Created
March 4, 2012 01:42
-
-
Save sivachandran/1969859 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
A simple TCP redirector in python
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
import socket | |
import threading | |
import select | |
import sys | |
terminateAll = False | |
class ClientThread(threading.Thread): | |
def __init__(self, clientSocket, targetHost, targetPort): | |
threading.Thread.__init__(self) | |
self.__clientSocket = clientSocket | |
self.__targetHost = targetHost | |
self.__targetPort = targetPort | |
def run(self): | |
print "Client Thread started" | |
self.__clientSocket.setblocking(0) | |
targetHostSocket = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) | |
targetHostSocket.connect((self.__targetHost, self.__targetPort)) | |
targetHostSocket.setblocking(0) | |
clientData = "" | |
targetHostData = "" | |
terminate = False | |
while not terminate and not terminateAll: | |
inputs = [self.__clientSocket, targetHostSocket] | |
outputs = [] | |
if len(clientData) > 0: | |
outputs.append(self.__clientSocket) | |
if len(targetHostData) > 0: | |
outputs.append(targetHostSocket) | |
try: | |
inputsReady, outputsReady, errorsReady = select.select(inputs, outputs, [], 1.0) | |
except Exception, e: | |
print e | |
break | |
for inp in inputsReady: | |
if inp == self.__clientSocket: | |
try: | |
data = self.__clientSocket.recv(4096) | |
except Exception, e: | |
print e | |
if data != None: | |
if len(data) > 0: | |
targetHostData += data | |
else: | |
terminate = True | |
elif inp == targetHostSocket: | |
try: | |
data = targetHostSocket.recv(4096) | |
except Exception, e: | |
print e | |
if data != None: | |
if len(data) > 0: | |
clientData += data | |
else: | |
terminate = True | |
for out in outputsReady: | |
if out == self.__clientSocket and len(clientData) > 0: | |
bytesWritten = self.__clientSocket.send(clientData) | |
if bytesWritten > 0: | |
clientData = clientData[bytesWritten:] | |
elif out == targetHostSocket and len(targetHostData) > 0: | |
bytesWritten = targetHostSocket.send(targetHostData) | |
if bytesWritten > 0: | |
targetHostData = targetHostData[bytesWritten:] | |
self.__clientSocket.close() | |
targetHostSocket.close() | |
print "ClienThread terminating" | |
if __name__ == '__main__': | |
if len(sys.argv) != 5: | |
print 'Usage:\n\tpython SimpleTCPRedirector <host> <port> <remote host> <remote port>' | |
print 'Example:\n\tpython SimpleTCPRedirector localhost 8080 www.google.com 80' | |
sys.exit(0) | |
localHost = sys.argv[1] | |
localPort = int(sys.argv[2]) | |
targetHost = sys.argv[3] | |
targetPort = int(sys.argv[4]) | |
serverSocket = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) | |
serverSocket.bind((localHost, localPort)) | |
serverSocket.listen(5) | |
print "Waiting for client..." | |
while True: | |
try: | |
clientSocket, address = serverSocket.accept() | |
except KeyboardInterrupt: | |
print "\nTerminating..." | |
terminateAll = True | |
break | |
ClientThread(clientSocket, targetHost, targetPort).start() | |
serverSocket.close() |
Thanks for the tips @sivachandran, I am afraid my python knowledge is not enough to be able to make those changes, and I am also surprised that I haven´t been able to find this TCP/IP duplication script already done anywhere, I think it would be really useful to be able to process data in different servers. In my case I am trying to receive data from a gps tracker and use it in two different servers, but I guess I will have to keep looking
You could parse the gps data and put it in a queue like redis pub/sub or mqtt in a format like json then let the two server listen to the queue
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
@heisenberg2980 Reach out me through [email protected] if you need further assistance.