the server component had a small bug, empty checking the wrong variable before building a list of allowed zones
when using a config without any Fqdns defined this would result in the server refusing the client access to tunnel anything if any zones where about to be used
tup proxies services on the local network to a remote gateway, all traffic between the remote server and the service on the local network is sent through a wireguard tunnel
think of tup as an open source and self-hosted alternative to ngrok and cloudflare tunnel
tupd (the server) can be found at: https://drive.proton.me/urls/GEJM1HT0DW#aOop4p7zxaPA
the tup client can be found at: https://drive.proton.me/urls/63SE9PW020#GFzZrprg9wjZ
I also noticed all file extensions were not inspectable directly in the drive (even though everything is only text files), I apologize for that, I believe transparancy is a very important key factor
I've complemented with .diff files generated with diff
from GNU diffutils, there are 'full' diff files for both tup and tupd (ending with _full.diff), and there is also a diff file for only the changes between tupd-0.5 and tupd-0.6 (tupd-0.6.diff)
the 'full' diff files can also be applied to an empty directory with GNU patch like this:
mkdir tupd-0.6
patch --directory=tupd-0.6/ --strip=1 < tupd-0.6_full.diff
Since my project is not uploaded by me to any git service many people didn't look on how it can be used so I want to give a few examples of the client, more explanations and examples can be found in the README.md and EXAMPLE.md of the client
Syntax: tup [-zone <zone>] [@][host]:[#]<port>
Examples:
tup :8080
this would proxy http://127.0.0.1:8080 onto a random subdomain on default zone, for example: https://xyz123.zone.domain.tld
tup 192.168.1.11:8080
this would proxy http://192.168.1.11:8080 onto a random subdomain on default zone
Syntax: tup -fqdn <domain> [@][host]:[#][@]<port>
Examples:
tup -fqdn sub.domain.tld :8080
this would proxy http://127.0.0.1:8080 directly onto https://sub.domain.tld
tup -fqdn sub.domain.tld 192.168.1.11:@8443
this would proxy https://192.168.1.11:8443 directly onto https://sub.domain.tld, skipping caddy and its tls termination on the server, same as a raw tcp proxy / sni proxy
Syntax: tup -udp|-tcp [rport:][@][host]:<port>
Examples:
tup -udp :27015
this would proxy udp://127.0.0.1:27015 onto a random UDP port on the server
tup -udp 27016:27015
this would proxy udp://127.0.0.1:27015 onto UDP port 27016 on the server
tup -udp 27016:192.168.1.11:27015
this would proxy udp://192.168.1.11:27015 onto UDP port 27016 on the server
tup -tcp :3306
this would proxy tcp://127.0.0.1:3306 onto a random TCP port on the server
I also want to clarify that the code is released with the Unlicense template, dedicating my software to the public domain
I just like to release it this way, I didn't have much reason or benefits to releasing it on a git service, hosted or my own
Indeed you are, but if you release it you probably want people to use it, otherwise why release at all? Going github/gitlab way just make that easier.
You are free to do what you want ofc, just my thoughts.
No problem, your thoughts are welcomed
I mainly developed it for myself, and sharing it if others want to do what ever they want to do with it, took many hours to just put together all the readmes and examples and cleaning up the code, I understand everyone wants me to release it on some git platform, but I didn't develop it using any cvs at all and don't plan to do that either