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πŸ¦™ Rama (γƒ©γƒž) is a modular service framework for the πŸ¦€ Rust language to move and transform your network packets. The reasons behind the creation of rama can be read in the "Why Rama" chapter.

Rama is async-first using Tokio as its only Async Runtime. Please refer to the examples found in the /examples dir to get inspired on how you can use it for your purposes.

The primary focus of Rama is to aid you in your development of proxies:

πŸ’‘ Check out the "Intro to Proxies" chapters in the Rama book to learn more about the different kind of proxies. It might help in case you are new to developing proxies.

The Distortion proxies support comes with User-Agent (UA) emulation capabilities. The emulations are made possible by patterns and data extracted using rama-fp. The service is publicly exposed at https://fp.ramaproxy.org, made possible by our sponsor host https://fly.io/.

πŸ” https://echo.ramaproxy.org/ is another service publicly exposed. In contrast to the Fingerprinting Service it is aimed at developers and allows you to send any http request you wish in order to get an insight on the Tls Info and Http Request Info the server receives from you when making that request.

curl -XPOST 'https://echo.ramaproxy.org/foo?bar=baz' \
  -H 'x-magic: 42' --data 'whatever forever'

Feel free to make use of while crafting distorted http requests, but please do so with moderation. In case you have ideas on how to improve the service, please let us know by opening an issue.

BrowserStack sponsors Rama by providing automated cross-platform browser testing on real devices, which uses the public fingerprinting service to aid in automated fingerprint collection on both the Http and Tls layers. By design we do not consider Tcp and Udp fingerprinting.

Next to proxies, Rama can also be used to develop Web Services and Http Clients.

There is no crates.io release of rama yet. If you already want to start using rama you can do so by referring to it in your Cargo.toml as follows:

rama = { git = "https://github.com/plabayo/rama" }

πŸ“– Rama's full documentation, references and background material can be found in the form of the "rama book" at https://ramaproxy.org/book.

πŸ’¬ Come join us at Discord on the #rama public channel. To ask questions, discuss ideas and ask how rama may be useful for you.

🏒 | Proxy Examples

  • /examples/tls_termination.rs: Spawns a mini handmade http server, as well as a TLS termination proxy, forwarding the plain text stream to the first.
  • /examples/tls_termination.rs: Spawns a mini handmade http server, as well as a TLS termination proxy, forwarding the plain text stream to the first.
  • /examples/mtls_tunnel_and_service.rs: Example of how to do mTls (manual Tls, where the client also needs a certificate) using rama, as well as how one might use this concept to provide a tunnel service build with these concepts;
  • /examples/http_connect_proxy.rs: Spawns a minimal http proxy which accepts http/1.1 and h2 connections alike, and proxies them to the target host.

🌐 | Web Services

Developing proxies are the primary focus of Rama (γƒ©γƒž). It can however also be used to develop web services to serve web pages, Http API's and static content. This comes with many of the same benefits that you get when developing proxies using Rama:

  • Use Async Method Traits;
  • Reuse modular Tower-like middleware using extensions as well as strongly typed state;
  • Have the ability to be in full control of your web stack from Transport Layer (Tcp, Udp), through Tls and Http;
  • If all you care about is the Http layer then that is fine to.
  • Be able to trust that your incoming Application Http data has not been modified (e.g. Http header casing and order is preserved);
  • Easily develop your service at a Request layer and High level functions alike, choices are yours and can be combined.

Examples of the kind of web services you might build with rama in function of your proxy service:

  • a k8s health service (/examples/http_k8s_health.rs);
  • a metric exposure service;
  • a minimal api service (e.g. to expose device profiles or certificates);
  • a graphical interface / control panel;

πŸ“– Learn more about developing web services in the Rama book: https://ramaproxy.org/book/web_servers.html.

🌐 | Web Service Examples

Here are some low level web service examples without fancy features:

  • /examples/http_listener_hello.rs: is the most basic example on how to provide a root service with no needs for endpoints or anything else (e.g. good enough for some use cases related to health services or metrics exposures);
  • /examples/http_service_hello.rs: is an example similar to the previous example but shows how you can also operate on the underlying transport (TCP) layer, prior to passing it to your http service;

There's also a premade webservice that can be used as the health service for your proxy k8s workloads:

The following are examples that use the high level concepts of Request/State extractors and IntoResponse converters, that you'll recognise from axum, just as available for rama services:

For a production-like example of a web service you can also read the rama-fp source code. This is the webservice behind the Rama fingerprinting service, which is used by the maintainers of πŸ¦™ Rama (γƒ©γƒž) to generate the UA emulation data for the Http and TLS layers. It is not meant to fingerprint humans or users. Instead it is meant to help automated processes look like a human.

πŸ’‘ This example showcases how you can make use of the match_service macro to create a Box-free service router. Another example of this approach can be seen in the http_service_match.rs example.

πŸ§‘β€πŸ’» | Http Clients

In The rama book you can read and learn that a big pilar of Rama's architecture is build on top of the Service concept. A Service takes as input a user-defined State (e.g. containing your database Pool) and a Request, and uses it to serve either a Response or Error. Such a Service can produce the response "directly" (also called ☘️ Leaf services) or instead pass the request and state to an inner Service which it wraps around (so called πŸ” Middlewares).

It's a powerful concept, originally introduced to Rust by the Tower ecosystem and allows you build complex stacks specialised to your needs in a modular and easy manner. Even cooler is that this works for both clients and servers alike.

Rama provides an HttpClient which sends your Http Request over the network and returns the Response if it receives and read one or an Error otherwise. Combined with the many Layers (middleware) that Rama provides and perhaps also some developed by you it is possible to create a powerful Http client suited to your needs.

As a πŸ’ cherry on the cake you can import the HttpClientExt trait in your Rust module to be able to use your Http Client Service stack using a high level API to build and send requests with ease.

πŸ§‘β€πŸ’» | Http Client Example

πŸ’‘ The full "high levelexample can be found at /examples/http_high_level_client.rs.

use rama::http::client::HttpClientExt;

let client = ServiceBuilder::new()
    .layer(TraceLayer::new_for_http())
    .layer(DecompressionLayer::new())
    .layer(
        AddAuthorizationLayer::basic("john", "123")
            .as_sensitive(true)
            .if_not_present(),
    )
    .layer(RetryLayer::new(
        ManagedPolicy::default().with_backoff(ExponentialBackoff::default()),
    ))
    .service(HttpClient::new());

#[derive(Debug, Deserialize)]
struct Info {
    name: String,
    example: String,
    magic: u64,
}

let info: Info = client
    .get("http://example.com/info")
    .header("x-magic", "42")
    .typed_header(Accept::json())
    .send(Context::default())
    .await
    .unwrap()
    .try_into_json()
    .await
    .unwrap();

⛨ | Safety

This crate uses #![forbid(unsafe_code)] to ensure everything is implemented in 100% safe Rust.

πŸ¦€ | Compatibility

Rama (γƒ©γƒž) is developed mostly on MacOS M-Series machines and run in production on a variety of Linux systems. Windows support is not officially guaranteed, but is tested using Github Actions with success.

platform tested test platform
MacOS βœ… M2 (developer laptop) and macos-12 Intel (GitHub Action)
Windows βœ… Windows 2022 (GitHub Action)
Linux βœ… Ubuntu 22.04 (GitHub Action)

Please open a ticket in case you have compatibility issues for your setup/platform. Our goal is not to support all possible platformns in the world, but we do want to support as many as we reasonably can.

Minimum supported Rust version

Rama's MSRV is 1.75.

Using GitHub Actions we also test if rama on that version still works on the stable and beta versions of rust as well.

🧭 | Roadmap

Please refer to https://github.com/plabayo/rama/milestones to know what's on the roadmap. Is there something not on the roadmap for the next version that you would really like? Please create a feature request to request it and become a sponsor if you can.

πŸ’Ό | License

This project is dual-licensed under both the MIT license and Apache 2.0 License.

πŸ‘‹ | Contributing

🎈 Thanks for your help improving the project! We are so happy to have you! We have a contributing guide to help you get involved in the rama project.

Contributions often come from people who already know what they want, be it a fix for a bug they encountered, or a feature that they are missing. Please do always make a ticket if one doesn't exist already.

It's possible however that you do not yet know what specifically to contribute, and yet want to help out. For that we thank you. You can take a look at the open issues, and in particular:

  • good first issue: issues that are good for those new to the rama codebase;
  • easy: issues that are seen as easy;
  • mentor available: issues for which we offer mentorship;
  • low prio: low prio issues that have no immediate pressure to be finished quick, great in case you want to help out but can only do with limited time to spare;

In general, any issue not assigned already is free to be picked up by anyone else. Please do communicate in the ticket if you are planning to pick it up, as to avoid multiple people trying to solve the same one.

Should you want to contribure this project but you do not yet know how to program in Rust, you could start learning Rust with as goal to contribute as soon as possible to rama by using "the Rust 101 Learning Guide" as your study companion. Glen can also be hired as a mentor or teacher to give you paid 1-on-1 lessons and other similar consultancy services. You can find his contact details at https://www.glendc.com/.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in rama by you, shall be licensed as both MIT and Apache 2.0, without any additional terms or conditions.

Acknowledgements

Special thanks goes to all involved in developing, maintaining and supporting the Rust programming language, the Tokio ecosystem and all other crates that we depend upon. This also includes Hyper and its ecosystem as without those projects Rama would not be. The core http module of rama is a specialised fork of hyper and use the underlying h2 and h3 crates as dependencies.

Extra credits also go to Axum, from which ideas and code were copied as its a project very much in line with the kind of software we want Rama to be, but for a different purpose. Our hats also go off to Tower, its inventors and all the people and creatures that help make it be every day. The service concept is derived from Tower and many of our layers are a Tower fork, adapted where required or desired.

An extra big shoutout goes also to the online communities surrounding and part of these ecosystems. They are a great place to hangout and always friendly and helpful. Thanks.

πŸ’– | Sponsors

Rama is completely free, open-source software which needs lots of effort and time to develop and maintain.

Support this project by becoming a sponsor. One time payments are accepted at GitHub as well as at "Buy me a Coffee".

One-time and monthly financial contributions are also possible via Paypal, should you feel more at ease with that at "Paypal Donations".

Sponsors help us continue to maintain and improve rama, as well as other Free and Open Source (FOSS) technology. It also helps us to create educational content such as https://github.com/plabayo/learn-rust-101, and other open source libraries such as https://github.com/plabayo/tower-async.

Next to the many unpaid developer hours we put in a project such as rama, we also have plenty of costs, such as services ranging from hosting to Docker, but also tooling for developers and automated processing. All these costs money.

Sponsors receive perks and depending on your regular contribution it also allows you to rely on us for support and consulting.

Finally, you can also support us by shopping Plabayo <3 γƒ©γƒž merchandise πŸ›οΈ at https://plabayo.threadless.com/.

Plabayo's Store With Rama Merchandise

Rama Sponsors

We would like to extend our thanks to the following sponsors for funding Rama (γƒ©γƒž) development. If you are interested in becoming a sponsor, you can do so by becoming a sponsor. One time payments are accepted at GitHub as well as at "Buy me a Coffee". One-time and monthly financial contributions are also possible via Paypal, should you feel more at ease with that at "Paypal Donations".

If you wish to financially support us through other means you can best start a conversation with us by sending an email to glen@plabayo.tech.

Premium Partners

Rama (γƒ©γƒž) is bundled with Http/Tls emulation data, gathered for all major platforms and browsers using real devices by BrowserStack. It does this automatically every day by using our public Fingerprinting service which is hosted together with a database on fly.io.

We are grateful to both sponsors for sponsering us these cloud resources.

Professional Services

🀝 Enterprise support, software customisations, integrations, professional support, consultancy and training are available upon request by sending an email to glen@plabayo.tech.

These type of contracts are another way for you to be able to support the project and at the same time get serviced for your own needs and purposes.

Rama is licensed as both MIT and Apache 2.0, as such you are free to use and modify the source code for any purposes, including commercial goals. That said, we would appreciate it if you would consider becoming a sponsor of the project if you do end up using it for commcercial reasons.

Contribute to Open Source

Part of the money we receive from sponsors is used to contribute to other projects that we depend upon. Plabayo sponsors the following organisations and individuals building and maintaining open source software that rama depends upon:

name projects
πŸ’Œ Tokio (Tokio Project and Ecosystem)
πŸ’Œ Ratatui (TUI framework)

Past Contributions

name projects
πŸ’Œ Ulixee (Browser Profile Data)
πŸ’Œ Sean McArthur (Hyper and Tokio)

🌱 | Alternatives

While there are a handful of proxies written in Rust, there are only two other Rust frameworks specifically made for proxy purposes. All other proxy codebases are single purpose code bases, some even just for learning purposes. Or are actually generic http/web libraries/frameworks that facilitate proxy features as an extra.

Cloudflare has been working on a proxy service framework, named pingora, since a couple of years already, and on the 28th of February of 2024 they also open sourced it.

Rama is not for everyone, but we sure hope it is right for you. If not, consider giving pingora a try, it might very well be the next best thing for you.

Secondly, ByteDance has an open source proxy framework written in Rust to developer forward and reverse proxies alike, named g3proxy.

❓| FAQ

Available at https://ramaproxy.org/book/faq.html.

⭐ | Stargazers

Star History Chart

original (OG) rama logo