Snowflake
Pluggable Transport using WebRTC, inspired by Flashproxy.
Status
- Transport: Successfully connects using WebRTC.
- Rendezvous: HTTP signaling (with optional domain fronting) to the Broker
arranges peer-to-peer connections with multitude of volunteer "snowflakes".
- Client multiplexes remote snowflakes.
- Can browse using Tor over Snowflake.
- Reproducible build with TBB.
Table of Contents
Usage
cd client/
go get
go build
tor -f torrc
This should start the client plugin, bootstrapping to 100% using WebRTC.
Dependencies
Client:
Proxy:
More Info
Tor can plug in the Snowflake client via a correctly configured torrc
.
For example:
ClientTransportPlugin snowflake exec ./client \
-url https://snowflake-broker.azureedge.net/ \
-front ajax.aspnetcdn.com \
-ice stun:stun.l.google.com:19302
-max 3
The flags -url
and -front
allow the Snowflake client to speak to the Broker,
in order to get connected with some volunteer's browser proxy. -ice
is a
comma-separated list of ICE servers, which are required for NAT traversal.
For logging, run tail -F snowflake.log
in a second terminal.
You can modify the torrc
to use your own broker:
ClientTransportPlugin snowflake exec ./client --meek
Building
This describes how to build the in-browser snowflake. For the client, see Usage,
above.
The client will only work if there are browser snowflakes available.
To run your own:
cd proxy/
npm run build
Then, start a local http server in the proxy/build/
in any way you like.
For instance:
cd build/
python -m http.server
Then, open a browser tab to http://127.0.0.1:8000/embed.html
to view
the debug-console of the snowflake.,
So long as that tab is open, you are an ephemeral Tor bridge.
Test Environment
There is a Docker-based test environment at https://github.com/cohosh/snowbox.
FAQ
Q: How does it work?
In the Tor use-case:
- Volunteers visit websites which host the "snowflake" proxy. (just
like flashproxy)
- Tor clients automatically find available browser proxies via the Broker
(the domain fronted signaling channel).
- Tor client and browser proxy establish a WebRTC peer connection.
- Proxy connects to some relay.
- Tor occurs.
More detailed information about how clients, snowflake proxies, and the Broker
fit together on the way...
Q: What are the benefits of this PT compared with other PTs?
Snowflake combines the advantages of flashproxy and meek. Primarily:
-
It has the convenience of Meek, but can support magnitudes more
users with negligible CDN costs. (Domain fronting is only used for brief
signalling / NAT-piercing to setup the P2P WebRTC DataChannels which handle
the actual traffic.)
-
Arbitrarily high numbers of volunteer proxies are possible like in
flashproxy, but NATs are no longer a usability barrier - no need for
manual port forwarding!
Q: Why is this called Snowflake?
It utilizes the "ICE" negotiation via WebRTC, and also involves a great
abundance of ephemeral and short-lived (and special!) volunteer proxies...
Appendix
-- Testing with Standalone Proxy --
cd proxy-go
go build
./proxy-go
-- Testing directly via WebRTC Server --
See server-webrtc/README.md for information on connecting directly to a
WebRTC server transport plugin, bypassing the Broker and browser proxy.
More documentation on the way.
Also available at:
torproject.org/pluggable-transports/snowflake