NKN Tuna Session is an overlay peer to peer connection based on multiple concurrent tuna connections and ncp protocol.
A few feature highlights:
-
Performance: Use multiple parallel paths to boost overall throughput.
-
Network agnostic: Neither dialer nor listener needs to have public IP address or NAT traversal. They are guaranteed to be connected regardless of their network conditions.
-
Security: Using public key as address, which enables built-in end to end encryption while being invulnerable to man-in-the-middle attack.
A simple illustration of a session between Alice and Bob:
X
/ \
Alice - Y - Bob
\ /
Z
Listener (Bob for example) will pay relayers in the middle (X, Y, Z) for relaying the traffic using NKN tokens. The payment will be based on bandwidth usage of the session.
You first need to import both nkn-sdk-go
and nkn-tuna-session
:
import (
nkn "github.com/nknorg/nkn-sdk-go"
ts "github.com/nknorg/nkn-tuna-session"
)
Create a multi-client and wallet (see nkn-sdk-go for details) or re-use your existing ones:
multiclient, err := nkn.NewMultiClient(...)
// wallet is only needed for listener side
wallet, err := nkn.NewWallet(...)
Then you can create a tuna session client:
// wallet is only needed for listener side and will be used for payment
// price is in unit of NKN token per MB
c, err := ts.NewTunaSessionClient(account, multiclient, wallet, &ts.Config{TunaMaxPrice: "0"})
A tuna session client can start listening for incoming session where the remote address match any of the given regexp:
// Accepting any address, equivalent to c.Listen(nkn.NewStringArray(".*"))
err = c.Listen(nil)
// Only accepting pubkey 25d660916021ab1d182fb6b52d666b47a0f181ed68cf52a056041bdcf4faaf99 but with any identifiers
err = c.Listen(nkn.NewStringArray("25d660916021ab1d182fb6b52d666b47a0f181ed68cf52a056041bdcf4faaf99$"))
// Only accepting address alice.25d660916021ab1d182fb6b52d666b47a0f181ed68cf52a056041bdcf4faaf99
err = c.Listen(nkn.NewStringArray("^alice\\.25d660916021ab1d182fb6b52d666b47a0f181ed68cf52a056041bdcf4faaf99$"))
Wait for tuna to connect:
<-c.OnConnect()
Then it can start accepting sessions:
session, err := c.Accept()
Tuna session client implements net.Listener
interface, so one can use it as a
drop-in replacement when net.Listener
is needed, e.g. http.Serve
.
On the other hand, any tuna session client can dial a session to a remote NKN address:
session, err := c.Dial("another nkn address")
Session implements net.Conn
interface, so it can be used as a drop-in
replacement when net.Conn
is needed:
buf := make([]byte, 1024)
n, err := session.Read(buf)
n, err := session.Write(buf)
A few more complicated examples can be found at examples
This library is designed to work with
gomobile and run natively
on iOS/Android without any modification. You can use gomobile bind
to compile
it to Objective-C framework for iOS:
gomobile bind -target=ios -ldflags "-s -w" github.com/nknorg/nkn-tuna-session github.com/nknorg/nkn-sdk-go github.com/nknorg/ncp-go github.com/nknorg/tuna github.com/nknorg/nkngomobile
and Java AAR for Android:
gomobile bind -target=android -ldflags "-s -w" github.com/nknorg/nkn-tuna-session github.com/nknorg/nkn-sdk-go github.com/nknorg/ncp-go github.com/nknorg/tuna github.com/nknorg/nkngomobile
Can I submit a bug, suggestion or feature request?
Yes. Please open an issue for that.
Can I contribute patches?
Yes, we appreciate your help! To make contributions, please fork the repo, push your changes to the forked repo with signed-off commits, and open a pull request here.
Please sign off your commit. This means adding a line "Signed-off-by: Name " at the end of each commit, indicating that you wrote the code and have the right to pass it on as an open source patch. This can be done automatically by adding -s when committing:
git commit -s