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https://github.com/UWNetworksLab/uProxy-p2p
Internet without borders
https://github.com/UWNetworksLab/uProxy-p2p
browser-extension peer-to-peer proxy-server university-of-washington webrtc
Last synced: about 2 months ago
JSON representation
Internet without borders
- Host: GitHub
- URL: https://github.com/UWNetworksLab/uProxy-p2p
- Owner: UWNetworksLab
- License: apache-2.0
- Created: 2014-04-07T20:34:40.000Z (over 10 years ago)
- Default Branch: master
- Last Pushed: 2022-12-06T21:00:42.000Z (about 2 years ago)
- Last Synced: 2024-04-14T13:15:29.827Z (8 months ago)
- Topics: browser-extension, peer-to-peer, proxy-server, university-of-washington, webrtc
- Language: TypeScript
- Homepage: https://www.uproxy.org/
- Size: 21.9 MB
- Stars: 857
- Watchers: 108
- Forks: 180
- Open Issues: 89
-
Metadata Files:
- Readme: README.md
- Contributing: CONTRIBUTING.md
- License: LICENSE.md
Awesome Lists containing this project
- awesome-webrtc - uProxy - Browser extension that lets users share their internet connection. (Projects / Tool)
- awesome-hacking-lists - UWNetworksLab/uProxy-p2p - Internet without borders (TypeScript)
README
# uProxy
[uProxy](https://www.uproxy.org) is a browser extension that lets users share their internet connection.
## Status
[![Slack Status](https://uproxy-slack.herokuapp.com/badge.svg)](https://uproxy-slack.herokuapp.com/)
[![Travis Status](https://travis-ci.org/uProxy/uproxy.svg?branch=dev)](https://travis-ci.org/uProxy/uproxy)Please read the [uProxy Coding Guide](https://docs.google.com/document/d/12RfgwSLnEm-X5Knj1xFVGpp-MH7BdWjuzzo_g7xabro/edit) to learn more about contributing to uProxy. For a high level technical overview of uProxy, see the [uProxy Design Doc](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1t_30vX7RcrEGuWwcg0Jub-HiNI0Ko3kBOyqXgrQN3Kw/edit#).
## Tools
uProxy is built using the following tools:
- [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com/) to write the tasks that build uProxy
- [TypeScript](http://www.typescriptlang.org/) as the primary language we code in; this compiles to JavaScript. It gives us type-checking and has some syntax improvements on JS, while letting us incrementally migrate and easily include external JS packages and frameworks.
- [Jasmine](http://jasmine.github.io/) for testing
- [Polymer](http://www.polymer-project.org/) for UI
- [Travis](https://travis-ci.org/) for continuous integrationTo manage dependencies we use:
- [npm](https://www.npmjs.org/) to install node modules that we use for our build process. (Specified in `package.json`)
- [Bower](http://bower.io) to install libraries that we use in the UI
(specified in `bower.json`) including Polymer.## Build
### Prerequisites
* [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install). If you have npm, you can install with `npm install -g --production yarn`.
* [grunt-cli](https://www.npmjs.com/package/grunt-cli) (once you've installed NPM, simply execute `yarn global add --prod grunt-cli`)### Building
First, to install required NPMs and configure the `build/` directory for TypeScript compilation, execute:
```bash
yarn
```Then, to compile the TypeScript code and build uProxy and all of the demo apps, execute:
```bash
grunt
```Having problems? To clean up from a partial, broken, or extremely out-dated build, try executing this command before repeating the above steps:
```bash
yarn run clean
```### IDE
[Visual Studio Code](https://code.visualstudio.com/) supports TypeScript compilation, search, and refactoring out of the box - just point it at the directory containing your uProxy clone.
## Run
### uProxy
#### Chrome
These are the steps to try uProxy in the Chrome browser.
- In Chrome, go to `chrome://extensions`, make sure 'Developer mode' is enabled
- Click 'Load unpacked extension...' and select `build/src/chrome/app`
- Click 'Load unpacked extension...' and select `build/src/chrome/extension`You need both the uProxy Chrome App and the uProxy Extension.
You can use `grunt build_chrome` from the root directory of the repository to re-compile just Chrome components.
#### Firefox
These are the steps to try uProxy in the Firefox browser.
- To run the add-on you need to have the Firefox add-on SDK installed.
Instructions can be found here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/Add-ons/SDK/Tutorials/Installation
- A quick way to get started is to download/extract the zip mentioned in "Prerequisites"- Run `cd build/src/firefox`
- Run `cfx run` and Firefox should launch with the uProxy add-on installed
You can use `grunt build_firefox` from the root directory of the repository to compile just Firefox comonents.
### Demo apps
These can be found at `build/src/samples/`. They are a mix of web sites, browser extensions (Chrome and Firefox), and Node.js apps.
To run web apps:
* start a webserver, e.g. `python -m SimpleHTTPServer`
* open the relevant HTML file in your browser, e.g. http://localhost:8000/build/src/samples/simple-freedom-chat/main.html.To run Chrome apps:
- open `chrome://extensions`, enable check Developer Mode, and load the unpacked extension from the relevant directory, e.g. `build/src/samples/simple-socks-chromeapp/`.To run Firefox add-ons:
- install [jpm](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/Add-ons/SDK/Tools/jpm) via NPM, e.g. `yarn install jpm -g`, `cd` to the relevant directory, e.g. `build/src/samples/simple-socks-firefoxapp/`, and execute ``jpm run -b `which firefox` ``.To run Node.js apps:
- Directly run `node` with the entry point, e.g. `node build/src/samples/zork-node/index.js`**Note: until freedom-for-node supports core.rtcpeerconnection, this sample will not work**
More on the demo apps themselves:
* **simple-freedom-chat** is a WebRTC-powered chat client, with both peers on the same page. This is the simplest possible demo `src/peerconnection`.
* **copypaste-freedom-chat** is the simplest possible, distributed, `src/peerconnection` demo in which text boxes
act as the signalling channel between two peers. Messages can be exchanged by
email, IM, shared doc, etc.
* **echo-server** starts a TCP echo server on port 9998. Run `telnet 127.0.0.1 9998` and then
type some stuff to verify that echo server echoes what you send it. Press ctrl-D to have the echo server terminate the connection or press `ctrl-]` then type `quit` to exit telnet.
* **Simple SOCKS** is the simplest possible, single-page, demo of the SOCKS proxy (`socks-to-rtc` and
`rtc-to-net` directories). This command may be used to test the proxy: `curl -x socks5h://localhost:9999 www.example.com` (`-h` indicates that DNS requests are made through the proxy too)
* **Zork** is a distributed SOCKS proxy with a telnet-based signalling channel, intended for use with [our Docker-based integration testing](https://github.com/uProxy/uproxy-docker). Try connecting to Zork with `telnet localhost 9000`.
* **uProbe** guess-timates your NAT type.
* **simple-churn-chat** is just like simple-freedom-chat, except WebRTC traffic between the two peers is obfuscated. Wireshark may be used to verify that the traffic is obfuscated; the endpoints in use - along with a lot of debugging information - may be determined by examining the Javascript console.
* **copypaste-freedom-chat** is just like copypaste-fredom-chat, except WebRTC traffic between the two peers is obfuscated.### Development and re-building uProxy
uProxy uses the Grunt build system for its build tasks. Here is a list
of uProxy's Grunt commands:* `build` - Builds everything, making stuff in the `build` directory (and runs tests).
* `build_chrome` - Build Chrome app and extension
* `build_chrome_app` - Build just Chrome app
* `build_chrome_ext` - Build just Chrome extension
* `build_firefox` - Build just Firefox
* `dist` - Generates distribution files, including the Firefox xpi
* `clean` - Cleans up
* `test` - Run unit tests
* `integration_test` - Run integration tests
* `everything` - 'build', 'test' and then 'integration_test'The easiest way to stay current is to pull changes, run `grunt build` to build
your distribution, and re-run as you make changes to the files.Before submitting any changes to the repository, make sure to run `grunt test`
to make sure it passes all unit tests. Failing tests are enough to immediately
reject submissions. :)## uProxy for Mobile
The development for mobile platforms uses the Cordova Chrome Apps (CCA) tool, also known as the [Chrome Apps for Mobile Toolchain](https://github.com/MobileChromeApps/mobile-chrome-apps). You can find the platform-specific information below:
* [Android Development](https://github.com/uProxy/uproxy/wiki/Android-Development)
## Layout of files
Configuration and setup files
* `Gruntfile.js` a file that specifies common tasks, e.g. how to build and package uProxy.
* `bower.json` specifies dependent libraries from Bower.
* `package.json` specifies dependent libraries from NPM.
* `.gitignore` what git should ignore
* `.bowerrc` tells bower where to put files
* `.travis.yml` Travis auto-testing
* `tools` directory contains some typescript and javascript to help Grunt.
* `third_party/tsd.json` specifies the typescript definitions to useSource code
* `src` holds all source code; no compiled files
* `src/generic_ui` generic user interface code
* `src/generic_core` generic uproxy core-functionality code
* `src/chrome/app` code specific to the chrome app
* `src/chrome/extension` code specific to the chrome extension
* `src/firefox` code specific to firefox
* `third_party` holds external libraries we depend on that are copied into this repository
* `node_modules` dynamically generated npm module dependencies
* `scraps` temporary holding for sharing scraps of codeDynamically created directories (`grunt clean` should remove them)
* `build` created by grunt tasks; holds the built code, but none of the code that was compiled.
* `build/dist` created by grunt tasks; holds final distribution versions
* `.grunt` holds grunt cache stuff
* `.tscache` holds typescript cache stuff