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I am writing a custom p2p program that runs on port 4900. In some cases when the person is behind a router, this port is not accessible from the internet.

Is there an automatic way of enabling the access to the port from the internet. I am not really sure of how other p2p applications work.

Can anyone please throw some light on this?

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  • possible duplicate of Is there a UPnP Library for .NET (C# or VB.NET)?
    – David
    Dec 15, 2011 at 16:29
  • 3
    @David I disagree on the duplicate, though UPnP is indeed 'the' answer.
    – jv42
    Dec 15, 2011 at 16:33
  • 2
    @jv42: Fair enough, which is why closing requires 5 votes. At the very least, it points the OP to useful and related information. I think StackOverflow etiquette prefers linking duplicates in this manner over re-posting the same answer. But I can see where these two differ enough. Either way, as long as the OP is helped, mission accomplished :)
    – David
    Dec 15, 2011 at 16:34
  • @David: I can see the point. As a user, I do prefer to have a straight answer to the question, even if it points the 'duplicate' with a very short explanation.
    – jv42
    Dec 15, 2011 at 16:41
  • I have posted my question, related to yours, but not precisly stackoverflow.com/questions/54118006/vpn-with-webrtc-stun-ice
    – BBK
    Jan 9, 2019 at 21:11

6 Answers 6

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P2P connectivity in a nutshell. Assume we're talking about UDP here. The steps below can also be applied to TCP with some adjustments.

  1. Enumerate all your local IP addresses (usually only 1). Create a UDP socket on a given port number** for each adapter with an IP address.

  2. For each socket created in step 1, contact a STUN or TURN server with that same socket to discover your external IP address and to discover what the internal port number maps to outside of the NAT (it's not always the same port value). That is, your local address 192.168.1.2:4900 might be 128.11.12.13:8888 to the outside world. And some NATs don't always use the same port mapping when using the same local port to other IP addresses. TURN will also provide you a "relay address". You can also use UPNP to get a port mapped address directly from your router, if it supports that protocol.

  3. Through a rendezvous service (SIP, XMPP, instant message, web service, email, cups with strings), publish your address candidate list to a service or send a notification to the other client that says, "hey, I want to connect with you". This message includes all the "address candidates" (ip and port pairs) collected in steps 1 and 2.

  4. The remote client, upon receiving the invite to connect, performs step 1 and 2 above as well. Then sends back his candidate list through the same channel that he received the inviter's candidate list on.

  5. Hole punching step. Both clients, start sending test messages over UDP to the other side's address candidates and listening for the same messages on their end. Whenever a messages is received, reply back to the address from which it came. Eventually, the clients will discover that they have a pair of addresses that they can reliably send datagrams too. Typically, one endpoint makes the final decision on which address pair (sockets) to communicate with and the protocol facilitates this endpoint telling the other endpoint this decision.

**- usually best to not to rely on a well known port for P2P clients. Because two clients behind the same NAT or firewall would not likely be able to use your software at the same time.

Here is a quick summary of some technologies to explore.

STUN - Is a simple server and protocol for clients behind a NAT/route to discover what their external IP and port mappings are.

TURN is an expansion to STUN, but supports relaying for P2P connectivity scenarios where firewalls and NATs prevent direct connections.

ICE is a set of steps by which STUN and TURN are used for setting up a P2P connection. ICE is a formal protocol for steps 1-5 above. Two excellent set of slides on ICE are here and here.

WebRTC is a variant of the ICE standard as well as a reference library for make P2P sessions with STUN and TURN.

UPNP + Internet Gateway Device Protocol - Some routers support this for hosts to automatically obtain port mappings.

libnice is an open source C library for Linux (and might work on windows) that implements ICE.

libjingle is another ICE implementation (in C++) from Google. For Windows and Linux.

PJNATH is a library within the PJSIP suite of coding libraries. It is a good implementation of an ICE stack (C code) and has been ported to a lot of platforms. (Windows, Linux, Mac, iOS, Symbian, and soon Android).

And finally, I have a blatant plug for you to use my STUN server code base.

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  • @selbie , can STUN/TURN/ICE implementation work if one of, or both the peers are behind Double NAT?
    – Jagdish
    Nov 11, 2014 at 7:14
  • 1
    @jagsgediya - yes. Most likely will converge through TURN.
    – selbie
    Nov 11, 2014 at 8:01
  • @selbie I'm still unclear how the stuff work. Assuming that STUN server returned 128.11.12.13:8888 for Natted ip and port 192.168.1.2:4900 Assuming that I want to expose my port 3000 to the outside world. Do I port forward all request arriving at port 4900 to port 3000
    – Viren
    Jul 30, 2017 at 10:27
  • If you are trying to run a dedicated server than any client can connect to, then none of this stuff applies. You just open up a port on your router and firewalls as you described. If you are trying to dynamically establish a temporary short-term connection with another computer without manually configuring your NAT, then the P2P instructions above apply.
    – selbie
    Aug 1, 2017 at 1:18
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There are solutions in some cases, see UPnP: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Plug_and_Play#NAT_traversal

My home router allows this, basically, the NAT can be configured automatically by the proper request from the computer.

I would not count on this to provide a big improvement in your availability, because not that many routers both support that and have it enabled.

EDIT: @David suggested this SO question for a .NET library for UPnP: Is there a UPnP Library for .NET (C# or VB.NET)?

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3

I would use WebRTC technology as an open source framework for such application.

Official Website

In fact it is an open source project which supports all necessary for peer-to-peer technologies out of the box:

  • ICE and STUN (NAT traversal)
  • DTLS and SRTP (security)
  • AVPF for quality of streaming.
2

This may be a little more complicated than what you're looking for, but TCP Hole Punching is a technique that should work. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP_hole_punching

Alternatively, UPnP works great for routers / firewalls that support it.

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You have another option that is NAT Port Mapping Protocol (NAT-PMP) NAT-PMP is widely used by VoIP applications like Skype or BitTorrent P2P clients.

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-1

For the simple beginnig I would recommend to see hole punching technique. Great video here. But be sure it will not always work relating the network topology. This solves the ICE technique which discovers how connection could be established.

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