Ansible playbook to automatically set up the Inlets cloud tunnel to expose your internal and development endpoints to the public Internet via an exit-node. The script was inspired by the official inlets tutorial that can be found on Alex Ellis' blog.
- you'll need an exit node. That could be a 5 USD VPS or any other computer with an IPv4 IP address.
- sub-domain at duckdns.org. It's free and easy to set up.
- you'll need Ansible installed on your local computer. Take a look at the docs to find the installation guide for your OS.
- rename the
vars.yml.example
tovars.yml
and update config variables (see Variables section below). - run the
server.yml
playbook to set up Inlets server on the exit node:
$ ansible-playbook server.yml
- run the
client.yml
playbook to set up Inlets client on the host node:
$ ansible-playbook client.yml
If asked for sudo password, add --ask-become-pass
parameter to the command.
pwd
- working direcotry on the exit node, e.g. /home/foo
inlets_token
- your unique token. You can generate one by running head -c 16 /dev/urandom | shasum | cut -d" " -f1
inlets_exit_node
- domain name or IP address of the exit node, e.g. foobar.duckdns.org
inlets_host_node
- host name or IP address of the host node, e.g. http://192.168.0.4:3000
duckdns_subdomain
- subdomain part of your duckdns domain that you've used for "inlets_exit_node", in this case foobar
duckdns_api_key
- api key provided by duckdns.org for your subdomain
ansible_exit_node
- name of the group in your ansible inventory file that contains exit node's IP address
ansible_host_node
- name of the group in your ansoble inventory file that contains host node's IP address