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ZeroTier Pylon

Easily tunnel traffic to and from your LAN and ZeroTier Virtual Network using an SOCKS5 proxy (includes an optional TCP relay for use behind difficult NATs)

Build

Build

Currently you must build it and distribute it to your server manually. The build process will pull a submodule (which itself pulls submodules), build libzt there, and then link pylon against the resultant libzt.a static library. Requires clang, and cmake to build.

make

Docker

We have docker images available if you prefer.

reflect

docker run --init -p 9443:443 -p 19993:9993/udp zerotier/pylon:latest \
reflect

See below for configuring zerotier-one to use your reflect as a tcp-relay.

refract

docker run --init -e ZT_PYLON_SECRET_KEY=$(cat identity.secret) -e ZT_PYLON_WHITELISTED_PORT=4545 \
--net=host --cap-add NET_ADMIN \
zerotier/pylon refract 6ab565387a111111 --listen-addr 0.0.0.0 --listen-port 1080

See [Usage] for more info on the commands.

Usage

Pylon can be run as one of two personalities that can work alone or together depending on your needs:

Name What do Is this a ZeroTier Node?
pylon refract This bridges traffic to and from your LAN Yes
pylon reflect This relays traffic over TCP/443 No

In many cases a single refract instance is enough to bridge devices onto your ZeroTier network. However, if you're behind some tricky NAT you might need to set up a reflect instance on a machine with a static IP for your refract instance to use.

Set identity

Set environment variable to hold your ZeroTier secret identity:

export ZT_PYLON_SECRET_KEY=$(sudo cat identity.secret)

Specify an (optional) UDP port for ZeroTier to use

By default Pylon will chose a random port to send ZeroTier traffic over, but If you need it to only send traffic over a whitelisted port you can specify one like so:

export ZT_PYLON_WHITELISTED_PORT=4545

refract (SOCKS5 Proxy)

Run proxy service to listen for app traffic locally on 127.0.0.1:1080:

./pylon refract b84ac5c40a2339c9 --listen-addr 0.0.0.0 --listen-port 1080

You can also listen on 0.0.0.0.

reflect (Dumb TCP Relay)

If you have a tricky NAT situation and can allow TCP/443, you can specify a relay on a machine with a static IP. To reduce latency, the tcp-relay should be as close as possible to the nodes it is serving. A datacenter in the same city or the LAN would be ideal.

./pylon reflect

Then tell your pylon instances to use that to proxy traffic:

./pylon refract b84ac5c40a2339c9 --listen-addr 0.0.0.0 --listen-port 1080 --relay-addr 0.0.0.0 --relay-port 443

Note: a reflect instance is just a tcp-proxy and can be used by a regular ZeroTier client just the same. Expand the following instructions for more info:

Instructions for use with regular ZeroTier client

Point your node at it

The default tcp relay is at 204.80.128.1/443 -an anycast address.

Option 1 - local.conf configuration

See Service docs for more info on local.conf { "settings": { "tcpFallbackRelay": "1.2.3.4/443", "forceTcpRelay": true } }

In this example, forceTcpRelay is enabled. This is helpful for testing or if you know you'll need tcp relay. It takes a few minutes for zerotier-one to realize it needs to relay otherwise.

Option 2 - redirect 204.80.128.1 to your own IP

If you are the admin of the network that is blocking ZeroTier UDP, you can transparently redirect 204.80.128.1 to one of your IP addresses. Users won't need to edit their local client configuration.

Configuring this in your Enterprise Firewall is left as an exercise to the reader.

Here is an iptables example for illustrative purposes:

-A PREROUTING -p tcp -d 204.80.128.1 --dport 443 -j DNAT --to-destination 1.2.3.4
-A POSTROUTING -p tcp -d 1.2.3.4 --dport 443 -j SNAT --to-source 204.80.128.1

Example Test

Set up remote resource:

mkdir serveme && cd serveme && echo "served data" > served.txt && \
python -m http.server -b 0.0.0.0 8000

Attempt a proxied HTTP GET:

curl --verbose --output output.txt 172.28.128.86:8000 --proxy socks5://127.0.0.1:1080

Debugging

make debug|clean

You'll get:

pylon-debug

Limitations

While a single Pylon instance will work for multiple networks and multiple applications simultaneously it will perform better if a new instance is started for each proxied network. The underlying libzt isn't multithreaded so it is recommended that you also split your proxied traffic across multiple instances if you notice performance bottlecks. Finally, Pylon only supports IPv4 TCP but IPv6 and UDP support can be added if there is sufficient interest.

Releasing

Releasing to Docker Hub is done from our internal CI.

  • create a tag on main: git tag v0.1.7
  • push the tag: git push --tags This triggers the build and push to dockerhub.
  • create a Github Release through the Github ui. Select the tag you just pushed.