Showing 18 of 18 projects
A modern, simple TCP tunnel in Rust that exposes local ports to a remote server, bypassing NAT firewalls.
SSH2 client and server modules written in pure JavaScript for Node.js.
A Secure Shell (SSH-2) library for .NET, optimized for parallelism.
Bulk port forward Kubernetes services to localhost with unique IPs and an interactive TUI for seamless local development.
An open-source, lightweight TCP/UDP tunneling solution with connection pooling and multi-protocol support for bypassing network restrictions.
A CLI tool for creating resilient SSH tunnels with a focus on reliability and user experience.
A simple command-line SSH tunnel manager that supports local, remote, and dynamic port forwarding with automatic reconnection.
A Kubernetes port-forward manager with auto-reconnection, reverse tunneling, and HTTP traffic inspection, available as a desktop GUI or terminal UI.
A pure Ruby implementation of the SSH2 client protocol for executing processes and managing connections to remote servers.
Spawns lightweight NixOS virtual machines in a shell for testing and development.
Rust bindings for libssh2, enabling SSH client functionality in Rust applications.
A single-binary tool for creating persistent SSH tunnels with an embedded SSH server for secure remote access.
Advanced port forwarding utility with TLS SNI/ALPN routing, IP-based rules, HTTP proxy features, and hot reloading.
A GUI tool to manage and monitor SSH connections with automatic port forwarding and configuration via YAML.
An intelligent HTTP/Socks5 proxy for Windows that automatically detects and circumvents internet censorship with built-in Shadowsocks support.
A minimal UPnP IGD library for ESP8266/ESP32 to automate port forwarding on routers.
A comprehensive proxy toolkit written in Go supporting SOCKS5, HTTP, port forwarding, and reverse proxying.
A simple CLI tool to manage IPTables forwards on Linux servers.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.