The aim of this document is to provide a gentle introduction into TON Sites, which are (TON) Web sites accessed through the TON Network. TON Sites may be used as a convenient entry point for other TON Services. In particular, HTML pages downloaded from TON Sites may contain links to ton://… URIs representing payments that can be performed by the user by clicking to the link, provided a TON Wallet is installed on the user’s device.
From the technical perspective, TON Sites are very much like the usual Web sites, but they are accessed through the TON Network (which is an overlay network inside the Internet) instead of the Internet. More specifically, they have an ADNL address (instead of a more customary IPv4 or IPv6 address), and they accept HTTP queries via RLDP protocol (which is a higher-level RPC protocol built upon ADNL, the main protocol of TON Network) instead of the usual TCP/IP. All encryption is handled by ADNL, so there is no need to use HTTPS (i.e., TLS).
In order to access existing and create new TON Sites one needs special gateways between the “ordinary” internet and the TON Network. Essentially, TON Sites are accessed with the aid of a HTTP->RLDP proxy running locally on the client’s machine, and they are created by means of a reverse RLDP->HTTP proxy running on a remote web server.
1. Compiling RLDP-HTTP Proxy
The RLDP-HTTP Proxy is a special utility specially designed for accessing and creating TON Sites. Its current (alpha) version is a part of the general TON Blockchain source tree, available at GitHub repository. In order to compile the RLDP-HTTP Proxy, follow the instructions outlined in README and Validator-HOWTO. The Proxy binary will be located as
rldp-http-proxy/rldp-http-proxy
in the build directory. Alternatively, you may want to build just the Proxy instead of building all TON Blockchain projects. This can be done by invoking
cmake --build . --target rldp-http-proxy
in the build directory.
2. Running RLDP-HTTP Proxy to access TON Sites
In order to access existing TON Sites, you need a running instance of RLDP-HTTP Proxy on your computer. It can be invoked as follows:
rldp-http-proxy/rldp-http-proxy -p 8080 -c 3333 -C ton-global.config.json
or
rldp-http-proxy/rldp-http-proxy -p 8080 -a
where ton-global.config.json
can be downloaded at https://test.ton.org/ton-global.config.json :
wget https://test.ton.org/ton-global.config.json
In the above example, 8080 is the TCP port that will be listened to at localhost for incoming HTTP queries, and 3333 is the UDP port that will be used for all outbound and inbound RLDP and ADNL activity, i.e., for connecting to the TON Sites via the TON Network.
If you have done everything correctly, the Proxy will not terminate, but it will continue running in the terminal. It can be used now for accessing TON Sites. When you don’t need it anymore, you can terminate it by pressing Ctrl-C, or simply by closing the terminal window.
3. Accessing TON Sites
Now suppose that you have a running instance of the RLDP-HTTP Proxy running on your computer and listening on localhost:8080 for inbound TCP connections, as explained above in Section 2.
A simple test that everything is working property may be performed using programs such as Curl or WGet. For example,
curl -x 127.0.0.1:8080 http://test.ton
attempts to download the main page of (TON) Site test.ton
using the proxy at 127.0.0.1:8080
. If the proxy is up and running, you’ll see something like
<HTML>
<H2> TON Blockchain Test Network & mdash; files and resources </ H2>
<H3> News </ H3>
<UL>
...
</ HTML>
because TON Site test.ton
is currently set up to be a mirror of Web Site https://test.ton.org.
Alternatively, you can set up localhost:8080
as a HTTP proxy in your browser. For example, if you use Firefox, visit [Setup] -> General -> Network Settings -> Settings -> Configure Proxy Access -> Manual Proxy configuration, and type “127.0.0.1” into the field “HTTP Proxy”, and “8080” into the field “Port”. If you don’t have Firefox yet, visit https://www.getfirefox.com first.
Once you have set up localhost:8080
as the HTTP proxy to be used in your browser, you can simply type the required URI, such as http://test.ton
, in the navigation bar of your browser, and interact with the TON Site in the same way as with the usual Web Sites.
4. Creating TON Sites
Most people will need just to access existing TON Sites, not to create new ones. However, if you want to create one, you’ll need to run RLDP-HTTP Proxy on your server, along with the usual web server software such as Apache or Nginx.
We suppose that you know already how to set up an ordinary web site, and that you have already configured one on your server, accepting incoming HTTP connections on TCP port example.ton
, as the main domain name or an alias for your web site in the configuration of your web server.
After that, you execute
rldp-http-proxy -a
in the background (you can try this in a terminal at first, but if you want your TON Site to run permanently, you’ll have to use options -d
and -l
as well).
If all works properly, the RLDP-HTTP proxy will accept incoming HTTP queries from the TON Network via RLDP/ADNL running on UDP port 3333 (of course, you can use any other UDP port if you want to) of IPv4 address example.ton
to TCP port 80 at 127.0.0.1, i.e., to your ordinary Web server.
You can visit TON Site http://example.ton
from a browser running on a client machine as explained in Sections 2 and 3 and check whether your TON Site is actually available to the public.