mirror of https://bitbucket.org/ausocean/av.git
221 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
221 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
RTMP Dump v2.4
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(C) 2009 Andrej Stepanchuk
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(C) 2009-2011 Howard Chu
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(C) 2010 2a665470ced7adb7156fcef47f8199a6371c117b8a79e399a2771e0b36384090
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(C) 2011 33ae1ce77301f4b4494faaa5f609f3c48b9dcf82
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License: GPLv2
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librtmp license: LGPLv2.1
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http://rtmpdump.mplayerhq.hu/
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To compile type "make" with SYS=<platform name>, e.g.
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$ make SYS=posix
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for Linux, Unix, etc. or
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$ make SYS=darwin
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for MacOSX or
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$ make SYS=mingw
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for Windows.
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You can cross-compile for other platforms using the CROSS_COMPILE variable:
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$ make CROSS_COMPILE=arm-none-linux- INC=-I/my/cross/includes
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Please read the Makefile to see what other make variables are used.
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This code also requires you to have OpenSSL and zlib installed. You may
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optionally use GnuTLS or polarssl instead of OpenSSL if desired. You may
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also build with just rtmpe support, and no rtmps/https support, by
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specifying -DNO_SSL in the XDEF macro, e.g.
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$ make XDEF=-DNO_SSL
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or
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$ make CRYPTO=POLARSSL XDEF=-DNO_SSL
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You may also turn off all crypto support if desired
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$ make CRYPTO=
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A shared library is now built by default, in addition to the static
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library. You can also turn it off if desired
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$ make SHARED=
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The rtmpdump programs still link to the static library, regardless.
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Note that if using OpenSSL, you must have version 0.9.8 or newer.
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For Polar SSL you must have version 1.0.0 or newer.
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Credit goes to team boxee for the XBMC RTMP code originally used in RTMPDumper.
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The current code is based on the XBMC code but rewritten in C by Howard Chu.
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SWF Verification
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----------------
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Note: these instructions for manually generating the SWFVerification
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info are provided only for historical documentation. The software can now
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generate this info automatically, so it is no longer necessary to
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run the commands described here. Just use the -W (--swfVfy) option
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to perform automatic SWFVerification.
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Download the swf player you want to use for SWFVerification, unzip it using
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$ flasm -x file.swf
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It will show the decompressed filesize, use it for --swfsize
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Now generate the hash
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$ openssl sha -sha256 -hmac "Genuine Adobe Flash Player 001" file.swf
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and use the --swfhash "01234..." option to pass it.
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e.g. $ ./rtmpdump --swfhash "123456..." --swfsize 987...
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Connect Parameters
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------------------
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Some servers expect additional custom parameters to be attached to the
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RTMP connect request. The "--auth" option handles a specific case, where
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a boolean TRUE followed by the given string are added to the request.
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Other servers may require completely different parameters, so the new
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"--conn" option has been added. This option can be set multiple times
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on the command line, adding one parameter each time.
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The argument to the option must take the form <type> : <value> where
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type can be B for boolean, S for string, N for number, and O for object.
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For booleans the value must be 0 or 1. Also, for objects the value must
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be 1 to start a new object, or 0 to end the current object.
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Examples:
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--conn B:0 --conn S:hello --conn N:3.14159
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Named parameters can be specified by prefixing 'N' to the type. Then the
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name should come next, and finally the value:
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--conn NB:myflag:1 --conn NS:category:something --conn NN:pi:3.14159
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Objects may be added sequentially:
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-C O:1 -C NB:flag:1 -C NS:status:success -C O:0 -C O:1 -C NN:time:12.30 -C O:0
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or nested:
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-C O:1 -C NS:code:hello -C NO:extra:1 -C NS:data:stuff -C O:0 -C O:0
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Building OpenSSL 0.9.8k
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-----------------------
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arm:
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./Configure -DL_ENDIAN --prefix=`pwd`/armlibs linux-generic32
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Then replace gcc, cc, ar, ranlib in Makefile and crypto/Makefile by arm-linux-* variants and use make && make install_sw
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win32:
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Try ./Configure mingw --prefix=`pwd`/win32libs -DL_ENDIAN -DOPENSSL_NO_HW
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Replace gcc, cc, ... by mingw32-* variants in Makefile and crypto/Makefile
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make && make install_sw
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OpenSSL cross-compiling can be a difficult beast.
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Precompiled OpenSSL binaries for Windows are available on
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http://www.slproweb.com/products/Win32OpenSSL.html
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If you're just running a pre-built Windows rtmpdump binary, then all you
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need is the "Light" installer. If you want to compile rtmpdump yourself,
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you'll need the full installer.
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Example Servers
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---------------
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Three different types of servers are also present in this distribution:
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rtmpsrv - a stub server
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rtmpsuck - a transparent proxy
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rtmpgw - an RTMP to HTTP gateway
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rtmpsrv - Note that this is very incomplete code, and I haven't yet decided
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whether or not to finish it. It is useful for obtaining all the parameters
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that a real Flash client would send to an RTMP server, so that they can be
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used with rtmpdump. The current version now invokes rtmpdump automatically
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after parsing a client request.
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rtmpsuck - proxy server. See below...
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All you need to do is redirect your Flash clients to the machine running this
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server and it will dump out all the connect / play parameters that the Flash
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client sent. The simplest way to cause the redirect is by editing /etc/hosts
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when you know the hostname of the RTMP server, and point it to localhost while
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running rtmpsrv on your machine. (This approach should work on any OS; on
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Windows you would edit %SystemRoot%\system32\drivers\etc\hosts.)
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On Linux you can also use iptables to redirect all outbound RTMP traffic. You
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need to be running as root in order to use the iptables command.
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In my original plan I would have the transparent proxy running as a special
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user (e.g. user "proxy"), and regular Flash clients running as any other user.
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In that case the proxy would make the connection to the real RTMP server. The
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iptables rule would look like this:
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iptables -t nat -A OUTPUT -p tcp --dport 1935 -m owner \! --uid-owner proxy \
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-j REDIRECT
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A rule like the above will be needed to use rtmpsuck. Note that you should
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replace "proxy" in the above command with an account that actually exists
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on your machine.
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Using it in this mode takes advantage of the Linux support for IP redirects;
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in particular it uses a special getsockopt() call to retrieve the original
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destination address of the connection. That way the proxy can create the
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real outbound connection without any other help from the user. The equivalent
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functionality may exist on other OSs but needs more investigation.
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(Based on reading the BSD ipfw manpage, this rule ought to work on BSD:
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ipfw add 40 fwd 127.0.0.1,1935 tcp from any to any 1935 not uid proxy
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Some confirmation from any BSD users would be nice.)
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(We have a solution for Windows based on a TDI driver; this is known to
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work on Win2K and WinXP but is assumed to not work on Vista or Win7 as the
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TDI is no longer used on those OS versions. Also, none of the known
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solutions are available as freeware.)
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The rtmpsuck command has only one option: "-z" to turn on debug logging.
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It listens on port 1935 for RTMP sessions, but you can also redirect other
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ports to it as needed (read the iptables docs). It first performs an RTMP
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handshake with the client, then waits for the client to send a connect
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request. It parses and prints the connect parameters, then makes an
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outbound connection to the real RTMP server. It performs an RTMP handshake
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with that server, forwards the connect request, and from that point on it
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just relays packets back and forth between the two endpoints.
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It also checks for a few packets that it treats specially: a play packet
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from the client will get parsed so that the playpath can be displayed. It
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also handles SWF Verification requests from the server, without forwarding
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them to the client. (There would be no point, since the response is tied to
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each session's handshake.)
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Once the play command is processed, all subsequent audio/video data received
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from the server will be written to a file, as well as being delivered back
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to the client.
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The point of all this, instead of just using a sniffer, is that since rtmpsuck
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has performed real handshakes with both the client and the server, it can
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negotiate whatever encryption keys are needed and so record the unencrypted
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data.
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rtmpgw - HTTP gateway: this is an HTTP server that accepts requests that
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consist of rtmpdump parameters. It then connects to the specified RTMP
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server and returns the retrieved data in the HTTP response. The only valid
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HTTP request is "GET /" but additional options can be provided in normal
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URL-encoded fashion. E.g.
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GET /?r=rtmp:%2f%2fserver%2fmyapp&y=somefile HTTP/1.0
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is equivalent the rtmpdump parameters "-r rtmp://server/myapp -y somefile".
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Note that only the shortform (single letter) rtmpdump options are supported.
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