Skip to content

This is a fork of STUNTMAN by john selbie, a STUN server compliant with the RFCs 5389, 5769, 5780 and 3489. The fork adds cmake support and works without boost.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

csteuer/stunserver

 
 

Repository files navigation

STUNTMAN - An open source STUN server

Version 1.2.16
April 7, 2020

About the fork

This is a fork of stunserver from John Selbie with the following changes:

  • Added CMake support.
  • Added android support (requires API level >= 24)
  • Boost is optional (when building with CMake).
    • The CRC 32 implementation of boost has been replaced with a modified version of Simple CRC32 by Björn Samuelsson.
    • Boost smart pointers have been replaced with C++11 smart pointers.
  • No OpenSSL dependency
  • The way that headers are included has been changed so that its easier to reuse the library components of stuntman.
  • clang-format has been used to format the changed source files. Although I have tried to create a formatting configuration close to the original style there are some white space changes.
  • The README has been converted into a markdown file and is no longer formatted with the custom pretty printer.
  • Some other minor changes on the documentation resource generation and usage.

To build with CMake install OpenSSL (see below) and run:

mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
cmake --build .

Optional Boost

Boost is only required if the CMake option with_configfile_support is set to ON. If the option is set to OFF (which is the default) the server application can not be configured with a JSON file (command line options are still possible).

Why this fork

The changes make it easier to use STUNTMAN as a library in other projects. E.g. with CMake >= 3.11:

include(FetchContent)

FetchContent_Declare(
  stuntman
  GIT_REPOSITORY [email protected]:csteuer/stunserver.git
  GIT_TAG        origin/master
)

FetchContent_MakeAvailable(stuntman)

Features:

  • Compliant with the latest RFCs including 5389, 5769, and 5780. Also includes backwards compatibility for RFC 3489.

  • Supports both UDP and TCP on both IPv4 and IPv6.

  • Client test app provided.

  • Stun server can operate in "full" mode as well as "basic" mode. Basic mode configures the server to listen on one port and respond to STUN binding requests. Full mode configures the service to listen on two different IP address interfaces (if available) and provide NAT behaviour and filtering detection support for clients.

  • Support for running a full mode STUN service on an Amazon EC2 instance. Run "stunserver --help" for visit www.stunprotocol.org on how to configure this mode.

  • Open source Apache license. See LICENSE file fore more details.

Known issues:

  • TLS mode has yet to be implemented.

  • Server does not honour the stun padding attribute. If someone really wants this support, let me know and I will consider adding it.

  • By default, the stun server operates in an open mode without performing authentication. All the code for authentication, challenge-response, message hashing, and message integrity attributes are fully coded. HMAC/SHA1/MD5 hashing code for generating and validating the message integrity attribute has been implemented and tested. However, the code for validating a user name or looking up a password is outside the scope of this release. Instead, hooks are provided for implementers to write their own code to validate a user name, fetch a password, and allow/deny a request. Details of writing your own authentication provider code are described in the file server/sampleauthprovider.h.

  • Dependency checking is not implemented in the Makefile. So if you need to recompile, I recommend make clean from the root to precede any subsequent make call.

  • If you run an instance of stunserver locally, you may observe that stunclient localhost may not successfully work. This is because the server is not listening on the loop-back adapter when running in full mode. The workaround is to specify the actual IP address that the server is listening on. Type ifconfig to discover your IP address (e.g. 10.11.12.13) followed by stunclient 10.11.12.13

Testing:

  • Fedora 15 with gcc/g++ 4.6.0
  • Fedora 17 with gcc/g++ 4.72
  • Ubuntu 11 with gcc/g++ 4.5.2
  • Ubuntu 12 with gcc/g++ 4.6.3
  • Ubuntu 12 with clang/clang++ 3.0
  • Amazon AWS with gcc/g++ 4.4
  • MacOS with XCode 7 and command line tools
  • FreeBSD 9.0 with gcc/g++ 4.2.1
  • Solaris 11 with gcc/g++ 4.5.2

Parsing code has been fuzz tested with zzuf

Prerequisites before compiling and running.

The short summary is that you need a C++ compiler (g++ preferred or clang++), GNU make, Boost header files, and the OpenSSL development files in order to compile the code. Below are the set of package installer commands that you can type from the command line to get the tools and libraries you need.

Debian/Ubuntu/Mint

sudo apt-get install g++
sudo apt-get install make
sudo apt-get install libboost-dev # For Boost
sudo apt-get install libssl-dev # For OpenSSL

RedHat/Fedora and EC2 Amazon Linux AMI

sudo yum groupinstall "Development Tools" # For g++, make, et. al.
sudo yum install boost-devel # For Boost
sudo yum install openssl-devel # For OpenSSL

Solaris and Mac

OpenSSL is already installed on Solaris and is not needed on Mac.

Install Boost locally as per instructions below, then uncomment and edit the top line of the common.inc file.

Manual Boost install

The compiled Boost runtime is not necessary. Just obtaining and unpacking the Boost source code distribution from www.boost.org will suffice. If you do not have the administrative privileges to install the Boost distribution into a standard system include path, you may uncomment and edit the top line of the common.inc file for the BOOST_INCLUDE variable. The common.inc file is in the same folder as this README.md file.

Manual OpenSSL install

You can obtain the OpenSSL development files and runtime from www.openssl.org. On most systems with development tools already installed, OpenSSL include files are already installed in the standard include path. If this is not the case, you can uncomment and edit the common.inc file to have the OPENSSL_INCLUDE variable defined.

Other prerequisites

pthreads and perl. I've never come across a system where this wasn't already pre-installed.

Compiling and running

Got Boost and OpenSSL taken care of as described above? Good. Just type make (or gmake on some systems). There will be three resulting binaries in the root of the source code package produced.

stuntestcode - This is the unit test code. I highly recommend you run this program first. When run, you'll see a series of lines being printed in regards to different code paths being tested. If you see any line that ends in "FAIL", we likely have a bug. Please contact me immediately if you see this.

stunserver - this is the server binary. Run ./stunserver --help for details on running this program. Running this program without any command line arguments defaults to listening on port 3478 on all adapters.

stunclient - this is the client test binary. Run ./stunclient --help for details on running this program. Example: ./stunclient stun.selbie.com

Firewall

Don't forget to configure your firewall to allow traffic for the local ports the stunserver will be listening on!

Feature roadmap (the features I want to implement in a subsequent release)

  • Clean-up Makefile and add "configure" and autotools support

  • Finish Windows port and able to run as a Windows service

  • Scale across more than one CPU (for multi-core and multi-proc machines). The threading code has already been written, just needs some finish work.

  • TLS support

Docker

  1. docker image build -t=stun-server-image .
  2. docker container run -d -p 3478:3478/tcp -p 3478:3478/udp --name=stun-container stun-server-image

Contact the author

John Selbie [email protected]

Please note that this is not the original version created by John Selbie.

About

This is a fork of STUNTMAN by john selbie, a STUN server compliant with the RFCs 5389, 5769, 5780 and 3489. The fork adds cmake support and works without boost.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • C++ 87.1%
  • C 7.1%
  • Roff 2.7%
  • CMake 1.5%
  • Makefile 0.9%
  • Batchfile 0.2%
  • Other 0.5%