0.1.4 • Published 8 years ago

dispatch-proxy v0.1.4

Weekly downloads
118
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
8 years ago

dispatch-proxy

A SOCKS5/HTTP proxy that balances traffic between multiple internet connections.

Works on Mac OS X, Windows and Linux.

Detailed installation instructions:

Installation

You'll need to have Node.JS >= 0.10.0 installed on your system.

$ npm install -g dispatch-proxy

To update:

$ npm update -g dispatch-proxy

Rationale

You often find yourself with multiple unused internet connections, be it a 3G/4G mobile subscription or a free wifi hotspot, that your system wont let you use together with your main one.

For example, my residence provides me with a cabled and wireless internet access. Both are capped at 1,200kB/s download/upload speed, but they can simultaneously run at full speed. My mobile internet access also provides me with 400kB/s download/upload speed.

Combine all of these with dispatch and a threaded download manager and you get a 2,800kB/s download and upload speed limit, which is considerably better :)

Use-cases

The possibilities are endless:

  • combine as many Wi-Fi networks/Ethernet/3G/4G connections as you have access to in one big, load balanced connection,
  • use it in conjunction with a threaded download manager, effectively combining multiple connections' speed in single file downloads,
  • create two proxies, assign to each its own interface, and run two apps simultaneously that use a different interface (e.g. for balancing download/upload),
  • create a hotspot proxy at home that connects through Ethernet and your 4G card for all your mobile devices,
  • etc.

Quick start

The module provides a simple command-line utility called dispatch.

$ dispatch start

Start a SOCKS proxy server on localhost:1080. Simply add this address as a SOCKS proxy in your system settings and your traffic will be automatically balanced between all available internet connections.

Usage

$ dispatch -h

  Usage: dispatch [options] [command]

  Commands:

    list                   list all available network interfaces
    start [options]        start a proxy server

  Options:

    -h, --help     output usage information
    -V, --version  output the version number
$ dispatch start -h

  Usage: start [options] [addresses]

  Options:

    -h, --help      output usage information
    -H, --host <h>  which host to accept connections from (defaults to localhost)
    -p, --port <p>  which port to listen to for connections (defaults to 8080 for HTTP proxy, 1080 for SOCKS proxy)
    --http          start an http proxy server
    --debug         log debug info in the console

Examples

$ dispatch start --http

Start an HTTP proxy server listening on localhost:8080, dispatching connections to every non-internal IPv4 local addresses.

$ dispatch start 10.0.0.0 10.0.0.1

Dispatch connections only to local addresses 10.0.0.0 and 10.0.0.1.

$ dispatch start 10.0.0.0@7 10.0.0.1@3

Dispatch connections to 10.0.0.0 7 times out of 10 and to '10.0.0.1' 3 times out of 10.

0.1.4

8 years ago

0.1.3

9 years ago

0.1.2

10 years ago

0.1.1

10 years ago

0.1.0

10 years ago

0.0.10

10 years ago

0.0.9

10 years ago

0.0.8

10 years ago

0.0.7

10 years ago

0.0.6

10 years ago

0.0.5

10 years ago

0.0.4

10 years ago

0.0.3

10 years ago

0.0.2

10 years ago

0.0.1

10 years ago