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Connect browsers to devices via WebRTC

Project description

BitBang

BitBang exposes local web servers to the internet using WebRTC peer-to-peer connections. No account required, no monthly fee, no data routed through third-party servers.

pip install bitbang

Quick demo

bitbang-fileshare ~/Downloads

This prints a URL and QR code. Anyone with the link can browse and download files directly from your machine. To verify it works outside your local network, scan the QR code from a phone on cellular.

Flask / FastAPI integration

# Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
adapter = BitBangWSGI(app)
adapter.run()  # Prints your public URL
# FastAPI
app = FastAPI()
adapter = BitBangASGI(app)
adapter.run()

Comparison

ngrok Cloudflare Tunnel Tailscale BitBang
Account required Yes Yes Yes No
Free tunnels 1 Unlimited Unlimited Unlimited
Data path Their servers Their servers P2P P2P
Viewer needs install No No Yes No
Configuration CLI flags Config file + DNS Dashboard None

BitBang's data path is direct between peers. The signaling server brokers the initial connection, then steps aside.


Background

The Internet is often thought of as a fully connected network — every machine is accessible from every other machine. But there are rules governing accessibility on the Internet.

Rules of Internet Accessibility

  1. Machines on the Internet are accessible by other machines on the Internet — and by machines on your local network.
  2. Machines on your local network are only accessible by other machines on your local network.

Because of rule 2, machines on your local network aren't reachable from outside — nor are the resources they hold: files, cameras, sensors, compute, or the web app you're currently developing. Cloud services exist to fill this gap: Dropbox for files, AWS IoT for sensors, Tailscale for compute, and ngrok for web apps — among others. These services apply rule 1, but each comes with the friction of account creation, monthly charges, and your data living on someone else's server.

BitBang connects a browser directly to any machine on your local network, from anywhere on the Internet. No cloud intermediary, no account, no third party in the middle. It uses a novel application of the peer-to-peer technology WebRTC.

WebRTC

WebRTC is the behind-the-scenes technology that makes Zoom and Google Meet video conferencing possible. WebRTC offers the highest bandwidth and lowest latency possible, which is important when you're streaming live video. It's mature, well-tested, and has ubiquitous support across all browsers. In addition to delivering low-latency media, it can also deliver raw data over "data channels", which is what BitBang uses.


Examples

The examples/ directory contains two simple demos:

cd examples/simple_fastapi && python3 runapp.py
cd examples/simple_flask && python3 runapp.py

Each prints a URL like https://bitba.ng/6a1ccd1516a0ead5bd25c46b0bff14b3, accessible from anywhere.

Fileshare

Share files without uploading them to a third-party service:

bitbang-fileshare photo.jpg           # Share a single file
bitbang-fileshare ~/Documents/project # Share a directory (uploads enabled)

Files transfer directly from your machine to the recipient.

Webcam

The webcam app streams video to your browser using WebRTC media channels. It can be used as a simple easy-to-setup monitoring/security camera using your laptop, for example.

bitbang-webcam 

How it works

Browsers normally connect to web servers over TCP. BitBang replaces this with a WebRTC data channel:

BitBang Python Block Diagram

The signaling server (bitba.ng) brokers the WebRTC handshake, then has no further involvement. It never sees application data.

Signaling server

The signaling server source is available here. It:

  1. Serves the BitBang browser runtime
  2. Validates connecting servers via RSA challenge
  3. Maintains WebSocket connections to active servers
  4. Brokers ICE candidate and SDP exchange

After the P2P connection is established, the signaling server is not involved.

Security

WebRTC mandates encryption:

  • Data channels: DTLS 1.2+
  • Media streams: SRTP
  • Signaling: HTTPS and WSS

Furthermore, each BitBang server generates an RSA keypair. The public key hash becomes its unique ID, which is used in its BitBang public URL. The signaling server challenge-verifies key ownership before accepting connections.

Roadmap

proxybang — A standalone binary that proxies any server on the local network. Run it once; the target is specified in the URL at browse-time.

https://bitban.ng/<proxy-id>/192.168.1.10:80
https://bitban.ng/<proxy-id>/nas.local
https://bitban.ng/<proxy-id>/octopi.local:5000

ESP32 support — Native BitBang for microcontrollers, including video streaming and OTA updates. It's an IoT network with no account set-up, subscription, etc.


License

MIT

Contributing

Issues and pull requests are welcome.

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