The TutoProxy.Server application is an inbound server for tunneling clients and for tcp/udp end-clients. cmd arguments:
- <host>, server address, for example http://200.100.10.1:8088
- --tcp <tcp>, list of tcp ports to listen to, for example --tcp=80,81,443,8000-8100. Optional, if --udp option is present.
- --udp <udp>, list of udp ports to listen to, for example --udp=700-900,65500. Optional, if --tcp option is present.
- --clients <clients> optional list of allowed clients, e.g. --clients=Client1,Client2 if this parameter is omitted, then there is no check for connecting client ID
- --daemon optional, disable the terminal GUI
For example, start input traffic tunneling on 50 tcp/udp ports to 3 clients:
TutoProxy.Server http://200.100.10.1:8088 --tcp=3389,8071-8073,10000-10010,20000-20010 --udp=5000-5010,7000-7010 --clients=Client0Linux,ClientSecLinux,Client3Win
The TutoProxy.Client is an output tunneling client. cmd arguments:
- <server>, TutoProxy.Server server address, for example http://200.100.10.1:8088
- <sendto>, the IP of the recipient of the data, for example 127.0.0.1
- --id <id>, client ID, for example --id=Client1
- --tcp <tcp>, list of tcp ports, for example --tcp=80,81,443,8000-8100. Optional, if --udp option is present.
- --udp <udp>, list of udp ports, for example --udp=700-900,65500. Optional, if --tcp option is present.
- --daemon optional, disable the terminal GUI
For example, start output traffic tunneling on 5 tcp and 3 udp ports:
TutoProxy.Client http://200.100.10.1:8088 127.0.0.1 --tcp=8071,10000,20004-20006 --udp=7000-7002 --id=Client0Linux
Keep in mind that ports of different TutoProxy.Clients should not overlap, i.e. each client serves a unique set of sockets/ports.