Archived
2
0
default-ish neko just with some customization
This repository has been archived on 2024-06-24. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues or pull requests.
Go to file
2022-11-04 22:43:18 -04:00
.docker fix opera openbox. 2022-09-08 19:56:18 +02:00
.github added opera image to build 2022-09-20 07:50:54 +02:00
.vscode Korean translation (#113) 2021-12-07 22:55:28 +01:00
client manual refresh function 2022-11-03 21:54:05 -04:00
docs added opera info to docs 2022-09-20 07:50:54 +02:00
server watch file transfer dir for changes 2022-11-04 22:43:18 -04:00
.gitattributes first commit 2020-01-13 08:05:38 +00:00
.gitignore added chromium option 2020-01-30 07:19:57 +00:00
docker-compose.yaml update docs #95. 2021-10-23 15:54:58 +02:00
LICENSE rename to m1k1o. 2021-10-05 22:32:46 +02:00
neko.code-workspace libclipboard 2020-02-02 22:48:23 +00:00
README.md update readme. 2022-09-11 13:42:54 +02:00
tsconfig.json first commit 2020-01-13 08:05:38 +00:00

n.eko

This app uses WebRTC to stream a desktop inside of a docker container, original author made this because rabb.it went under and his internet could not handle streaming and discord kept crashing when his friend attempted to. He just wanted to watch anime with his friends ლ(ಠ益ಠლ) so he started digging throughout the internet and found a few kinda clones, but none of them had the virtual browser, then he found Turtus and he was able to figure out the rest.

Then I found this project and started to dig into it. I really liked the idea of having collaborative browser browsing together with mutliple people, so I created a fork. Initially, I wanted to merge my changes to the upstream repository, but the original author did not have time for this project anymore and it got eventually archived.

Use-cases and comparison

Neko started as a virtual browser that is streamed using WebRTC to multiple users.

  • It is not only limited to a browser; it can run anything that runs on linux (e.g. VLC). Browser only happens to be the most popular and widely used use-case.
  • In fact, it is not limited to a single program either; you can install a full desktop environment (e.g. XFCE).
  • Speaking of limits, it does not need to run in a container; you could install neko on your host, connect to your X server and control your whole VM.
  • Theoretically it is not limited to only X server, anything that can be controlled and scraped periodically for images could be used instead.
    • Like implementing RDP or VNC protocol, where neko would only act as WebRTC relay server. This is currently only future.

Primary use case is connecting with multiple people, leveraging real time synchronization and interactivity:

  • Watch party - watching video content together with multiple people and reacting to it (chat, emotes) - open source alternative to giggl.app.
  • Interactive presentation - not only screen sharing, but others can control the screen.
  • Collaborative tool - brainstorming ideas, cobrowsing, code debugging together.
  • Support/Teaching - interactively guiding people in controlled environment.
  • Embed anything - embed virtual browser in your web app - open source alternative to hyperbeam.
    • open any third-party website or application, synchronize audio and video flawlessly among multiple participants.
    • request rooms using API with neko-rooms.

Other use cases that benefit from single-user:

  • Personal workspace - streaming containerized apps and desktops to end-users - similar to kasm.
  • Persistent browser - own browser with persistent cookies available anywhere - similar to mightyapp.
    • no state is left on the host browser after terminating the connection.
    • sensitive data like cookies are not transferred - only video is shared.
  • Throwaway browser - a better solution for planning secret parties and buying birthday gifts off the internet.
    • use Tor Browser and VPN for additional anonymity.
    • mitigates risk of OS fingerprinting and browser vulnerabilities by running in container.
  • Session broadcasting - broadcast room content using RTMP (to e.g. twitch or youtube...).
  • Session recording - broadcast RTMP can be saved to a file using e.g. nginx-rtmp
    • have clean environment when recording tutorials.
    • no need to hide bookmarks or use incognito mode.
  • Jump host - access your internal applications securely without the need for VPN.
  • Automated browser - you can install playwright or puppeteer and automate tasks while being able to actively intercept them.

Compared to clientless remote desktop gateway (e.g. Apache Guacamole or websockify with noVNC), installed with remote desktop server along with desired program (e.g. linuxserver/firefox) provides neko additionally:

  • Smooth video because it uses WebRTC and not images sent over WebSockets.
  • Built in audio support, what is not part of Apache Guacamole or noVNC.
  • Multi-participant control, what is not natively supported by Apache Guacamole or noVNC.

Supported browsers

Other programs

... others in m1k1o/neko-apps

Features

  • Text Chat (With basic markdown support, discord flavor)
  • Admin users (Kick, Ban & Force Give/Release Controls, Lock room)
  • Clipboard synchronization (on supported browsers)
  • Emote overlay
  • Ignore user (chat and emotes)
  • Persistent settings
  • Automatic Login with custom url args. (add ?usr=<your-user-name>&pwd=<room-pass> to the url.)
  • Broadcasting room content using RTMP (to e.g. twitch or youtube...)

Why n.eko?

I like cats 🐱 (Neko is the Japanese word for cat), I'm a weeb/nerd.

But why the cat butt? Because cats are assholes, but you love them anyways.

Multiple rooms

For n.eko room management software, visit neko-rooms.

It also offers zero-knowledge installation script (with HTTPS and Traefik).

Documentation

How to contribute? How to build?

Navigate to .docker folder for further information.

Support

If you want to support this project, you can do it here.