Terminal over HTTP and HTTPS. Wetty is an alternative to ajaxterm/anyterm but much better than them because wetty uses ChromeOS' terminal emulator (hterm) which is a full fledged implementation of terminal emulation written entirely in Javascript. Also it uses websockets instead of Ajax and hence better response time.
npm install -g wetty
wetty -p 3000
If you run it as root it will launch /bin/login
(where you can specify the
user name), else it will launch ssh
and connect by default to localhost
.
If instead you wish to connect to a remote host you can specify the --sshhost
option, the SSH port using the --sshport
option and the SSH user using the
--sshuser
option.
You can also specify the SSH user name in the address bar like this:
http://yourserver:3000/wetty/ssh/<username>
or
http://yourserver:3000/ssh/<username>
Always use HTTPS. If you don't have SSL certificates from a CA you can create a self signed certificate using this command:
openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -days 30000 -nodes
And then run:
wetty --sslkey key.pem --sslcert cert.pem -p 3000
Again, if you run it as root it will launch /bin/login
, else it will launch
SSH to localhost
or a specified host as explained above.
Put the following configuration in nginx's conf:
location /wetty {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:3000/wetty;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_read_timeout 43200000;
proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_set_header X-NginX-Proxy true;
}
Put the following configuration in apache's conf:
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/wetty/socket.io [NC]
RewriteCond %{QUERY_STRING} transport=websocket [NC]
RewriteRule /wetty/socket.io/(.*) ws://localhost:9123/wetty/socket.io/$1 [P,L]
<LocationMatch ^/wetty/(.*)>
DirectorySlash On
Require all granted
ProxyPassMatch http://127.0.0.1:9123
ProxyPassReverse /wetty/
</LocationMatch>
If you are running bin/index.js
as root
and have an Nginx proxy you have to
use:
http://yourserver.com/wetty
Else if you are running bin/index.js
as a regular user you can use:
http://yourserver.com/wetty/ssh/<username>
or
http://yourserver.com/wetty
Note that if your Nginx is configured for HTTPS you should run wetty without SSL.
This repo includes a Dockerfile you can use to run a Dockerized version of wetty. You can run whatever you want!
Just modify docker-compose and run:
docker-compose up -d
Visit the appropriate URL in your browser
([localhost|$(boot2docker ip)]:PORT
).
The default username is term
and the password is term
, if you did not modify
SSHHOST
If you dont want to build the image yourself just remove the line build; .
Install wetty globally with global option:
$ sudo yarn global add wetty
$ sudo cp /usr/local/lib/node_modules/wetty.js/bin/wetty.conf /etc/init
$ sudo start wetty
$ yarn global add wetty
$ cp ~/.config/yarn/global/node_modules/wetty.js/bin/wetty.service ~/.config/systemd/user/
$ systemctl --user enable wetty
$ systemctl --user start wetty
This will start wetty on port 3000. If you want to change the port or redirect
stdout/stderr you should change the last line in wetty.conf
file, something
like this:
exec sudo -u root wetty -p 80 >> /var/log/wetty.log 2>&1
Wetty supports all browsers that Google's hterm supports. Wetty has been reported to work on Google Chrome, Firefox and IE 11.
This fix has been known to help some users.