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dh_python
B.J. Dweck 2020-10-06 15:14:57 +02:00
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# TORch: Illuminating the Path to your Node # TORch: Illuminating the Path to your Node
TORch is a solution for creating an SSH-via-Tor backdoor on a remote device as a means of fallback remote management and initial headless device configuration.
## Description
Since Tor traffic easily crosses NAT boundries, this is a nice solution for
* fallback connection to remote devices located on other LANs in the event that the network configuration on the remote side changes and the primary connection / VPN fails
* the initial discovery and connection to a headless device like a Raspberry Pi on a local network which is configured via DHCP
A TORch solution consists of 3 processes:
* `torch-agent` - Installed on remote machine; responsible for creating Tor hidden service and broadcasting the onion hostname an MQTT broker
* MQTT broker - Any MQTT broker, reachable via IPv4 or Tor, through TLS or insecure communications
* `torch-subscriber` - Listens for and handles onion hostname publications
## Installation of TORch Agent (Ubuntu)
Copy the files to the target device
* `install-ubuntu2004.sh`
* `torch-agent.py`
* `torch.conf`
* `torch.service`
Run the installation script:
```bash
vagrant@ubuntu2004:~$ ./install-ubuntu2004.sh
```
This will create a local user `torch` and install the TORch agent as a Systemd service named `torch`
## Configuration
The TORch agent will look for a `torch.conf` configuration in the configuration directory.
The configuation directory can be specified by
* The `TORCH_CONFIG_DIR` environment variable
* Using the `--config-dir` commandline option
* Default: `/etc/torch`
A fully configured example can be found [here](example/README.md)
See the sample [`torch.conf`](torch.conf) file for additional configuration options and details

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# TORch Agent Example
The example creates a Vagrant machine configured with TORch Agent
## Instructions to Run
### Install dependencies
* `docker`
* `mosquitto_sub`
* `apt install mosquitto-clients`
### Run the Broker
Add the following line to your `/etc/hosts` file:
```
127.0.0.1 mqtt.example.com
```
Run the broker in a terminal window:
```bash
cd example
./run-broker.sh
```
### Run the Subscriber
In a separate terminal window, run the subscriber:
```bash
cd example
./run-subscriber.sh
```
### Run TORch Agent in Vagrant
Run the Vagrant box in a third terminal window:
```bash
vagrant up
```
You should see that the broker received a connection from the Vagrant box at boot up and the subscriber received the onion hostname. You can use a local `tor` proxy to connect to the vagrant box using SSH and the onion hostname.