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Ziti Echo Server

This example shows how to open a socket to listen on the network overlay for a particular service and send all bytes received back to the sender.

Setup 🔧

Refer to the examples README for details on setting up your network, service, and obtaining an identity file.

Install Python Requirements

If you haven't already installed them, you'll need the dependent libraries used in the examples.

pip install -r ../requirements

Running the Example ▶️

This example accepts two input arguments.

  1. The identity file to be used by the SDK tunneler to bind to the service
  2. The service to bind to
python ziti-echo-server.py </path/to/id.json> <name-of-service>

Testing the Example 📋

Netcat can be used to test this however, in order to connect to the service over netcat you'll need an identity and a tunneler for the device running the netcat commands. An easy way to set this up is to create an identity that has dial access on the intended service. Then run a tunneler on your platform, and enroll the identity.

If we use netcat to connect to the intercept address and send some data, we will see a response of the exact same data we sent (hence the name, echo server).

Example:

nc <name-of-service> <intercept-port>
Hello!

Example Output:

Using a service called python.echo.ziti on port 80 here is what this would look like.

nc python.echo.ziti 80
Hello
Hello