Pion TURN is a Go toolkit for building TURN servers and clients. We wrote it to solve problems we had when building RTC projects.
- Deployable - Use modern tooling of the Go ecosystem. Stop generating config files.
- Embeddable - Include
pion/turn
in your existing applications. No need to manage another service. - Extendable - TURN as an API so you can easily integrate with your existing monitoring and metrics.
- Maintainable -
pion/turn
is simple and well documented. Designed for learning and easy debugging. - Portable - Quickly deploy to multiple architectures/platforms just by setting an environment variable.
- Safe - Stability and safety is important for network services. Go provides everything we need.
- Scalable - Create allocations and mutate state at runtime. Designed to make scaling easy.
pion/turn
is an API for building STUN/TURN clients and servers, not a binary you deploy then configure. It may require copying our examples and
making minor modifications to fit your need, no knowledge of Go is required however. You may be able to download the pre-made binaries of our examples
if you wish to get started quickly.
The advantage of this is that you don't need to deal with complicated config files, or custom APIs to modify the state of Pion TURN. After you instantiate an instance of a Pion TURN server or client you interact with it like any library. The quickest way to get started is to look at the examples or GoDoc
We try to cover most common use cases in examples. If more examples could be helpful please file an issue, we are always looking
to expand and improve pion/turn
to make it easier for developers.
To build any example you just need to run go build
in the directory of the example you care about.
It is also very easy to cross compile Go programs.
You can also see pion/turn
usage in pion/ice
Also take a look at the Pion WebRTC FAQ
Yes.
Replace the username with a token in the AuthHandler. The password sent by the client can be any non-empty string, as long as it matches that used by the GenerateAuthKey function.
Yes.
- RFC 5389: Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)
- RFC 5766: Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay Extensions to Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)
- RFC 6062: Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN) Extensions for TCP Allocations
- RFC 6156: Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN) Extension for IPv6
The library is used as a part of our WebRTC implementation. Please refer to that roadmap to track our major milestones.
Pion has an active community on the Slack.
Follow the Pion Twitter for project updates and important WebRTC news.
We are always looking to support your projects. Please reach out if you have something to build! If you need commercial support or don't want to use public methods you can contact us at team@pion.ly
Check out the contributing wiki to join the group of amazing people making this project possible
MIT License - see LICENSE for full text