hts [options] [host:][port]
This manual page briefly documents the hts command.
hts listens for incoming httptunnel connections at PORT
(default port is 8888), and optionally binds to ip address HOST. When a
connection is made, I/O is redirected to the destination specified by the
--device or --forward-port switch.
The program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long
options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options are included
below.
- -h, --help
- Show summary of options.
- -c, --content-length
BYTES
- use HTTP PUT requests of BYTES size (k, M, and G postfixes
recognized)
- -d, --device
DEVICE
- use DEVICE for input and output
- -F, --forward-port
HOST:PORT
- connect to PORT at HOST and use it for input and output
- -k, --keep-alive
SECONDS
- send keepalive bytes every SECONDS seconds (default is 5)
- -M, --max-connection-age
SEC
- maximum time a connection will stay open is SEC seconds (default is
300)
- -s, --stdin-stdout
- use stdin/stdout for communication (implies --no-daemon)
- -S,
--strict-content-length
- always write Content-Length bytes in requests
- -V, --version
- output version information and exit
- -w, --no-daemon
- don't fork into the background
- -p, --pid-file
LOCATION
- write a PID file to LOCATION
- -C, --chroot
LOCATION
- chroot to LOCATION before serving clients
- -u, --user USER
- change user and group identities before serving clients
This manual page was contributed by Teemu Hukkanen
<tjhukkan@iki.fi>, and was originally written for the Debian GNU/Linux
system.