mirror of
https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/anti-censorship/pluggable-transports/snowflake.git
synced 2025-10-13 20:11:19 -04:00
127 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
127 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
# snowflake-pt
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[](https://travis-ci.org/keroserene/snowflake)
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A Pluggable Transport using WebRTC
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### Status
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Successfully & automatically bootstraps with a WebRTC transport, using HTTP
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signaling (with optional domain fronting) speaking to a multitude of volunteer
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"snowflakes". Still lots of work to do.
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### Usage
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```
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cd client/
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go get
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go build
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tor -f torrc
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```
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This should start the client plugin, bootstrapping to 100% using WebRTC.
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#### Dependencies
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- [go-webrtc](https://github.com/keroserene/go-webrtc).
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- Go 1.5+
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#### More Info
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The client uses the following `torrc` options:
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```
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ClientTransportPlugin snowflake exec ./client \
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--url https://snowflake-reg.appspot.com/ \
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--front www.google.com
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```
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Which allows it to speak to the Broker,
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get matched with a "snowflake" browser proxy,
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and negotiate a WebRTC PeerConnection.
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To see logs, do `tail -F snowflake.log` in a second terminal.
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You can modify the `torrc` to use your own broker,
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or remove the options entirely which will default to the old copy paste
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method (see `torrc-manual`):
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```
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ClientTransportPlugin snowflake exec ./client --meek
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```
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Also, it is possible to connect directly to the go-webrtc server plugin
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(skipping all the browser snowflake / broker stuff - see appendix)
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#### Building a Snowflake
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This will only work if there are any browser snowflakes running at all.
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To run your own, first make sure coffeescript is installed.
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Then, build with:
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```
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cd proxy/
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cake build
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```
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(Type `cake` by itself to see possible commands)
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Then, start a local http server in the `proxy/build/` in any way you like.
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For instance:
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```
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cd build/
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python -m http.server
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```
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Open a browser tab to `0.0.0.0:8000/snowflake.html`.
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TODO: Turn the snowflake proxy into a more deployable badge.
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### Appendix
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##### -- Testing directly via WebRTC Server --
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Using the server plugin uses an HTTP server that simulates the interaction
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that a client would have with a broker.
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Using the browser proxy (which will soon be the only way) requires copy and
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pasting between 3 terminals and a browser tab.
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Edit server/torrc and add "-http 127.0.0.1:8080" to the end of the
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ServerTransportPlugin line:
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```
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ServerTransportPlugin snowflake exec ./server -http 127.0.0.1:8080
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```
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```
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cd server/
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go build
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tor -f torrc
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```
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Edit client/torrc and add "-url http://127.0.0.1:8080" to the end of the
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ClientTransportPlugin line:
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```
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ClientTransportPlugin snowflake exec ./client -url http://127.0.0.1:8080/
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```
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##### -- Via Browser Proxy --
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Open up three terminals for the **client:**
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A: `tor -f torrc SOCKSPort auto`
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B: `cat > signal`
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C: `tail -F snowflake.log`
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Then, in the browser proxy:
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- Look for the offer in terminal C; copy and paste it into the browser.
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- Copy and paste the answer generated in the browser back to terminal B.
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- Once WebRTC successfully connects, the browser terminal should turn green.
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Shortly after, the tor client should bootstrap to 100%.
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More documentation on the way.
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Also available at:
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[torproject.org/pluggable-transports/snowflake](https://gitweb.torproject.org/pluggable-transports/snowflake.git/)
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