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WTransport

WebTransport protocol, pure-rust, async-friendly.

Introduction

WebTransport is a new protocol being developed to enable low-latency, bidirectional communication between clients and servers over the web. It aims to address the limitations of existing protocols like HTTP and WebSocket by offering a more efficient and flexible transport layer.

Benefits of WebTransport

Notes

Please be aware that WebTransport is still a draft and not yet standardized. The WTransport library, while functional, is not considered completely production-ready. It should be used with caution and may undergo changes as the WebTransport specification evolves.

Simple API

```rust async fn server() -> Result<(), Error> { let config = ServerConfig::builder() .withbindaddress(SocketAddr::new(Ipv6Addr::LOCALHOST.into(), 4433)) .with_certificate(Certificate::load("cert.pem", "key.pem")?);

let server = Endpoint::server(config)?;

println!("Waiting for incoming connections...");
loop {    
    let connecting = server.accept().await?;

    tokio::spawn(async move {
       println!("New connection");
       let connection = connecting.await?;
       let stream = connection.accept_bi().await?
       // ...
    });
}

} ```

Getting Started

0. Clone the Repository

bash git clone https://github.com/BiagioFesta/wtransport.git bash cd wtransport/

1. Generate TLS Certificate

bash cargo run --example gencert

This will generate cert.pem and key.pem in the current working directory.

Moreover, the program will also output the fingerprint of the certificate. Something like this: Certificate generated Fingerprint: OjyqTe//WoGnvBrgiO37tkOQJyuN1r7hhyBzwX0gotg=

Please take note of the fingerprint, as you will need it to verify the certificate on the client side.

2. Run Example Server

bash cargo run --example server

3. Run Client on Browser

Latest versions of Google Chrome started supporting some implementations of the protocol.

Since the generated certificate is self-signed, it cannot be directly accepted by the browser at the moment. In order to allow the local certificate, you need to launch Google Chrome with two additional options: google-chrome \ --origin-to-force-quic-on=localhost:4433 \ --ignore-certificate-errors-spki-list=FINGERPRINT

Replace FINGERPRINT with the value obtained in step 1. For example, OjyqTe//WoGnvBrgiO37tkOQJyuN1r7hhyBzwX0gotg=.

4. Connect to the Server

Open the website https://webtransport.day/ on Google Chrome instace. Use the URL: https://localhost:4433, and click on Connect.

Enjoy!

Examples