All header transformation code from h2mux has been consolidated in the connection package since it's used by both h2mux and http2 logic.
Exported headers used by proxying between edge and cloudflared so then can be shared by tunnel service on the edge.
Moved access-related headers to corresponding packages that have the code that sets/uses these headers.
Removed tunnel hostname tracking from h2mux since it wasn't used by anything. We will continue to set the tunnel hostname header from the edge for backward compatibilty, but it's no longer used by cloudflared.
Move bastion-related logic into carrier package, untangled dependencies between carrier, origin, and websocket packages.
To use cloudflared as a socks proxy, add an ingress on the server
side with your desired rules. Rules are matched in the order they
are added. If there are no rules, it is an implicit allow. If
there are rules, but no rule matches match, the connection is denied.
ingress:
- hostname: socks.example.com
service: socks-proxy
originRequest:
ipRules:
- prefix: 1.1.1.1/24
ports: [80, 443]
allow: true
- prefix: 0.0.0.0/0
allow: false
On the client, run using tcp mode:
cloudflared access tcp --hostname socks.example.com --url 127.0.0.1:8080
Set your socks proxy as 127.0.0.1:8080 and you will now be proxying
all connections to the remote machine.
added ingress.DefaultStreamHandler and a basic test for tcp stream proxy
moved websocket.Stream to ingress
cloudflared no longer picks tcpstream host from header
- extracted ResponseWriter from proxyConnection
- added bastion tests over websocket
- removed HTTPResp()
- added some docstrings
- Renamed some ingress clients as proxies
- renamed instances of client to proxy in connection and origin
- Stream no longer takes a context and logger.Service