Rust Reverse Proxy Servers

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Browse free open source Rust Reverse Proxy Servers and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Rust Reverse Proxy Servers by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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  • 1
    rathole

    rathole

    A lightweight and high-performance reverse proxy for NAT traversal

    A secure, stable and high-performance reverse proxy for NAT traversal, written in Rust. rathole, like frp and ngrok, can help to expose the service on the device behind the NAT to the Internet, via a server with a public IP. High Performance Much higher throughput can be achieved than frp, and more stable when handling a large volume of connections. Low Resource Consumption Consumes much fewer memory than similar tools. See Benchmark. The binary can be as small as ~500KiB to fit the constraints of devices, like embedded devices as routers. Security Tokens of services are mandatory and service-wise. The server and clients are responsible for their own configs. With the optional Noise Protocol, encryption can be configured at ease. No need to create a self-signed certificate! TLS is also supported.
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Sōzu

    Sōzu

    Sōzu HTTP reverse proxy, configurable at runtime, fast and safe

    Open source HTTP reverse proxy built in Rust for immutable infrastructures. Most existing tools have a static vision of production: a service is installed once on a long-lived server, updated from time to time, with configuration rarely changing. There's now a shift in infrastructure to short-lived virtual machines and hundreds of new deployments per day, and the usual tools reach their limits. How do we reconcile a dynamic environment with availability guarantees? How can we get "zero downtime" deployments for critical services? SŌZU is a HTTP reverse proxy built in Rust, that can handle fine-grained configuration changes at runtime without reloads, and is designed to never ever stop. SŌZU receives and handles configuration changes at runtime and updates its internal configuration without restarts. You can update the configuration multiple times per second, and it will take care of lingering connections.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
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