An example of Lacewing Blue (Bluewing) implementation of Lacewing Relay protocol as a server.
Windows EXE and Unix executable using Visual Studio. Full C++ speed, with no trace of Clickteam Fusion.
Windows EXE is in x86 and x64. Unix is in x86 (i386), x64 (x86_64), ARMv7 and ARM64.
- This server is compatible with clients that use Lacewing Relay protocol.
- Optional Flash policy hosting, and auto-generates a policy file for the Lacewing port.
- Optional upload cap on TCP + UDP for all clients, and TCP for clients.
- This server is compatible with HTML5 and UWP JavaScript, both secure and insecure WebSocket.
To use the WebSocket Secure server, ensure you have privkey.pem and fullchain.pem in the app folder.
The server is compatible with any of the following (and any combination):
- non-Fusion clients
- client programs that are made in Clickteam Fusion 2.5 or Multimedia Fusion 2.0
- Fusion 2.0/2.5 clients for Windows, Android, iOS, SWF/Flash, HTML5, and UWP
- Lacewing Relay and Lacewing Blue Fusion extensions (Blue is highly recommended for client, as it is more recent)
You will need Visual Studio 2017+, with Windows XP support add-on.
- To add it to your VS install, run the Visual Studio Installer, select More > Modify, and under Individual Components tab, enable C++ Windows XP Support for VS 2017 (v141) tools.
(Note that VS 2017 XP is the latest XP, so you want VS 2017 XP support even if you're using VS 2019.) - Alternatively, XP support requirement can be removed in half a minute; simply switch the compiler under Project Properties > General > Platform Toolset, from v141_xp to v121 (if you're using VS 2017) or to v141 (if VS 2019).
Due to use of C++17 features, like std::string_view, VS 2015 is not supported.
While this repository is a Visual Studio and Windows based server, Blue liblacewing should be usable on other compilers (e.g. GCC) and on other POSIX-based platforms (e.g. Linux flavours). If you get any issues compiling Bluewing itself on non-Windows, or using non-Visual Studio, feel free to create an issue or pull request.
This is MIT license, so you're free to use personally, commercially, or sell your variant of this, but you should include a notice that you retrieved it from this repository.