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The CrushTunnel process can be integrated into an existing workflow using a standalone machine acting as the tunnel provider, or programmatically through your own code.

Here is a stand alone example (one long line):

java -cp CrushTunnel.jar com.crushftp.tunnel2.Tunnel2 protocol=https host=www.crushftp.com port=443 username=demo password=demo

That command would start the tunnel and make it a FTP server handling requests that ultimately ended up going through the tunnel and to the main CrushFTP server on the other side. You can control the port ranges for PASV, and the IP that is given to the FTP clients for PASV mode. The tunnel goes over HTTPS, so everything is encrypted between CrushTunnel and the server.


To programmatically start the tunnel, include the CrushTunnel.jar file, and do something similar to the following:
com.crushtunnel.gui.Common.trustEverything(); //ignore SSL validation issues…bad for prod use
com.crushftp.tunnel2.Tunnel2 t = new com.crushftp.tunnel2.Tunnel2("https://www.crushftp.com:443/", "demo", "demo", false);
t.startThreads();
//tunnel is now open and ready.  Connections to it over FTP on 127.0.0.1 will be proxied securely through the tunnel to the CrushFTP FTP server side.

//to stop it later on
t.stopThisTunnel();

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« This particular version was published on 05-Dec-2023 05:32 by Ben Spink.
G’day (anonymous guest)
CrushFTP11 | What's New

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