/ultraviolet-node

Ultraviolet web application example for easy deployment (Node.js)

Primary LanguageJavaScript

Ultraviolet-Node

The deployable version of Ultraviolet, a highly sophisticated proxy used for evading internet censorship or accessing websites in a controlled sandbox using the power of service-workers and more!

Quick Deployments

Deploy to Heroku Run on Replit

Features

  • CAPTCHA support along with hCAPTCHA support
  • URL encoding settings to further hide activity when using Ultraviolet
  • Configuration all done on the client-side via service-workers
  • Speed in comparison to other web proxies that fully proxy content
  • Blacklist setting and more for easy hosting
  • Security in mind and leak prevention
  • Frequent updates to improve site support or fix security issues

Supported Sites

Technologies Used

  • Service Workers
  • HTML, JS, CSS rewriting
  • Parse5
  • Acorn.js

Used by

  • Incognito, a popular web proxy service with focus on privacy
  • Holy-Unblocker, a popular web proxy service focusing on bypassing web filters and more
  • Hypertabs, a web proxy service using a PWA browser as its frontend

Table of Contents

Installation and Setup

Installation of Ultraviolet is simple. You can find a Tl;DR of the installation and setup process just below. If you are unfamiliar with the "standard" installation process, look a bit farther down for a more comprehensive installation and setup guide.

Basic Guide

$ git clone https://github.com/titaniumnetwork-dev/Ultraviolet-Node --recursive
$ cd Ultraviolet-Node
$ npm install
$ npm start

Replit Setup Guide

To setup on Replit, first click on the "Run on Replit" button. After loading into your repl, run the following commands:

$ npm install
$ chmod +x main.sh
$ ./main.sh

You will only have to run the second command once. It just allows main.sh to be executed. By running main.sh, you will update any submodules and will start the app.

Note: If you choose not to use main.sh, but would rather just run all commands manually, please note that you will have to manually install submodules by running git update submodules --init. Without it, static will not be installed, and that is a required directory.

Comprehensive Guide

Below will describe a comprehensive guide to install Ultraviolet on Linux machines.

To clone the repository, simply run the following command:

$ git clone https://github.com/titaniumnetwork-dev/Ultraviolet-Node --recursive

The --recursive flag will clone the repository and all submodules.

To begin work on the actual setup, cd into the repository. You can do so by running the following command:

$ cd Ultraviolet-Node

From here, you can update your submodules and install your dependencies. To do so, run the following command:

$ npm install

Finally, to start Ultraviolet, run the following command:

$ npm start

You can then find Ultraviolet on http://127.0.0.1:8080. If you would like to change the port UV will be running on, edit the last line in index.mjs.

Please note that UV will not function without HTTPS. If you are hosting on Replit or Heroku, this won't be a problem as they provide you with SSL/TLS by default and will automatically apply it to your instance, however if you are attempting to host UV on a different platform, such as a personal server, you WILL need to use HTTPS.

Configuration

Configuring Ultraviolet is very simple. Simple descriptions of each configurable option are provided as a comment in the block below. More detailed documentation can be found just below mentioned block.

uv.config.js

self.__uv$config = {
    prefix: '/sw/', // Proxy url prefix
    bare: '/bare/', // Bare server location
    encodeUrl: Ultraviolet.codec.xor.encode, // URL Encoding function
    decodeUrl: Ultraviolet.codec.xor.decode, // Decode URL function
    handler: '/uv.handler.js', // Handler script
    bundle: '/uv.bundle.js', // Bundled script
    config: '/uv.config.js', // Configuration script
    sw: '/uv.sw.js', // Service Worker Script
};
Configuration Options and Explanation
Prefix The prefix is the prefix that you want users to see. Ex: https://example.com/service. The default prefix is service.
Bare Bare Servers can run on directories. For example, if the directory was /bare/ then the bare origin would look like http://example.org/bare/. The bare origin is passed to clients.
encodeUrl EncodeUrl is how you want the URL a proxy site's visitors has to be encoded. Options include Ultraviolet.codec.base64.encode, Ultraviolet.codec.plain.encode, or Ultraviolet.codec.xor.encode. It is recommended that you use xor or base64 as it hides the queries your visitors are searching and visiting.
decodeURL DecodeUrl is how you want the url to be decoded. It is recommended you keep it the same as encodeUrl.
Handler Handler is the path to the UV handler. The default name and path to this file is static/uv/uv.handler.js.
Bundle Bundle is the path to the UV bundle file. The default name and path to this file is static/uv/uv.bundle.js.
Config Config is the path to the UV config file. The default name and path to this file is static/uv/uv.bundle.js.
SW SW is the path to the UV Service Worker script. The default name and path to this file is static/uv/uv.sw.js.

Static Files

Static files is the frontend for Ultraviolet. A standalone repository for it can be found here.

Core Scripts

Configuration mentions a few scripts that make up Ultraviolet. To get documentation for what each of the scripts do, check out the documentation for them in their standalone repository.

Main Scripts After Building

The client-hooking & service worker scripts required for UV are located in ultraviolet-scripts

  • Scripts
    • uv.sw.js Service worker gateway
    • uv.sw-handler.js - Service worker handler
    • uv.bundle.js Webpack compiled Ultraviolet rewriter
    • uv.handler.js Client-side hooking
    • uv.config.js Configuration

Authors

  • Caracal.js (Creator of Ultraviolet)
  • Divide (Creator of TOMP)

Credits