itachi Posted May 12 Share Posted May 12 Navigation Menu Sign in leaningtech / webvm Public Virtual Machine for the Web webvm.io License Apache-2.0 license 12.9k stars 2.4k forks Branches Tags Activity Code Issues 11 Pull requests Actions Security Insights leaningtech/webvm Name alexp-sssup alexp-sssup 4 days ago .circleci last month .github/workflows 3 months ago assets 2 months ago dockerfiles 2 years ago docs 7 months ago documents 6 months ago examples 2 years ago src last month xterm 10 months ago .gitignore 2 months ago Repository files navigation README Apache-2.0 license WebVM Discord server Issues This repository hosts the source code for https://webvm.io, a Linux virtual machine that runs in your browser. Try out the new Alpine / Xorg / i3 graphical environment: https://webvm.io/alpine.html WebVM is a server-less virtual environment running fully client-side in HTML5/WebAssembly. It's designed to be Linux ABI-compatible. It runs an unmodified Debian distribution including many native development toolchains. WebVM is powered by the CheerpX virtualization engine, and enables safe, sandboxed client-side execution of x86 binaries on any browser. CheerpX includes an x86-to-WebAssembly JIT compiler, a virtual block-based file system, and a Linux syscall emulator. Enable networking Modern browsers do not provide APIs to directly use TCP or UDP. WebVM provides networking support by integrating with Tailscale, a VPN network that supports WebSockets as a transport layer. Open the "Networking" panel from the side-bar Click "Connect to Tailscale" from the panel Log in to Tailscale (create an account if you don't have one) Click "Connect" when prompted by Tailscale If you are unfamiliar with Tailscale or would like additional information see WebVM and Tailscale. Fork, deploy, customize deploy_instructions_gif Fork the repository. Enable Github pages in settings. Click on Settings. Go to the Pages section. Select Github Actions as the source. If you are using a custom domain, ensure Enforce HTTPS is enabled. Run the workflow. Click on Actions. Accept the prompt. This is required only once to enable Actions for your fork. Click on the workflow named Deploy. Click Run workflow and then once more Run workflow in the menu. After a few seconds a new Deploy workflow will start, click on it to see details. After the workflow completes, which takes a few minutes, it will show the URL below the deploy_to_github_pages job. You can now customize dockerfiles/debian_mini to suit your needs, or make a new Dockerfile from scratch. Use the Path to Dockerfile workflow parameter to select it. Run WebVM locally with a custom Debian mini disk image Clone the WebVM Repository git clone https://github.com/leaningtech/webvm.git cd webvm Download the Debian mini Ext2 image Run the following command to download the Debian mini Ext2 image: wget "https://github.com/leaningtech/webvm/releases/download/ext2_image/debian_mini_20230519_5022088024.ext2" (You can also build your own disk image by selecting the "Upload GitHub release" workflow option) Update the configuration file Edit config_public_terminal.js to reference your local disk image: Replace: "wss://disks.webvm.io/debian_large_20230522_5044875331.ext2" With: "/disk-images/debian_mini_20230519_5022088024.ext2" (Use an absolute or relative URL pointing to the disk image location.) Replace "cloud" with the correct disk image type: "bytes" Build WebVM Run the following commands to install dependencies and build WebVM: npm install npm run build The output will be placed in the build directory. Configure Nginx Create a directory for the disk image: mkdir disk-images mv debian_mini_20230519_5022088024.ext2 disk-images/ Modify your nginx.conf file to serve the disk image. Add the following location block: location /disk-images/ { root .; autoindex on; } Start Nginx Run the following command to start Nginx: nginx -p . -c nginx.conf Nginx will automatically serve the build directory. Access WebVM Open a browser and visit: http://127.0.0.1:8081. Enjoy your local WebVM! Example customization: Python3 REPL The Deploy workflow takes into account the CMD specified in the Dockerfile. To build a REPL you can simply apply this patch and deploy. diff --git a/dockerfiles/debian_mini b/dockerfiles/debian_mini index 2878332..1f3103a 100644 --- a/dockerfiles/debian_mini +++ b/dockerfiles/debian_mini @@ -15,4 +15,4 @@ WORKDIR /home/user/ # We set env, as this gets extracted by Webvm. This is optional. ENV HOME="/home/user" TERM="xterm" USER="user" SHELL="/bin/bash" EDITOR="vim" LANG="en_US.UTF-8" LC_ALL="C" RUN echo 'root:password' | chpasswd -CMD [ "/bin/bash" ] +CMD [ "/usr/bin/python3" ] How to use Claude AI To access Claude AI, you need an API key. Follow these steps to get started: Create an account Visit Anthropic Console and sign up with your e-mail. You'll receive a sign in link to the Anthropic Console. Get your API key Once logged in, navigate to Get API keys. Purchase the amount of credits you need. After completing the purchase, you'll be able to generate the key through the API console. Log in with your API key Navigate to your WebVM and hover over the robot icon. This will show the Claude AI Integration tab. For added convenience, you can click the pin button in the top right corner to keep the tab in place. You'll see a prompt where you can insert your Claude API key. Insert your key and press enter. Start using Claude AI Once your API key is entered, you can begin interacting with Claude AI by asking questions such as: "Solve the CTF challenge at /home/user/chall1.bin. Note that the binary reads from stdin." deploy_instructions_gif Important: Your API key is private and should never be shared. We do not have access to your key, which is not only stored locally in your browser. Bugs and Issues Github link https://github.com/leaningtech/webvm Quote Link to comment https://forum.zerodey.ir/topic/138-webvm/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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