streamhut
Stream and send data, terminal to web and vice versa.
Synopsis
- Stream your terminal to anyone without installing anything.
- Path names map to channels.
- Anyone in the same channel can view what's streamed.
- Easily self-host your own streamhut server.
Streamhut allows you to stream (pipe) realtime data from your terminal stdout/stderr to a web xterm UI or even to another terminal. It also allow you to quickly share data and files between devices.
As long as you have netcat
which comes pre-installed in most *nix systems than you can use streamhut! If you can't install netcat, you may also use the streamhut CLI client.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This software is alpha quality and not production ready. Use at your own risk!
Demo
https://streamhut.io
Getting Started (without installing anything)
One liner to stream your terminal:
$ exec > >(nc stream.ht 1337) 2>&1
Example of streaming tail of file:
# terminal 1
$ cat > data.txt
# terminal 2
$ tail -F data.txt | nc stream.ht 1337
Stream the current date every second:
$ while true; do date; sleep 1; done | nc stream.ht 1337
Stream output of a program (delay is required to see share url):
$ (sleep 5; htop) | nc stream.ht 1337
# waits 5 seconds, and then send contents of program.
Example of piping to both stdout and netcat:
$ (echo -n; sleep 5; htop) | tee >(nc stream.ht 1337)
Don't have netcat available? Pipe to a file descriptor with an open TCP connection:
$ exec 3<>/dev/tcp/stream.ht/1337 && head -1 <&3 && exec &> >(tee >(cat >&3))
Install
$ go get github.com/streamhut/streamhut/cmd/streamhut
CLI
Example of using streamhut CLI:
Stream to server
Piping commands:
$ htop | streamhut
Add delay to see share url:
$ htop | streamhut -d 5
Open url in browser:
$ htop | streamhut -o
Stream to different server:
$ htop | streamhut -h localhost -p 1337
Stream to custom channel:
$ htop | streamhut -c mychannel
For more options, run streamhut --help
Run your own server:
$ streamhut server
Starting server...
HTTP/WebSocket port: 8080
TCP port: 1337
Run server with TLS/SSL:
$ mkcert localhost
$ sudo streamhut server --tls --tls-cert=localhost.pem --tls-key=localhost-key.pem -p 443
For more options, run streamhut server --help
Listening on a channel
# terminal 1
$ streamhut listen -h localhost -p 8080 -i -c yo
# terminal 2
$ exec > >(nc localhost 1337) 2>&1;echo \#yo
For more options, run streamhut listen --help
Docker
You can run streamhut as a Docker container:
$ docker pull streamhut/streamhut
$ docker run -e PORT=8080 -e TCP_PORT=1337 -p 8080:8080 -p 1337:1337 --restart unless-stopped streamhut/streamhut:latest
Self-host (docker one-liner)
One-liner to self-host using Docker:
docker run -p 8080:8080 -p 1337:1337 streamhut/streamhut
Test
make test
Development
Start server:
make start
Run migrations:
make migrate
FAQ
-
Q: How is the stream log data stored?
- A: Currently it's stored in a local sqlite3 database. More robust and scalable options are in the works.
-
Q: What happened to the streamhut NPM module?
-
Q: Can the same channel be used more than once?
-
Q: What's the difference between stream.ht and streamhut.io?
- A: The domain stream.ht is an alias for streamhut.io, meaning you can type stream.ht as the domain for convenience. Other aliases are streamhut.net and streamhut.org.
License
Released under the Apache 2.0 license.