BNC (software)

A BNC (short for bouncer) is a piece of software that is used to relay traffic and connections in computer networks, much like a proxy. Using a BNC allows a user to hide the original source of the user's connection, providing privacy as well as the ability to route traffic through a specific location. A BNC can also be used to hide the true target to which a user connects.[1]

IRC

Scheme of an IRC network with normal clients (green), bots (blue) and bouncers (orange)

One common usage is over Internet Relay Chat (IRC) via a BNC running on remote servers. In such an environment, where it is very easy to ascertain a user's IP address a BNC may help to hide the original connection source, as well as providing the opportunity for "vhosts" or "virtual hosts". The use of a vhost does not conceal the connection any better, but merely adds a statement as the hostname.

Many BNCs remain connected to an IRC server in the event the client should disconnect from the Internet. Often state changes are tracked so that they may be relayed to the client upon reconnection. Some implementations opt to store all messages sent across the network that the client would have normally received, and send them upon the clients reconnection; this is often considered to be much too resource dependent for commercial hosting services to provide. Other logging features and bot like functions may be included with various implementations but are not standard.

Example

User A logs onto IRC directly and appears as [email protected]
User A logs onto IRC indirectly through a BNC and appears as [email protected]

Software

A list of bouncer software.

FTP

BNCs are also often used for File Transfer Protocol (FTP), again to hide the user and server from each other and to route traffic through a specific location. FTP bouncers can be divided into two different categories, entry and traffic.

Entry bouncer acts as a gateway to the server, but it does not hide the existence of the actual server. Entry bouncers, like cubnc, can be used in a multi-server setup for easy access to each server and load balancing. This removes the need to select which FTP server to log in to, when trying to access the server farm.

Traffic bouncers relay traffic through the host they are installed on, and when used, it appears as the bouncer is actually the FTP server, thus hiding the real location of the server completely. Multiple traffic bouncers can be installed parallel, in order to balance traffic load across different links. Most elaborate bouncers can even bounce secure SSL/TLS connections.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Lederer, Christian (phrozen77). (December 22, 2009). "IRC bouncer comparison". IRC-Junkie. December 22, 2009.
  2. Friedman, Nat (June 17, 2011). "Instant company". nat.org.
  3. 1 2 3 "Linux IRC mini-HOWTO: IRC Bouncers (IRC Proxy)". The Linux Documentation Project. TLDP.org.
  4. "JBouncer". Jibble.org. Retrieved May 24, 2012.
  5. "psyBNC documentation". Ubuntu.com. Retrieved September 14, 2008.
  6. "irc/psyBNC". Freshports. Retrieved September 14, 2008.
  7. Mierau, Caspar Clemens (April 2007). "Looking for intruders with lsof" (PDF). Linux Magazine.
  8. "shroudBNC". shroudbnc.info.
  9. "Bouncer". Github. Retrieved November 2, 2012

External links

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