Note: The project is still a WIP, a license and proper versioning will be added soon.
loon allows you to make a local file accessible online.
The loon client generates one URL per resource, which points to an HTTP server, which in turn forwards any request back to the loon client through a websocket connection. It acts like a tunnel for HTTP traffic, but with a very minimal and lightweight implementation behind it, ideal to keep your client small and lean.
There are three main actors with loon:
Client – The client library is used on the device that wishes to share a resource. It connects to the server via a websocket connection and remains connected for the duration it wants to share these resources. Sharing a resource is as simple as registering it with the client and generating a URL - this process is instant. The URL can then be shared with a third party to access the resource. Uploading is done when the server receives a request at the generated URL, the request is forwarded to the client and then uploaded by the client through the websocket connection. The generated URL becomes invalid once the resource has been unregistered or the websocket connection has been closed.
Server – The server accepts both client websocket connections and requests to URLs that were generated by these clients. Its sole purpose is to provide a mechanism for clients to generate URLs that are accessible from the internet and to forward requests and responses between clients and third parties.
Third party – Any third party can make requests to generated URLs to access the resource that has been registered by a client.
The loon server in this repository
is meant to be put behind a reverse proxy and a cache.
The only caching mechanism that is provided by the implementation
is control over the max-age
value in a response's Cache-Control
header,
but the actual caching itself needs to be taken care of separately.
The used cache and/or reverse proxy must guarantee the following to prevent clients from being flooded with requests:
- Concurrent requests MUST lead to a single request to the client, whose response should then be cached and served.
- Any
Cache-Control
request header MUST be ignored, otherwise third parties can bypass the cache, e.g. by setting theno-cache
directive. When using a reverse proxy, this header should be deleted from all requests. If not done properly, the cache is effectively rendered obsolete from an attackers point of view. - Query parameters are not forwarded to a connected client, so they MUST not be part of the cache key. Setting a meaningless query parameter should not bypass the cache.
A deployment example can be found in deployments.
- System and protocol specification: api
- A well-tested server library written in Go: pkg/server
- A simple client library written in Go: pkg/client
- A CLI program to run the server and client: cmd/loon
- It makes use of the above server and client library
- A feature-complete, reference client library written in C++:
client
- Well-tested and has more features than the Go client library
- Dependencies: libhv or Qt for websocket communication + OpenSSL + Protobuf
- Compatible with C++17 or newer
- Uses the CMake build system
- Small footprint: 2.899 lines for commit
6d44d2
(excluding websocket abstraction and tests) - Documentation: https://ungive.github.io/loon/client
- A ready to use server Docker image: build/package/Dockerfile
- A server deployment example with Docker Compose and Caddy: deployments
- An example server configuration to quickly get started: examples/server/config.yaml
Warning!
The public API of these libraries and programs is not yet stable and might change in the future. Wait for the first stable release, if a stable API is required.
To expose the server to your local network,
change the value after -addr
to :8080
and edit base_url
in the used example configuration
to contain your computer's IP address and the configured port,
e.g. http://192.168.178.2:8080
.
git clone https://github.com/ungive/loon
cd ./loon
go install ./cmd/loon
loon server -addr localhost:8080 -config examples/server/config.yaml
Build the image yourself:
docker build -t loon -f build/package/Dockerfile .
docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd)/examples/server/config.yaml:/app/config.yaml -p 8080:80 ungive/loon:latest
loon client -server http://localhost:8080 assets/loon-small.png
Or use a pre-built image from the GitHub Container Registry (not updated regularly yet):
docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd)/examples/server/config.yaml:/app/config.yaml -p 8080:80 ghcr.io/ungive/loon:latest
loon client -server http://localhost:8080 assets/loon-small.png
loon client -server http://192.168.178.43:8080 assets/loon-small.png assets/loon-full.png
Example output:
assets/loon-small.png: http://localhost:8080/BnRWzVodwVmY11V7MXQ-Mw/f7AapwFxVSwlHgiTungSpqFNkb_jAdkhvGVGaNeoWJc/loon-small.png
Open the URL in a browser and it should show the file's contents.
For a docker compose deployment example, see deployments
.
Features:
- Uses Caddy server (similar to nginx)
- Client responses are cached (using Souin cache)
- Prometheus and Grafana integration for metrics
- The websocket endpoint is authenticated, so only trusted clients can connect to the server
- Uses a self-signed certificate for websocket connections, so clients can authenticate the server
- Generated URLs are exposed via HTTPS with a certificate from a trusted CA (thanks to Caddy), so traffic is encrypted everywhere
To better understand the aim of this software and what problem it tries to solve, read the following problem statement:
You want a local file on your computer to be publicly accessible from the internet by generating a simple HTTP(S) URL for it, which points to a well-known server that acts as the middleman for file transfers. Files should only be uploaded when they are actually requested via that URL and they should not be stored on the server indefinitely.
This should be possible without:
- exposing your local computer to the internet,
- having to start an HTTP server and binding to a port on the local device,
- having to use sophisticated tunneling software, which does more than you actually want it to,
- or using some kind of uploading service or cloud provider.
At the same time you want to have guaranteed protection from abuse:
- multiple requests to the same generated URL should use an optionally cached response on the server, so that you only have to upload your file once, within a given period of time.
- simultaneous requests to the same URL should only require you to upload once, not multiple times.
- requests to invalid URLs (not generated by you) should be ignored by the server.
File contents do not need to be end-to-end encrypted, it is okay for any third party to see what it is in the file, including the intermediate server and anyone in possession of a generated URL.
The proposed solution is a server that acts as a middleman, which accepts requests to a well-known HTTPS endpoint and forwards them to a client through a websocket connection. The client then sends the image data back through that connection, which is then sent to whoever made the request.
The protocol is described in full detail in api/specification.md.
This software was primarily designed for the use case of
hosting an image online, that is only available locally,
for a temporary amount of time,
so that the image can be used within a Discord activity status
(also known as Discord Rich Presence),
by supplying the generated HTTPS URL to the Discord Game SDK,
as the largeImageKey
or smallImageKey
.
Discord requires the image shown in a status to either be one of a handful of previously uploaded images, which is insufficient for this use case, or a link to an image that is available via HTTPS. Since the image is only available locally, it must be uploaded to a server or a server on the client computer must be exposed to the internet. The latter was not an option, so a solution was needed to be able to temporarily upload images, but with the added benfit that:
- images are not stored indefinitely (like with an image uploading service)
- the image is only uploaded anywhere when it is actually needed (sometimes a Discord status is never actually viewed by anybody)
- the client merely has to connect to a websocket server and adhere to a very simple communication protocol
This software solves that problem, by allowing any client to generate URLs locally, set them as an image in the Discord status and supply the image contents for the case that the image is needed via a websocket connection.
Since files are not end-to-end encrypted the number of other use cases are limited, but it could certainly be used for other things as well. If you have any ideas or if you are using this software for another use case, feel free to open an issue to bring it to my attention!
Project is still a WIP, a license will be added soon!
Copyright (c) 2024 Jonas van den Berg