Files
noVNC/utils/wsecho.py
Joel Martin f2538f337d wsproxy, wstelnet: wrap command, WS telnet client.
wswrapper:

    Getting the wswrapper.c LD_PRELOAD model working has turned out to
    involve too many dark corners of the glibc/POSIX file descriptor
    space. I realized that 95% of what I want can be accomplished by
    adding a "wrap command" mode to wsproxy.

    The code is still there for now, but consider it experimental at
    best. Minor fix to dup2 and add dup and dup3 logging.

wsproxy Wrap Command:

    In wsproxy wrap command mode, a command line is specified instead
    of a target address and port. wsproxy then uses a much simpler
    LD_PRELOAD library, rebind.so, to move intercept any bind() system
    calls made by the program. If the bind() call is for the wsproxy
    listen port number then the real bind() system call is issued for
    an alternate (free high) port on loopback/localhost.  wsproxy then
    forwards from the listen address/port to the moved port.

    The --wrap-mode argument takes three options that determine the
    behavior of wsproxy when the wrapped command returns an exit code
    (exit or daemonizing): ignore, exit, respawn.

    For example, this runs vncserver on turns port 5901 into
    a WebSockets port (rebind.so must be built first):

        ./utils/wsproxy.py --wrap-mode=ignore 5901 -- vncserver :1

    The vncserver command backgrounds itself so the wrap mode is set
    to "ignore" so that wsproxy keeps running even after it receives
    an exit code from vncserver.

wstelnet:

    To demonstrate the wrap command mode, I added WebSockets telnet
    client.

    For example, this runs telnetd (krb5-telnetd) on turns port 2023
    into a WebSockets port (using "respawn" mode since telnetd exits
    after each connection closes):

        sudo ./utils/wsproxy.py --wrap-mode=respawn 2023 -- telnetd -debug 2023

    Then the utils/wstelnet.html page can be used to connect to the
    telnetd server on port 2023. The telnet client includes VT100.js
    (from http://code.google.com/p/sshconsole) which handles the
    terminal emulation and rendering.

rebind:

    The rebind LD_PRELOAD library is used by wsproxy in wrap command
    mode to intercept bind() system calls and move the port to
    a different port on loopback/localhost. The rebind.so library can
    be built by running make in the utils directory.

    The rebind library can be used separately from wsproxy by setting
    the REBIND_OLD_PORT and REBIND_NEW_PORT environment variables
    prior to executing a command. For example:

        export export REBIND_PORT_OLD="23"
        export export REBIND_PORT_NEW="65023"
        LD_PRELOAD=./rebind.so telnetd -debug 23

    Alternately, the rebind script does the same thing:

        rebind 23 65023 telnetd -debug 23

Other changes/notes:

- wsproxy no longer daemonizes by default. Remove -f/--foreground
  option and add -D/--deamon option.

- When wsproxy is used to wrap a command in "respawn" mode, the
  command will not be respawn more often than 3 times within 10
  seconds.

- Move getKeysym routine out of Canvas object so that it can be called
  directly.
2011-01-12 13:15:11 -06:00

91 lines
2.8 KiB
Python
Executable File

#!/usr/bin/python
'''
A WebSocket server that echos back whatever it receives from the client.
Copyright 2010 Joel Martin
Licensed under LGPL version 3 (see docs/LICENSE.LGPL-3)
You can make a cert/key with openssl using:
openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -out self.pem -keyout self.pem
as taken from http://docs.python.org/dev/library/ssl.html#certificates
'''
import sys, socket, select
from websocket import WebSocketServer
class WebSocketEcho(WebSocketServer):
"""
WebSockets server that echo back whatever is received from the
client. All traffic to/from the client is base64
encoded/decoded.
"""
buffer_size = 8096
def new_client(self, client):
"""
Echo back whatever is received.
"""
cqueue = []
cpartial = ""
rlist = [client]
while True:
wlist = []
if cqueue: wlist.append(client)
ins, outs, excepts = select.select(rlist, wlist, [], 1)
if excepts: raise Exception("Socket exception")
if client in outs:
# Send queued target data to the client
dat = cqueue.pop(0)
sent = client.send(dat)
self.vmsg("Sent %s/%s bytes of frame: '%s'" % (
sent, len(dat), self.decode(dat)[0]))
if sent != len(dat):
# requeue the remaining data
cqueue.insert(0, dat[sent:])
if client in ins:
# Receive client data, decode it, and send it back
buf = client.recv(self.buffer_size)
if len(buf) == 0: raise self.EClose("Client closed")
if buf == '\xff\x00':
raise self.EClose("Client sent orderly close frame")
elif buf[-1] == '\xff':
if cpartial:
# Prepend saved partial and decode frame(s)
frames = self.decode(cpartial + buf)
cpartial = ""
else:
# decode frame(s)
frames = self.decode(buf)
for frame in frames:
self.vmsg("Received frame: %s" % repr(frame))
cqueue.append(self.encode(frame))
else:
# Save off partial WebSockets frame
self.vmsg("Received partial frame")
cpartial = cpartial + buf
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
if len(sys.argv) < 1: raise
listen_port = int(sys.argv[1])
except:
print "Usage: %s <listen_port>" % sys.argv[0]
sys.exit(1)
server = WebSocketEcho(
listen_port=listen_port,
verbose=True,
cert='self.pem',
web='.')
server.start_server()