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NAMEss-tunnel - shadowsocks tools for local port forwarding, libev portSYNOPSISss-tunnel [-uUv6] [-h|--help] [-s <server_host>] [-p <server_port>] [-l <local_port>] [-k <password>] [-m <encrypt_method>] [-f <pid_file>] [-t <timeout>] [-c <config_file>] [-i <interface>] [-b <local_address>] [-a <user_name>] [-n <nofile>] [-L addr:port] [--mtu <MTU>] [--mptcp] [--reuse-port] [--no-delay] [--plugin <plugin_name>] [--plugin-opts <plugin_options>] [--key <key_in_base64>]DESCRIPTIONShadowsocks-libev is a lightweight and secure socks5 proxy. It is a port of the original shadowsocks created by clowwindy. Shadowsocks-libev is written in pure C and takes advantage of libev to achieve both high performance and low resource consumption.Shadowsocks-libev consists of five components. ss-tunnel(1) is a tool for local port forwarding. See OPTIONS section for special option needed by ss-tunnel(1). For more information, check out shadowsocks-libev(8). OPTIONS-s <server_host>Set the server’s hostname or IP.
-p <server_port> Set the server’s port number.
-l <local_port> Set the local port number.
-k <password>, --password <password> Set the password. The server and the client should use
the same password.
--key <key_in_base64> Set the key directly. The key should be encoded with
URL-safe Base64.
-m <encrypt_method> Set the cipher.
Shadowsocks-libev accepts 19 different ciphers: aes-128-gcm, aes-192-gcm, aes-256-gcm, rc4-md5, aes-128-cfb, aes-192-cfb, aes-256-cfb, aes-128-ctr, aes-192-ctr, aes-256-ctr, bf-cfb, camellia-128-cfb, camellia-192-cfb, camellia-256-cfb, chacha20-ietf-poly1305, xchacha20-ietf-poly1305, salsa20, chacha20 and chacha20-ietf. The default cipher is chacha20-ietf-poly1305. If built with PolarSSL or custom OpenSSL libraries, some of these ciphers may not work. -a <user_name> Run as a specific user.
-f <pid_file> Start shadowsocks as a daemon with specific pid
file.
-t <timeout> Set the socket timeout in seconds. The default value is
60.
-c <config_file> Use a configuration file.
Refer to shadowsocks-libev(8) CONFIG FILE section for more details. -n <number> Specify max number of open files.
Only available on Linux. -i <interface> Send traffic through specific network interface.
For example, there are three interfaces in your device, which is lo (127.0.0.1), eth0 (192.168.0.1) and eth1 (192.168.0.2). Meanwhile, you configure ss-tunnel to listen on 0.0.0.0:8388 and bind to eth1. That results the traffic go out through eth1, but not lo nor eth0. This option is useful to control traffic in multi-interface environment. -b <local_address> Specify the local address to use while this client is
making outbound connections to the server.
-u Enable UDP relay.
-U Enable UDP relay and disable TCP relay.
-6 Resovle hostname to IPv6 address first.
-L <addr:port> Specify destination server address and port for local
port forwarding.
Only used and available in tunnel mode. --mtu <MTU> Specify the MTU of your network interface.
--mptcp Enable Multipath TCP.
Only available with MPTCP enabled Linux kernel. --reuse-port Enable port reuse.
Only available with Linux kernel > 3.9.0. --no-delay Enable TCP_NODELAY.
--plugin <plugin_name> Enable SIP003 plugin. (Experimental)
--plugin-opts <plugin_options> Set SIP003 plugin options. (Experimental)
-v Enable verbose mode.
-h|--help Print help message.
SEE ALSOss-local(1), ss-server(1), ss-redir(1), ss-manager(1), shadowsocks-libev(8), iptables(8), /etc/shadowsocks-libev/config.json
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