host>:<turn_port>
Connecting to peer --> 8.8.8.8:53
Error 447: b'Connection Timeout or Failure\x00\x00\x00'
- listen on
127.0.0.1:9999
as SOCKS proxy
➜ python turnproxy.py run -t <turn_host>:<turn_port> -u username -p password -s 127.0.0.1:9999
Turn server == <turn_host>:<turn_port>
Socks server listening <-- 127.0.0.1:9999
127.0.0.1:2330 - Connected
127.0.0.1:2330 - SOCKS established
127.0.0.1:2330 - Client disconnected
127.0.0.1:2335 - Connected
...
-
config socks proxy for your
http
,ssh
,redis
,mysql
, ... clients and enjoy 😉 -
enable flag
-d
or--debug
if you are curious
docs
this work is heavily inspired from the awesome disclosure below
qa
what is turn
?
then, what is stun
?
where they are used ?
i mean where?
thats too much info, i just want to test this script