Hi all,
Are there any known scripts(.sh /.py etc) that could help me setup multiple .onion services on a single machine?
Something like pagekite can potentially help, except of course for onion services.
My aim is to setup a xmpp instance, a WriteFreely instance and a mediawiki site ultimately.
Regards,
Hello Farhān,
You might not necessarily need a script for that, you can simply define multiple hidden services in your tor config.
The only thing you need to do the following in your config (Note you can also open multiple ports):
*HiddenServiceDir* /path/to/dir/1 *HiddenServicePort* 80 8080
*HiddenServiceDir* /path/to/dir/2 *HiddenServicePort* 80 8081 *HiddenServicePort* 22 2222
This will make your tor generate 2 hidden services, one with it's hostname found at /path/to/dir/1/hostname and one at /path/to/dir/2/hostname. In this example the first service would accept traffic on port 80 and direct it to port 8080 of your host machine and the second would do the same but also forward port 22 to port 2222 of your host.
You may also want to put an nginx in front of your apps to act as a reverse proxy, so you can map different services to different directories, but there are a lot of tutorials for that out there, so I won't go into detail about that.
Regards, *Kevin Kandlbinder* </kevin@kevink.dev mailto:kevin@kevink.dev/>
Am 03.08.2020 um 19:13 schrieb Farhān:
Hi all,
Are there any known scripts(.sh /.py etc) that could help me setup multiple .onion services on a single machine?
Something like pagekite can potentially help, except of course for onion services.
My aim is to setup a xmpp instance, a WriteFreely instance and a mediawiki site ultimately.
Regards,
tor-onions mailing list tor-onions@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-onions
Hi Kevin,
I did set HiddenServicePort 80 localhost:8080 specifically for Mediawiki, running with apache2 webserver.
Although the service worked as expected on localhost, I was unable to send it over .onion. And setting HiddenServicePort 80 localhost:80 gave the standard apache2 configuration webpage, the module for which I have since disabled
I'll try the configuration you suggested early tomorrow and check the results.
Regards, Farhān
On 4 August 2020 12:33:31 am IST, Kevin Kandlbinder kevin@kevink.dev wrote:
Hello Farhān,
You might not necessarily need a script for that, you can simply define
multiple hidden services in your tor config.
The only thing you need to do the following in your config (Note you can also open multiple ports):
*HiddenServiceDir* /path/to/dir/1 *HiddenServicePort* 80 8080
*HiddenServiceDir* /path/to/dir/2 *HiddenServicePort* 80 8081 *HiddenServicePort* 22 2222
This will make your tor generate 2 hidden services, one with it's hostname found at /path/to/dir/1/hostname and one at /path/to/dir/2/hostname. In this example the first service would accept
traffic on port 80 and direct it to port 8080 of your host machine and the second would do the same but also forward port 22 to port 2222 of your host.
You may also want to put an nginx in front of your apps to act as a reverse proxy, so you can map different services to different directories, but there are a lot of tutorials for that out there, so I won't go into detail about that.
Regards, *Kevin Kandlbinder* </kevin@kevink.dev mailto:kevin@kevink.dev/>
Am 03.08.2020 um 19:13 schrieb Farhān:
Hi all,
Are there any known scripts(.sh /.py etc) that could help me setup multiple .onion services on a single machine?
Something like pagekite can potentially help, except of course for onion services.
My aim is to setup a xmpp instance, a WriteFreely instance and a mediawiki site ultimately.
Regards,
tor-onions mailing list tor-onions@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-onions
"Farhān" ibnabdalkareem@gmail.com writes:
Are there any known scripts(.sh /.py etc) that could help me setup multiple .onion services on a single machine? Something like pagekite can potentially help, except of course for onion services. My aim is to setup a xmpp instance, a WriteFreely instance and a mediawiki site ultimately.
If you're looking for a thing to manage onions from other bash / cli scripts then the "carml" subcommand "carml onion" might help. See here for more information:
https://carml.readthedocs.io/en/latest/command-onion.html
You can always file a feature-request or bug if it doesn't quite meet your use-case.
tor-onions@lists.torproject.org