This repository contains an Isolated Web App that allows the user to connect to a TCP/IP server through an interactive terminal. In other words, a Telnet client. This provides a demonstration of the Direct Sockets API.
This application is served statically and is cached for offline use. No analytics are collected. All communication is directly between the client and the remote server specified by the user.
This project is written in TypeScript and uses npm and Webpack to manage dependencies and automate the build process. To get started clone the repository and install dependencies by running,
npm install
Chrome supports two options for Isolated Web App development. In "proxy" mode
you run a local development server as you would for normal web app development
on a URL like http://localhost:4321
. When the app is installed a random
isolated-app://
origin is created and the browser proxies requests for this
origin to your local server. This allows you to quickly edit and refresh the
app to see your changes. When developer mode is enabled Chrome also allows you
to self-sign a Web Bundle and load it as it would be for a production app.
These instructions have been tested on Chrome 110.0.5464.2. When developing an Isolated Web App always make sure you are running the latest version of Chrome dev-channel as the feature is under active development.
To start a local development server run,
npm run start
The server is listening on http://localhost:4321
. The next step is to launch
Chrome to install the app in "proxy" mode,
google-chrome-unstable --enable-features=IsolatedWebApps,IsolatedWebAppDevMode \
--install-isolated-web-app-from-url=http://localhost:4321
If you visit chrome://apps
you will see a new app called "Telnet".
After installation you can remove the --install-isolated-web-app-from-url
parameter from the command line.
Note that flags must be provided on the command line when the browser first starts. Once it is running launching it from the command line will open a new window but command line flags will not take effect.
Webpack's automatic reloading will not work because it does not support Trusted Types.
Signing a Web Bundle requires generating a private key. This only needs to be done once; the supported algorithms are Ed25519 and ECDSA P-256 SHA-256.
openssl genpkey -algorithm ed25519 -out private.pem
or
openssl ecparam -name prime256v1 -genkey -noout -out private.pem
To build,
npm run build
This will generate dist/telnet.swbn
, a Web Bundle signed with the development
key generated above.
To install this bundle as an Isolated Web App, launch Chrome with the following flags,
google-chrome-unstable --enable-features=IsolatedWebApps,IsolatedWebAppDevMode \
--install-isolated-web-app-from-file=$PWD/dist/telnet.swbn
If you visit chrome://apps
you will see a new app called "Telnet".
After installation you can remove the --install-isolated-web-app-from-file
parameter from the command line.
Note that flags must be provided on the command line when the browser first starts. Once it is running launching it from the command line will open a new window but command line flags will not take effect.
For discussions related to this repository's content, the telnet client, please use GitHub Issues.
For discussions related to Isolated Web Apps in general, or Chromium-specific implementation and development questions, please use the [email protected] mailing list.
If you'd like to discuss the Isolated Web Apps proposal itself, consider opening an issue in its incubation repository at https://github.com/WICG/isolated-web-apps.