syncthing/vendor/github.com/ccding/go-stun
2017-03-07 12:44:16 +00:00
..
stun lib/connections: Add KCP support (fixes #804) 2017-03-07 12:44:16 +00:00
LICENSE lib/connections: Add KCP support (fixes #804) 2017-03-07 12:44:16 +00:00
main.go lib/connections: Add KCP support (fixes #804) 2017-03-07 12:44:16 +00:00
README.md lib/connections: Add KCP support (fixes #804) 2017-03-07 12:44:16 +00:00

go-stun

[Build Status] (https://travis-ci.org/ccding/go-stun) [License] (https://opensource.org/licenses/Apache-2.0) [GoDoc] (http://godoc.org/github.com/ccding/go-stun/stun) [Go Report Card] (https://goreportcard.com/report/github.com/ccding/go-stun)

go-stun is a STUN (RFC 3489, 5389) client implementation in golang (a.k.a. UDP hole punching).

RFC 3489: STUN - Simple Traversal of User Datagram Protocol (UDP) Through Network Address Translators (NATs)

RFC 5389: Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)

Use the Command Line Tool

Simply run these commands (if you have installed golang and set $GOPATH)

go get github.com/ccding/go-stun
go-stun

or clone this repo and run these commands

go build
./go-stun

You will get the output like

NAT Type: Full cone NAT
External IP Family: 1
External IP: 166.111.4.100
External Port: 23009

You can use -s flag to use another STUN server, and use -v to work on verbose mode.

> ./go-stun --help
Usage of ./go-stun:
  -s string
        server address (default "stun1.l.google.com:19302")
  -v    verbose mode

Use the Library

The library github.com/ccding/go-stun/stun is extremely easy to use -- just one line of code.

import "github.com/ccding/go-stun/stun"

func main() {
	nat, host, err := stun.NewClient().Discover()
}

More details please go to main.go and [GoDoc] (http://godoc.org/github.com/ccding/go-stun/stun)