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			1157 lines
		
	
	
		
			42 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			1157 lines
		
	
	
		
			42 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .\" Text automatically generated by txt2man
 | |
| .TH TURN 1 "15 July 2014" "" ""
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| .SH GENERAL INFORMATION
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| 
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| The \fBTURN Server\fP project contains the source code of a TURN server and TURN client 
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| messaging library. Also, some extra programs provided, for testing\-only 
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| purposes. 
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| .PP
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| See the INSTALL file for the building instructions.
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| .PP
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| After the build, you will have the following binary images:
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| .TP
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| .B
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| 1.
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| \fIturnserver\fP: \fBTURN Server\fP relay. 
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| The compiled binary image of the \fBTURN Server\fP program is located in bin/ sub\-directory.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| 2.
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| \fIturnadmin\fP: TURN administration tool. See README.turnadmin and \fIturnadmin\fP man page.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| 3.
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| turnutils_uclient. See README.turnutils and \fIturnutils\fP man page.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| 4.
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| turnutils_peer. See README.turnutils and \fIturnutils\fP man page.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| 5.
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| turnutils_stunclient. See README.turnutils and \fIturnutils\fP man page.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| 6.
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| turnutils_rfc5769check. See README.turnutils and \fIturnutils\fP man page.
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| .PP
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| In the "examples/scripts" sub\-directory, you will find the examples of command lines to be used 
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| to run the programs. The scripts are meant to be run from examples/ sub\-directory, for example:
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| .PP
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| $ cd examples
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| $ ./scripts/secure_relay.sh
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| .SH RUNNING THE TURN SERVER
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| 
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| Options note: \fIturnserver\fP has long and short option names, for most options.
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| Some options have only long form, some options have only short form. Their syntax 
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| somewhat different, if an argument is required:
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| .PP
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| The short form must be used as this (for example):
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| .PP
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| .nf
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| .fam C
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|   $ turnserver \-L 12.34.56.78
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| 
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| .fam T
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| .fi
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| The long form equivalent must use the "=" character:
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| .PP
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| .nf
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| .fam C
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|   $ turnserver \-\-listening\-ip=12.34.56.78
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| 
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| .fam T
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| .fi
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| If this is a flag option (no argument required) then their usage are the same, for example:
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| .PP
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| .nf
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| .fam C
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|  $ turnserver \-a
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| 
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| .fam T
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| .fi
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| is equivalent to:
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| .PP
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| .nf
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| .fam C
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|  $ turnserver \-\-lt\-cred\-mech
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| 
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| .fam T
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| .fi
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| =====================================
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| .SS  NAME
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| \fB
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| \fBturnserver \fP\- a TURN relay server implementation.
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| \fB
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| .SS  SYNOPSIS
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| .nf
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| .fam C
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| 
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| $ \fIturnserver\fP [\fB\-n\fP | \fB\-c\fP <config\-file> ] [\fIflags\fP] [ \fB\-\-userdb\fP=<userdb\-file> | \fB\-\-psql\-userdb\fP=<db\-conn\-string> | \fB\-\-mysql\-userdb\fP=<db\-conn\-string>  | \fB\-\-mongo\-userdb\fP=<db\-conn\-string>  | \fB\-\-redis\-userdb\fP=<db\-conn\-string> ] [\fB\-z\fP | \fB\-\-no\-auth\fP | \fB\-a\fP | \fB\-\-lt\-cred\-mech\fP ] [\fIoptions\fP]
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| $ \fIturnserver\fP \fB\-h\fP
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| 
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| .fam T
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| .fi
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| .fam T
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| .fi
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| .SS  DESCRIPTION                                           
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| 
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| .TP
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| .B
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| Config file settings:
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-n\fP
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| Do not use configuration file, use only command line parameters.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-c\fP
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| Configuration file name (default \- turnserver.conf).
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| The format of config file can be seen in
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| the supplied examples/etc/turnserver.conf example file. Long 
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| names of the \fIoptions\fP are used as the configuration 
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| items names in the file. If not an absolute path is supplied, 
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| then the file is searched in the following directories: 
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| .RS
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| .IP \(bu 3
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| current directory
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| .IP \(bu 3
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| current directory etc/ sub\-directory
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| .IP \(bu 3
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| upper directory level etc/
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| .IP \(bu 3
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| /etc/
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| .IP \(bu 3
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| /usr/local/etc/
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| .IP \(bu 3
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| installation directory /etc
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| .RE
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| .TP
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| .B
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| User database settings:
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| .TP
 | |
| .B
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| \fB\-b\fP, \fB\-\-userdb\fP
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| User database file name (default \- turnuserdb.conf),
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| for long\-term credentials mechanism only.
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| This user file database is being dynamically checked while the \fIturnserver\fP 
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| is working, and the user accounts can be changed dynamically by
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| editing the database.
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| .TP
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| .B
 | |
| \fB\-e\fP, \fB\-\-psql\-userdb\fP
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| User database connection string for PostgreSQL.
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| This database can be used for long\-term and short\-term credentials mechanisms,
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| and it can store the secret value for secret\-based timed authentication in TURN RESP API.
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| The connection string format is like that:
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| .RS
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| .PP
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| "host=<host> dbname=<dbname> user=<db\-user> password=<db\-user\-password> connect_timeout=<seconds>" 
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| (for 8.x or newer Postgres).
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| .PP
 | |
| Or:
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| .PP
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| "postgresql://username:password@hostname:port/databasename" (for 9.x or newer Postgres). 
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| See the INSTALL file for more explanations and examples.
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| .PP
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| Also, see http://www.PostgreSQL.org for full PostgreSQL documentation.
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| .RE
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-M\fP, \fB\-\-mysql\-userdb\fP
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| User database connection string for MySQL or MariaDB. 
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| This database can be used for long\-term and short\-term credentials mechanisms,
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| and it can store the secret value for secret\-based timed authentication in TURN RESP API.
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| The connection string format is like that:
 | |
| .RS
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| .PP
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| "host=<host> dbname=<dbname> user=<db\-user> password=<db\-user\-password> connect_timeout=<seconds>"
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| See the INSTALL file for more explanations and examples.
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| .PP
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| Also, see http://www.mysql.org or http://mariadb.org 
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| for full MySQL documentation.
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| .RE
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| .TP
 | |
| .B
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| \fB\-J\fP, \fB\-\-mongo\-userdb\fP
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| User database connection string for MongoDB. 
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| This database can be used for long\-term and short\-term credentials mechanisms,
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| and it can store the secret value for secret\-based timed authentication in TURN RESP API.
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| The connection string format is like that:
 | |
| .RS
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| .PP
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| "mongodb://[username:password@]host1[:port1][,host2[:port2],\.\.\.[,hostN[:portN]]][/[database][?\fIoptions\fP]]"
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| See the INSTALL file for more explanations and examples.
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| .PP
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| Also, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/
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| for full MongoDB documentation.
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| .RE
 | |
| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-N\fP, \fB\-\-redis\-userdb\fP
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| User database connection string for Redis. 
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| This database can be used for long\-term and short\-term credentials mechanisms,
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| and it can store the secret value for secret\-based timed authentication in TURN RESP API.
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| The connection string format is like that:
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| .RS
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| .PP
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| "ip=<ip\-addr> dbname=<db\-number> password=<db\-password> connect_timeout=<seconds>"
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| See the INSTALL file for more explanations and examples.
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| .PP
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| Also, see http://redis.io for full Redis documentation.
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| .RE
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| .TP
 | |
| .B
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| Flags:
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-v\fP, \fB\-\-verbose\fP
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| Moderate verbose mode.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-V\fP, \fB\-\-Verbose\fP
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| Extra verbose mode, very annoying and not recommended.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-o\fP, \fB\-\-daemon\fP
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| Run server as daemon.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-f\fP, \fB\-\-fingerprint\fP
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| Use fingerprints in the TURN messages. If an incoming request
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| contains a fingerprint, then TURN server will always add 
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| fingerprints to the messages in this session, regardless of the
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| per\-server setting.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-a\fP, \fB\-\-lt\-cred\-mech\fP
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| Use long\-term credentials mechanism (this one you need for WebRTC usage). 
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| This option can be used with either flat file user database or 
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| PostgreSQL DB or MySQL DB or MongoDB or Redis for user keys storage.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-A\fP, \fB\-\-st\-cred\-mech\fP
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| Use the short\-term credentials mechanism. This option requires
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| a PostgreSQL or MySQL or MongoDB or Redis DB for short term passwords storage.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-z\fP, \fB\-\-no\-auth\fP
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| Do not use any credentials mechanism, allow anonymous access. 
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| Opposite to \fB\-a\fP and \fB\-A\fP \fIoptions\fP. This is default option when no 
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| authentication\-related \fIoptions\fP are set.
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| By default, no credential mechanism is used \-
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| any user is allowed.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-use\-auth\-secret\fP
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| TURN REST API flag.
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| Flag that sets a special WebRTC authorization option 
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| that is based upon authentication secret. The feature purpose 
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| is to support "\fBTURN Server\fP REST API" as described in
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| the TURN REST API section below.
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| This option uses timestamp as part of combined username:
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| usercombo \-> "timestamp:username",
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| turn user \-> usercombo,
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| turn password \-> \fBbase64\fP(hmac(secret key, usercombo)).
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| This allows TURN credentials to be accounted for a specific user id.
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| If you don't have a suitable id, the timestamp alone can be used.
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| This option is just turns on secret\-based authentication.
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| The actual value of the secret is defined either by option static\-auth\-secret,
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| or can be found in the turn_secret table in the database.
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| This option can be used with long\-term credentials mechanisms only \-
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| it does not make much sense with the short\-term mechanism.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-dh566\fP
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| Use 566 bits predefined DH TLS key. Default size of the key is 1066.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-dh2066\fP
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| Use 2066 bits predefined DH TLS key. Default size of the key is 1066.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-sslv2\fP
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| Do not allow SSLv2 protocol.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-sslv3\fP
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| Do not allow SSLv3 protocol.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-tlsv1\fP
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| Do not allow TLSv1 protocol.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-tlsv1_1\fP
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| Do not allow TLSv1.1 protocol.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-tlsv1_2\fP
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| Do not allow TLSv1.2 protocol.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-udp\fP
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| Do not start UDP client listeners.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-tcp\fP
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| Do not start TCP client listeners.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-tls\fP
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| Do not start TLS client listeners.
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| .TP
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| .B
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| \fB\-\-no\-dtls\fP
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| Do not start DTLS client listeners.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-no\-udp\-relay\fP
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| Do not allow UDP relay endpoints defined in RFC 5766, 
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| use only TCP relay endpoints as defined in RFC 6062.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-no\-tcp\-relay\fP
 | |
| Do not allow TCP relay endpoints defined in RFC 6062, 
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| use only UDP relay endpoints as defined in RFC 5766. 
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| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-stale\-nonce\fP
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| Use extra security with nonce value having limited lifetime (600 secs). 
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-no\-stdout\-log\fP
 | |
| Flag to prevent stdout log messages.
 | |
| By default, all log messages are going to both stdout and to
 | |
| the configured log file. With this option everything will be going to 
 | |
| the log file only (unless the log file itself is stdout).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-syslog\fP
 | |
| With this flag, all log will be redirected to the system log (syslog).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-simple\-log\fP
 | |
| This flag means that no log file rollover will be used, and the log file
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| name will be constructed as\-is, without PID and date appendage.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-secure\-stun\fP
 | |
| Require authentication of the STUN Binding request.
 | |
| By default, the clients are allowed anonymous access to the STUN Binding functionality.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-S\fP, \fB\-\-stun\-only\fP
 | |
| Run as STUN server only, all TURN requests will be ignored. 
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| Option to suppress TURN functionality, only STUN requests will be processed.
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| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-no\-stun\fP
 | |
| Run as TURN server only, all STUN requests will be ignored. 
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| Option to suppress STUN functionality, only TURN requests will be processed.
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| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-no\-loopback\-peers\fP
 | |
| Disallow peers on the loopback addresses (127.x.x.x and ::1).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-no\-multicast\-peers\fP
 | |
| Disallow peers on well\-known broadcast addresses 
 | |
| (224.0.0.0 and above, and FFXX:*).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-sha256\fP
 | |
| Require SHA256 digest function to be used for the message integrity.
 | |
| By default, the server uses SHA1 hashes. With this option, the server 
 | |
| requires the stronger SHA256 hashes. The client application must support
 | |
| SHA256 hash function if this option is used. If the server obtains a message 
 | |
| from the client with a weaker (SHA1) hash function then the server returns 
 | |
| error code 426.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
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| \fB\-\-mobility\fP
 | |
| Mobility with ICE (MICE) specs support.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-no\-cli\fP
 | |
| Turn OFF the CLI support. By default it is always ON.
 | |
| See also \fIoptions\fP \fB\-\-cli\-ip\fP and \fB\-\-cli\-port\fP.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-server\-relay\fP
 | |
| Server relay. NON\-STANDARD AND DANGEROUS OPTION. 
 | |
| Only for those applications when we want to run 
 | |
| server applications on the relay endpoints.
 | |
| This option eliminates the IP permissions check 
 | |
| on the packets incoming to the relay endpoints.
 | |
| See http://tools.ietf.org/search/rfc5766#section\-17.2.3 .
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-udp\-self\-balance\fP
 | |
| (recommended for older Linuxes only)
 | |
| Automatically balance UDP traffic over auxiliary servers
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| (if configured). The load balancing is using the 
 | |
| ALTERNATE\-SERVER mechanism. The TURN client must support 
 | |
| 300 ALTERNATE\-SERVER response for this functionality.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-h\fP
 | |
| Help.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| Options with required values:
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-d\fP, \fB\-\-listening\-device\fP
 | |
| Listener interface device.
 | |
| (NOT RECOMMENDED. Optional functionality, Linux only). 
 | |
| The \fIturnserver\fP process must have root privileges to bind the 
 | |
| listening endpoint to a device. If \fIturnserver\fP must run as a 
 | |
| process without root privileges, then just do not use this setting.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-L\fP, \fB\-\-listening\-ip\fP
 | |
| Listener IP address of relay server. 
 | |
| Multiple listeners can be specified, for example:
 | |
| \fB\-L\fP ip1 \fB\-L\fP ip2 \fB\-L\fP ip3
 | |
| If no \fBIP\fP(s) specified, then all IPv4 and 
 | |
| IPv6 system IPs will be used for listening.
 | |
| The same \fBip\fP(s) can be used as both listening and relay \fBip\fP(s).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-p\fP, \fB\-\-listening\-port\fP
 | |
| TURN listener port for UDP and TCP listeners (Default: 3478).
 | |
| Note: actually, TLS & DTLS sessions can connect to the "plain" TCP & UDP
 | |
| \fBport\fP(s), too \- if allowed by configuration.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-tls\-listening\-port\fP
 | |
| TURN listener port for TLS and DTLS listeners (Default: 5349).
 | |
| Note: actually, "plain" TCP & UDP sessions can connect to the TLS & DTLS
 | |
| \fBport\fP(s), too \- if allowed by configuration. The TURN server 
 | |
| "automatically" recognizes the type of traffic. Actually, two listening
 | |
| endpoints (the "plain" one and the "tls" one) are equivalent in terms of
 | |
| functionality; but we keep both endpoints to satisfy the RFC 5766 specs.
 | |
| For secure TCP connections, we currently support SSL version 3 and 
 | |
| TLS versions 1.0, 1.1, 1.2. SSL2 "encapsulation mode" is also supported.
 | |
| For secure UDP connections, we support DTLS version 1.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-alt\-listening\-port\fP
 | |
| Alternative listening port for UDP and TCP listeners;
 | |
| default (or zero) value means "listening port plus one".
 | |
| This is needed for STUN CHANGE_REQUEST \- in RFC 5780 sense
 | |
| or in old RFC 3489 sense \- for NAT behavior discovery). The \fBTURN Server\fP
 | |
| supports CHANGE_REQUEST only if it is started with more than one
 | |
| listening IP address of the same family (IPv4 or IPv6). The CHANGE_REQUEST
 | |
| is only supported by UDP protocol, other protocols are listening
 | |
| on that endpoint only for "symmetry".
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-alt\-tls\-listening\-port\fP
 | |
| Alternative listening port for TLS and DTLS protocols.
 | |
| Default (or zero) value means "TLS listening port plus one".
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-aux\-server\fP
 | |
| Auxiliary STUN/TURN server listening endpoint.
 | |
| Aux servers have almost full TURN and STUN functionality.
 | |
| The (minor) limitations are:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP 1) 4
 | |
| Auxiliary servers do not have alternative ports and
 | |
| they do not support STUN RFC 5780 functionality (CHANGE REQUEST).
 | |
| .IP 2) 4
 | |
| Auxiliary servers also are never returning ALTERNATIVE\-SERVER reply.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Valid formats are 1.2.3.4:5555 for IPv4 and [1:2::3:4]:5555 for IPv6.
 | |
| There may be multiple aux\-server \fIoptions\fP, each will be used for listening
 | |
| to client requests.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-i\fP, \fB\-\-relay\-device\fP
 | |
| Relay interface device for relay sockets 
 | |
| (NOT RECOMMENDED. Optional, Linux only).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-E\fP, \fB\-\-relay\-ip\fP
 | |
| Relay address (the local IP address that 
 | |
| will be used to relay the packets to the 
 | |
| peer). Multiple relay addresses may be used:
 | |
| \fB\-E\fP ip1 \fB\-E\fP ip2 \fB\-E\fP ip3
 | |
| The same \fBIP\fP(s) can be used as both listening \fBIP\fP(s) and relay \fBIP\fP(s).
 | |
| If no relay \fBIP\fP(s) specified, then the \fIturnserver\fP will apply the 
 | |
| default policy: it will decide itself which relay addresses to be 
 | |
| used, and it will always be using the client socket IP address as 
 | |
| the relay IP address of the TURN session (if the requested relay 
 | |
| address family is the same as the family of the client socket).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-X\fP, \fB\-\-external\-ip\fP
 | |
| \fBTURN Server\fP public/private address mapping, if the server is behind NAT.
 | |
| In that situation, if a \fB\-X\fP is used in form "\fB\-X\fP <ip>" then that ip will be reported
 | |
| as relay IP address of all allocations. This scenario works only in a simple case
 | |
| when one single relay address is be used, and no CHANGE_REQUEST functionality is 
 | |
| required. That single relay address must be mapped by NAT to the 'external' IP.
 | |
| The "external\-ip" value, if not empty, is returned in XOR\-RELAYED\-ADDRESS field.
 | |
| For that 'external' IP, NAT must forward ports directly (relayed port 12345
 | |
| must be always mapped to the same 'external' port 12345).
 | |
| In more complex case when more than one IP address is involved,
 | |
| that option must be used several times, each entry must
 | |
| have form "\fB\-X\fP <public\-ip/private\-ip>", to map all involved addresses.
 | |
| CHANGE_REQUEST (RFC5780 or RFC3489) NAT discovery STUN functionality will work 
 | |
| correctly, if the addresses are mapped properly, even when the TURN server itself 
 | |
| is behind A NAT.
 | |
| By default, this value is empty, and no address mapping is used.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-m\fP, \fB\-\-relay\-threads\fP
 | |
| Number of relay threads to handle the established connections
 | |
| (in addition to authentication thread and the listener thread).
 | |
| If set to 0 then application runs relay process in a single thread,
 | |
| in the same thread with the listener process (the authentication thread will 
 | |
| still be a separate thread). In older systems (before Linux kernel 3.9),
 | |
| the number of UDP threads is always one threads per network listening endpoint \-
 | |
| unless "\fB\-m\fP 0" or "\fB\-m\fP 1" is set.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-min\-port\fP
 | |
| Lower bound of the UDP port range for relay 
 | |
| endpoints allocation.
 | |
| Default value is 49152, according to RFC 5766.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-max\-port\fP
 | |
| Upper bound of the UDP port range for relay 
 | |
| endpoints allocation.
 | |
| Default value is 65535, according to RFC 5766.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-u\fP, \fB\-\-user\fP
 | |
| Long\-term security mechanism credentials user account, 
 | |
| in the column\-separated form username:key. 
 | |
| Multiple user accounts may used in the command line.
 | |
| The key is either the user password, or
 | |
| the key is generated
 | |
| by \fIturnadmin\fP command. In the second case,
 | |
| the key must be prepended with 0x symbols.
 | |
| The key is calculated over the user name, 
 | |
| the user realm, and the user password.
 | |
| This setting may not be used with TURN REST API or
 | |
| with short\-term credentials mechanism.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-r\fP, \fB\-\-realm\fP
 | |
| The default realm to be used for the users when no explicit 
 | |
| origin/realm relationship was found in the database, or if the TURN
 | |
| server is not using any database (just the commands\-line settings
 | |
| and the userdb file). Must be used with long\-term credentials 
 | |
| mechanism or with TURN REST API.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-C\fP, \fB\-\-rest\-api\-separator\fP
 | |
| This is the timestamp/username separator symbol (character) in TURN REST API.
 | |
| The default value is :.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-q\fP, \fB\-\-user\-quota\fP
 | |
| Per\-user allocations quota: how many concurrent 
 | |
| allocations a user can create. This option can also be set 
 | |
| through the database, for a particular realm.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-Q\fP, \fB\-\-total\-quota\fP
 | |
| Total allocations quota: global limit on concurrent allocations.
 | |
| This option can also be set through the database, for a particular realm.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-s\fP, \fB\-\-max\-bps\fP
 | |
| Max bytes\-per\-second bandwidth a TURN session is allowed to handle
 | |
| (input and output network streams are treated separately). Anything above 
 | |
| that limit will be dropped or temporary suppressed (within the
 | |
| available buffer limits). This option can also be set through the 
 | |
| database, for a particular realm.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-B\fP, \fB\-\-bps\-capacity\fP
 | |
| Maximum server capacity.
 | |
| Total bytes\-per\-second bandwidth the TURN server is allowed to allocate
 | |
| for the sessions, combined (input and output network streams are treated
 | |
| separately).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-static\-auth\-secret\fP
 | |
| Static authentication secret value (a string) for TURN REST API only.
 | |
| If not set, then the turn server will try to use the dynamic value 
 | |
| in turn_secret table in user database (if present). The database\-stored
 | |
| value can be changed on\-the\-fly by a separate program, so this is why
 | |
| that other mode is dynamic. Multiple shared secrets can be used
 | |
| (both in the database and in the "static" fashion).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-cert\fP
 | |
| Certificate file, PEM format. Same file 
 | |
| search rules applied as for the configuration 
 | |
| file. If both \fB\-\-no\-tls\fP and \fB\-\-no\-dtls\fP \fIoptions\fP 
 | |
| are specified, then this parameter is not needed.
 | |
| Default value is turn_server_cert.pem.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-pkey\fP
 | |
| Private key file, PEM format. Same file 
 | |
| search rules applied as for the configuration 
 | |
| file. If both \fB\-\-no\-tls\fP and \fB\-\-no\-dtls\fP \fIoptions\fP 
 | |
| are specified, then this parameter is not needed.
 | |
| Default value is turn_server_pkey.pem.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-pkey\-pwd\fP
 | |
| If the private key file is encrypted, then this password to be used.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-cipher\-list\fP
 | |
| Allowed OpenSSL cipher list for TLS/DTLS connections.
 | |
| Default value is "DEFAULT".
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-CA\-file\fP
 | |
| CA file in OpenSSL format. 
 | |
| Forces TURN server to verify the client SSL certificates.
 | |
| By default, no CA is set and no client certificate check is performed.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-ec\-curve\-name\fP
 | |
| Curve name for EC ciphers, if supported by OpenSSL library (TLS and DTLS).
 | |
| The default value is prime256v1.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-dh\-file\fP
 | |
| Use custom DH TLS key, stored in PEM format in the file.
 | |
| Flags \fB\-\-dh566\fP and \fB\-\-dh2066\fP are ignored when the DH key is taken from a file.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-l\fP, \fB\-\-log\-file\fP
 | |
| Option to set the full path name of the log file.
 | |
| By default, the \fIturnserver\fP tries to open a log file in 
 | |
| /var/log/\fIturnserver\fP, /var/log, /var/tmp, /tmp and . (current) 
 | |
| directories (which file open operation succeeds 
 | |
| first that file will be used). With this option you can set the 
 | |
| definite log file name.
 | |
| The special names are "stdout" and "\-" \- they will force everything 
 | |
| to the stdout. Also, "syslog" name will redirect everything into
 | |
| the system log (syslog), as if the option "\fB\-\-syslog\fP" was set. 
 | |
| In the runtime, the logfile can be reset with the SIGHUP signal 
 | |
| to the \fIturnserver\fP process.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-alternate\-server\fP
 | |
| Option to set the "redirection" mode. The value of this option
 | |
| will be the address of the alternate server for UDP & TCP service in form of 
 | |
| <ip>[:<port>]. The server will send this value in the attribute
 | |
| ALTERNATE\-SERVER, with error 300, on ALLOCATE request, to the client.
 | |
| Client will receive only values with the same address family
 | |
| as the client network endpoint address family. 
 | |
| See RFC 5389 and RFC 5766 for ALTERNATE\-SERVER functionality description. 
 | |
| The client must use the obtained value for subsequent TURN communications.
 | |
| If more than one \fB\-\-alternate\-server\fP \fIoptions\fP are provided, then the functionality
 | |
| can be more accurately described as "load\-balancing" than a mere "redirection". 
 | |
| If the port number is omitted, then the default port 
 | |
| number 3478 for the UDP/TCP protocols will be used.
 | |
| Colon (:) characters in IPv6 addresses may conflict with the syntax of 
 | |
| the option. To alleviate this conflict, literal IPv6 addresses are enclosed 
 | |
| in square brackets in such resource identifiers, for example: 
 | |
| [2001:db8:85a3:8d3:1319:8a2e:370:7348]:3478 . 
 | |
| Multiple alternate servers can be set. They will be used in the
 | |
| round\-robin manner. All servers in the pool are considered of equal weight and 
 | |
| the load will be distributed equally. For example, if we have 4 alternate servers, 
 | |
| then each server will receive 25% of ALLOCATE requests. An alternate TURN server 
 | |
| address can be used more than one time with the alternate\-server option, so this 
 | |
| can emulate "weighting" of the servers. 
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-tls\-alternate\-server\fP
 | |
| Option to set alternative server for TLS & DTLS services in form of 
 | |
| <ip>:<port>. If the port number is omitted, then the default port 
 | |
| number 5349 for the TLS/DTLS protocols will be used. See the previous option for the 
 | |
| functionality description.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-O\fP, \fB\-\-redis\-statsdb\fP
 | |
| Redis status and statistics database connection string, if used (default \- empty, 
 | |
| no Redis stats DB used). This database keeps allocations status information, and it can 
 | |
| be also used for publishing and delivering traffic and allocation event notifications.
 | |
| This database option can be used independently of \fB\-\-redis\-userdb\fP option,
 | |
| and actually Redis can be used for status/statistics and MySQL or MongoDB or PostgreSQL can
 | |
| be used for the user database.
 | |
| The connection string has the same parameters as redis\-userdb connection string.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-max\-allocate\-timeout\fP
 | |
| Max time, in seconds, allowed for full allocation establishment. 
 | |
| Default is 60 seconds.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| \fB\-\-denied\-peer\-ip\fP=<IPaddr[\fB\-IPaddr\fP]>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| \fB\-\-allowed\-peer\-ip\fP=<IPaddr[\fB\-IPaddr\fP]> Options to ban or allow specific ip addresses or ranges 
 | |
| of ip addresses. If an ip address is specified as both allowed and denied, then 
 | |
| the ip address is considered to be allowed. This is useful when you wish to ban
 | |
| a range of ip addresses, except for a few specific ips within that range.
 | |
| This can be used when you do not want users of the turn server to be able to access
 | |
| machines reachable by the turn server, but would otherwise be unreachable from the 
 | |
| internet (e.g. when the turn server is sitting behind a NAT). The 'white" and "black" peer 
 | |
| IP ranges can also be dynamically changed in the database. 
 | |
| The allowed/denied addresses (white/black lists) rules are very simple:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP 1) 4
 | |
| If there is no rule for an address, then it is allowed;
 | |
| .IP 2) 4
 | |
| If there is an "allowed" rule that fits the address then it is allowed \- no matter what;
 | |
| .IP 3) 4
 | |
| If there is no "allowed" rule that fits the address, and if there is a "denied" rule that
 | |
| fits the address, then it is denied.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-pidfile\fP
 | |
| File name to store the pid of the process.
 | |
| Default is /var/run/turnserver.pid (if superuser account is used) or
 | |
| /var/tmp/turnserver.pid .
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-proc\-user\fP
 | |
| User name to run the process. After the initialization, the \fIturnserver\fP process
 | |
| will make an attempt to change the current user ID to that user.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-proc\-group\fP
 | |
| Group name to run the process. After the initialization, the \fIturnserver\fP process
 | |
| will make an attempt to change the current group ID to that group.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-cli\-ip\fP
 | |
| Local system IP address to be used for CLI management interface.
 | |
| The \fIturnserver\fP process can be accessed for management with telnet,
 | |
| at this IP address and on the CLI port (see the next parameter). 
 | |
| Default value is 127.0.0.1. You can use telnet or putty (in telnet mode)
 | |
| to access the CLI management interface. 
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-cli\-port\fP
 | |
| CLI management interface listening port. Default is 5766.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-cli\-password\fP
 | |
| CLI access password. Default is empty (no password).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-cli\-max\-output\-sessions\fP
 | |
| Maximum number of output sessions in ps CLI command.
 | |
| This value can be changed on\-the\-fly in CLI. The default value is 256.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B
 | |
| \fB\-\-ne\fP=[1|2|3]
 | |
| Set network engine type for the process (for internal purposes).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| ==================================
 | |
| .SH LOAD BALANCE AND PERFORMANCE TUNING
 | |
| 
 | |
| This topic is covered in the wiki page:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| http://code.google.com/p/coturn/wiki/turn_performance_and_load_balance
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| ===================================
 | |
| .SH WEBRTC USAGE
 | |
| 
 | |
| This is a set of notes for the WebRTC users:
 | |
| .IP 1) 4
 | |
| WebRTC uses long\-term authentication mechanism, so you have to use \fB\-a\fP
 | |
| option (or \fB\-\-lt\-cred\-mech\fP). WebRTC relaying will not work with anonymous access 
 | |
| or with short\-term authentication. With \fB\-a\fP option, do not forget to set the 
 | |
| default realm (\fB\-r\fP option). You will also have to set up the user accounts, 
 | |
| for that you have a number of \fIoptions\fP:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| .fam C
 | |
|         a) command\-line options (\-u).
 | |
| 
 | |
|         b) userdb config file.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         c) a database table (PostgreSQL or MySQL or MongoDB). You will have to set keys with 
 | |
|         turnadmin utility (see docs and wiki for turnadmin). You cannot use open passwords 
 | |
|         in the database.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         d) Redis key/value pair(s), if Redis is used. You key use either keys or 
 | |
|         open passwords with Redis; see turndb/testredisdbsetup.sh file.  
 | |
| 
 | |
|         e) You also can use the TURN REST API. You will need shared secret(s) set
 | |
|         either  through the command line option, or through the config file, or through
 | |
|         the database table or Redis key/value pairs.  
 | |
| 
 | |
| .fam T
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| .IP 2) 4
 | |
| Usually WebRTC uses fingerprinting (\fB\-f\fP).
 | |
| .IP 3) 4
 | |
| \fB\-v\fP option may be nice to see the connected clients.
 | |
| .IP 4) 4
 | |
| \fB\-X\fP is needed if you are running your TURN server behind a NAT.
 | |
| .IP 5) 4
 | |
| \fB\-\-min\-port\fP and \fB\-\-max\-port\fP may be needed if you want to limit the relay endpoints ports
 | |
| number range.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| ===================================
 | |
| .SH TURN REST API
 | |
| 
 | |
| In WebRTC, the browser obtains the TURN connection information from the web
 | |
| server. This information is a secure information \- because it contains the 
 | |
| necessary TURN credentials. As these credentials are transmitted over the 
 | |
| public networks, we have a potential security breach.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If we have to transmit a valuable information over the public network, 
 | |
| then this information has to have a limited lifetime. Then the guy who 
 | |
| obtains this information without permission will be able to perform 
 | |
| only limited damage.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| This is how the idea of TURN REST API \- time\-limited TURN credentials \- 
 | |
| appeared. This security mechanism is based upon the long\-term credentials 
 | |
| mechanism. The main idea of the REST API is that the web server provides 
 | |
| the credentials to the client, but those credentials can be used only 
 | |
| limited time by an application that has to create a TURN server connection.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The "classic" long\-term credentials mechanism (LTCM) is described here:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5389#section\-10.2
 | |
| http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5389#section\-15.4
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| For authentication, each user must know two things: the username and the 
 | |
| password. Optionally, the user must supply the ORIGIN value, so that the 
 | |
| server can figure out the realm to be used for the user. The nonce and 
 | |
| the realm values are supplied by the TURN server. But LTCM is not saying 
 | |
| anything about the nature and about the persistence 
 | |
| of the username and of the password; and this is used by the REST API.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In the TURN REST API, there is no persistent passwords for users. A user has 
 | |
| just the username. The password is always temporary, and it is generated by 
 | |
| the web server on\-demand, when the user accesses the WebRTC page. And, 
 | |
| actually, a temporary one\-time session only, username is provided to the user, 
 | |
| too. 
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The temporary user is generated as:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| temporary\-username="timestamp" + ":" + "username"
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| where username is the persistent user name, and the timestamp format is just 
 | |
| seconds sinse 1970 \- the same value as \fBtime\fP(NULL) function returns.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| The temporary password is obtained as HMAC\-SHA1 function over the temporary
 | |
| username, with shared secret as the HMAC key, and then the result is encoded:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| temporary\-password = \fBbase64_encode\fP(hmac\-sha1(shared\-secret, temporary\-username))
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Both the TURN server and the web server know the same shared secret. How the
 | |
| shared secret is distributed among the involved entities is left to the WebRTC
 | |
| deployment details \- this is beyond the scope of the TURN REST API.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| So, a timestamp is used for the temporary password calculation, and this 
 | |
| timestamp can be retrieved from the temporary username. This information
 | |
| is valuable, but only temporary, while the timestamp is not expired. Without
 | |
| knowledge of the shared secret, a new temporary password cannot be generated.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| This is all formally described in Justin's Uberti TURN REST API document
 | |
| that can be obtained following the link "TURN REST API" in the \fBTURN Server\fP
 | |
| project's page http://code.google.com/p/coturn/.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Once the temporary username and password are obtained by the client (browser)
 | |
| application, then the rest is just 'classic" long\-term credentials mechanism.
 | |
| For developers, we are going to describe it step\-by\-step below:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| a new TURN client sends a request command to the TURN server. Optionally,
 | |
| it adds the ORIGIN field to it. 
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| TURN server sees that this is a new client and the message is not
 | |
| authenticated.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| the TURN server generates a random nonce string, and return the
 | |
| error 401 to the client, with nonce and realm included. If the ORIGIN
 | |
| field was present in the client request, it may affect the realm value
 | |
| that the server chooses for the client.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| the client sees the 401 error and it extracts two values from
 | |
| the error response: the nonce and the realm.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| the client uses username, realm and password to produce a key:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| .fam C
 | |
|          key = MD5(username ":" realm ":" SASLprep(password))
 | |
| .fam T
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| (SASLprep is described here: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4013)
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| the client forms a new request, adds username, realm and nonce to the
 | |
| request. Then, the client calculates and adds the integrity field to 
 | |
| the request. This is the trickiest part of the process, and it is
 | |
| described in the end of section 15.4: 
 | |
| http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5389#section\-15.4
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| the client, optionally, adds the fingerprint field. This may be also
 | |
| a tricky procedure, described in section 15.5 of the same document. 
 | |
| WebRTC usually uses fingerprinted TURN messages.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| the TURN server receives the request, reads the username.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| then the TURN server checks that the nonce and the realm in the request
 | |
| are the valid ones.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| then the TURN server calculates the key.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| then the TURN server calculates the integrity field.
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| then the TURN server compares the calculated integrity field with the
 | |
| received one \- they must be the same. If the integrity fields differ, 
 | |
| then the request is rejected.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In subsequent communications, the client may go with exactly the same 
 | |
| sequence, but for optimization usually the client, having already 
 | |
| information about realm and nonce, pre\-calculates the integrity string 
 | |
| for each request, so that the 401 error response becomes unnecessary. 
 | |
| The TURN server may use "\fB\-\-stale\-nonce\fP" option for extra security: in 
 | |
| some time, the nonce expires and the client will obtain 438 error response
 | |
| with the new nonce, and the client will have to start using the new nonce.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In subsequent communications, the sever and the client will always assume 
 | |
| the same password \- the original password becomes the session parameter and 
 | |
| is never expiring. So the password is not changing while the session is valid
 | |
| and unexpired. So, if the session is properly maintained, it may go forever, 
 | |
| even if the user password has been already changed (in the database). The 
 | |
| session simply is using the old password. Once the session got disconnected, 
 | |
| the client will have to use the new password to re\-connect (if the password 
 | |
| has been changed).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| An example when a new shared secret is generated every hour by the TURN server
 | |
| box and then supplied to the web server, remotely, is provided in the script
 | |
| examples/scripts/restapi/shared_secret_maintainer.pl .
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| A very important thing is that the nonce must be totally random and it must be 
 | |
| different for different clients and different sessions. 
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| ===================================
 | |
| .SH DATABASES
 | |
| 
 | |
| For the user database, the \fIturnserver\fP has the following \fIoptions\fP:
 | |
| .IP 1) 4
 | |
| Users can be set in the command line, with multiple \fB\-u\fP or \fB\-\-user\fP \fIoptions\fP.
 | |
| Obviously, only a few users can be set that way, and their credentials are fixed 
 | |
| for the \fIturnserver\fP process lifetime.
 | |
| .IP 2) 4
 | |
| Users can be set in turnusers.conf flat file DB. The \fIturnserver\fP process periodically
 | |
| re\-reads this file, so the user accounts may be changed while the \fIturnserver\fP is running.
 | |
| But still a relatively small (up to a hundred ?) number of users can be handled that way.
 | |
| .IP 3) 4
 | |
| Users can be stored in PostgreSQL database, if the \fIturnserver\fP was compiled with PostgreSQL
 | |
| support. Each time \fIturnserver\fP checks user credentials, it reads the database (asynchronously,
 | |
| of course, so that the current flow of packets is not delayed in any way), so any change in the 
 | |
| database content is immediately visible by the \fIturnserver\fP. This is the way if you need the 
 | |
| best scalability. The schema for the database can be found in schema.sql file.
 | |
| For long\-term credentials, you have to set the "keys" for the users; the "keys" are generated 
 | |
| by the \fIturnadmin\fP utility. For the key generation, you need username, password and the realm. 
 | |
| All users in the database must use the same realm value; if down the road you will decide 
 | |
| to change the realm name, then you will have to re\-generate all user keys (that can be done 
 | |
| in a batch script). If you are using short\-term credentials, then you use open passwords 
 | |
| in the database; you will have to make sure that nobody can access the database outside of 
 | |
| the TURN server box. See the file turndb/testsqldbsetup.sql as an example.
 | |
| .IP 4) 4
 | |
| The same is true for MySQL database. The same schema file is applicable.
 | |
| The same considerations are applicable. 
 | |
| .IP 5) 4
 | |
| The same is true for the Redis database, but the Redis database has aa different schema \-
 | |
| it can be found (in the form of explanation) in schema.userdb.redis. 
 | |
| Also, in Redis you can store both "keys" and open passwords (for long term credentials) \- 
 | |
| the "open password" option is less secure but more convenient for low\-security environments. 
 | |
| For short\-term credentials, you will use open passwords only. See the file 
 | |
| turndb/testredisdbsetup.sh as an example. 
 | |
| .IP 6) 4
 | |
| If a database is used, then users can be divided into multiple independent realms. Each realm
 | |
| can be administered separately, and each realm can have its own set of users and its own
 | |
| performance \fIoptions\fP (max\-bps, user\-quota, total\-quota).
 | |
| .IP 7) 4
 | |
| If you use MongoDB, the database will be setup for you automatically.
 | |
| .IP 8) 4
 | |
| Of course, the \fIturnserver\fP can be used in non\-secure mode, when users are allowed to establish
 | |
| sessions anonymously. But in most cases (like WebRTC) that will not work.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| For the status and statistics database, there are two choices:
 | |
| .IP 1) 4
 | |
| The simplest choice is not to use it. Do not set \fB\-\-redis\-statsdb\fP option, and this functionality
 | |
| will be simply ignored.
 | |
| .IP 2) 4
 | |
| If you choose to use it, then set the \fB\-\-redis\-statsdb\fP option. This may be the same database
 | |
| as in \fB\-\-redis\-userdb\fP option, or it may be a different database. You may want to use different 
 | |
| database for security or convenience reasons. Also, you can use different database management
 | |
| systems for the user database and for the ststus and statistics database. For example, you can use 
 | |
| MySQL as the user database, and you can use redis for the statistics. Or you can use Redis for both.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| So, we have 6 choices for the user management, and 2 choices for the statistics management. These
 | |
| two are totally independent. So, you have overall 6*2=12 ways to handle persistent information, 
 | |
| choose any for your convenience.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| You do not have to handle the database information "manually" \- the \fIturnadmin\fP program can handle 
 | |
| everything for you. For PostgreSQL and MySQL you will just have to create an empty database
 | |
| with schema.sql SQL script. With Redis, you do not have to do even that \- just run \fIturnadmin\fP and 
 | |
| it will set the users for you (see the \fIturnadmin\fP manuals).
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH LIBRARIES
 | |
| 
 | |
| In the lib/ sub\-directory the build process will create TURN client messaging library.
 | |
| In the include/ sub\-directory, the necessary include files will be placed.
 | |
| The C++ wrapper for the messaging functionality is located in TurnMsgLib.h header.
 | |
| An example of C++ code can be found in stunclient.c file. 
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH DOCS
 | |
| 
 | |
| After installation, run the command:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| $ man \fIturnserver\fP
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| or in the project root directory:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| $ man \fB\-M\fP man \fIturnserver\fP
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| to see the man page.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| In the docs/html subdirectory of the original archive tree, you will find the client library 
 | |
| reference. After the installation, it will be placed in PREFIX/share/doc/\fIturnserver\fP/html.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH LOGS
 | |
| 
 | |
| When the \fBTURN Server\fP starts, it makes efforts to create a log file turn_<pid>.log 
 | |
| in the following directories:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| /var/log
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| /log/
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| /var/tmp
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| /tmp
 | |
| .IP \(bu 3
 | |
| current directory
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| If all efforts failed (due to the system permission settings) then all 
 | |
| log messages are sent only to the standard output of the process.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| This behavior can be controlled by \fB\-\-log\-file\fP, \fB\-\-syslog\fP and \fB\-\-no\-stdout\-log\fP \fIoptions\fP.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH TELNET CLI
 | |
| 
 | |
| The \fIturnserver\fP process provides a telnet CLI access as statistics and basic management
 | |
| interface. By default, the \fIturnserver\fP starts a telnet CLI listener on IP 127.0.0.1 and
 | |
| port 5766. That can be changed by the command\-cline \fIoptions\fP of the \fIturnserver\fP process
 | |
| (see \fB\-\-cli\-ip\fP and \fB\-\-cli\-port\fP \fIoptions\fP). The full list of telnet CLI commands is provided
 | |
| in "help" command output in the telnet CLI.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH CLUSTERS
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fBTURN Server\fP can be a part of the cluster installation. But, to support the "even port" functionality 
 | |
| (RTP/RTCP streams pairs) the client requests from a particular IP must be delivered to the same 
 | |
| \fBTURN Server\fP instance, so it requires some networking setup massaging for the cluster. The reason is that 
 | |
| the RTP and RTCP relaying endpoints must be allocated on the same relay IP. It would be possible 
 | |
| to design a scheme with the application\-level requests forwarding (and we may do that later) but 
 | |
| it would affect the performance.
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH FILES
 | |
| 
 | |
| /etc/turnserver.conf
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| /etc/turnuserdb.conf
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| /usr/local/etc/turnserver.conf
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| /usr/local/etc/turnuserdb.conf
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH DIRECTORIES
 | |
| 
 | |
| /usr/local/share/\fIturnserver\fP
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| /usr/local/share/doc/\fIturnserver\fP
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| /usr/local/share/examples/\fIturnserver\fP
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH STANDARDS
 | |
| 
 | |
| obsolete STUN RFC 3489
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| new STUN RFC 5389
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| TURN RFC 5766
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| TURN\-TCP extension RFC 6062
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| TURN IPv6 extension RFC 6156
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| STUN/TURN test vectors RFC 5769
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| STUN NAT behavior discovery RFC 5780
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| =================================
 | |
| .SH SEE ALSO
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fIturnadmin\fP, \fIturnutils\fP
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| ======================================
 | |
| .SS  WEB RESOURCES
 | |
| 
 | |
| project page:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| http://code.google.com/p/coturn/
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Wiki page:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| http://code.google.com/p/coturn/wiki/Readme
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| forum:
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!forum/turn\-server\-project\-rfc5766\-turn\-server/
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| ======================================
 | |
| .SS  AUTHORS
 | |
| 
 | |
| Oleg Moskalenko <mom040267@gmail.com>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Gabor Kovesdan http://kovesdan.org/
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Daniel Pocock http://danielpocock.com/
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| John Selbie (jselbie@gmail.com)
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Lee Sylvester <lee@designrealm.co.uk>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Erik Johnston <erikj@openmarket.com>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Roman Lisagor <roman@demonware.net>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Vladimir Tsanev <tsachev@gmail.com>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Po\-sheng Lin <personlin118@gmail.com>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Peter Dunkley <peter.dunkley@crocodilertc.net>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Mutsutoshi Yoshimoto <mutsutoshi.yoshimoto@mixi.co.jp>
 | |
| .PP
 | |
| Federico Pinna <fpinna@vivocha.com>
 |