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🕳 bore is a simple CLI tool for making tunnels to localhost

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bore

A modern, simple TCP tunnel in Rust that exposes local ports to a remote server, bypassing standard NAT connection firewalls. That's all it does: no more, and no less.

# Installation (requires Rust)
cargo install bore-cli

# On your local machine
bore local 8000 --to bore.pub

This will expose your local port at localhost:8000 to the public internet at bore.pub:<PORT>, where the port number is assigned randomly.

Like localtunnel and ngrok, except bore is intended to be a highly efficient, unopinionated tool for forwarding TCP traffic that is simple to install and easy to self-host, with no frills attached.

Detailed Usage

This section describes detailed usage for the bore CLI command.

Local Forwarding

TODO

Self-Hosting

As mentioned in the startup instructions, there is an public instance of the bore server running at bore.pub. However, if you want to self-host bore on your own network, you can do so with the following command:

bore server

That's all it takes! After the server starts running at a given address, you can then update the bore local command with option --to <ADDRESS> to forward a local port to this remote server.

Protocol

There is an implicit control port at 7835, used for creating new connections on demand. This can be configured in the command-line options.

Acknowledgements

Created by Eric Zhang (@ekzhang1). Licensed under the MIT license.

The author would like to thank the contributors and maintainers of the Tokio project for making it possible to write ergonomic and efficient network services in Rust.

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