Siavash Sameni 921856eba9 feat(reflect): QUIC-native NAT reflection ("STUN for QUIC") — Phase 1
Lets a client ask its registered relay "what IP:port do you see for
me?" over the existing TLS-authenticated signal channel, returning
the client's server-reflexive address as a SocketAddr. Replaces the
need for a classic STUN deployment and becomes the bootstrap step
for future P2P hole-punching: once both peers know their own reflex
addrs, they can advertise them in DirectCallOffer and attempt a
direct QUIC handshake to each other.

Wire protocol (wzp-proto):
- SignalMessage::Reflect — unit variant, client -> relay
- SignalMessage::ReflectResponse { observed_addr: String } — relay -> client
- JSON-serde, appended at end of enum: zero ordinal concerns,
  backward compat with pre-Phase-1 relays by construction (older
  relays log "unexpected message" and drop; newer clients time out
  cleanly within 1s).

Relay handler (wzp-relay/src/main.rs, signal loop):
- New match arm next to Ping reuses the already-bound `addr` from
  connection.remote_address() and replies with observed_addr as a
  string. debug!-level log on success, warn!-level on send failure.

Client side (desktop/src-tauri/src/lib.rs):
- SignalState gains pending_reflect: Option<oneshot::Sender<SocketAddr>>.
- get_reflected_address Tauri command installs the oneshot before
  sending Reflect and awaits it with a 1s timeout; cleans up on
  every exit path (send failure, timeout, parse error).
- recv loop's new ReflectResponse arm fires the pending sender or
  emits a debug log for unsolicited responses — never crashes the
  loop on malformed input.
- Integrated into invoke_handler! alongside the other signal
  commands.

UI (desktop/index.html + src/main.ts):
- New "Network" section in settings panel with a "Detect" button
  that displays the reflected address or a categorized warning
  ("register first" / "relay does not support reflection" / error).

Tests (crates/wzp-relay/tests/reflect.rs — 3 new, all passing):
- reflect_happy_path: client on loopback gets back 127.0.0.1:<its own port>
- reflect_two_clients_distinct_ports: two concurrent clients see
  their own distinct ports, proving per-connection remote_address
- reflect_old_relay_times_out: mock relay that ignores Reflect —
  client times out between 1000-1200ms and does not hang

Also pre-existing test bit-rot unrelated to this PR — fixed so the
full workspace `cargo test` goes green:
- handshake_integration tests in wzp-client, wzp-relay and
  featherchat_compat in wzp-crypto all missed the `alias` field
  addition to CallOffer and the 3-arg form of perform_handshake
  plus 4-tuple return of accept_handshake. Updated to the current
  API surface.

Results:
  cargo test --workspace --exclude wzp-android: 386 passed
  cargo check --workspace: clean
  cargo clippy: no new warnings in touched files

Verification excludes wzp-android because it's dead code on this
branch (Tauri mobile uses wzp-native instead) and can't link -llog
on macOS host — unchanged status quo.

PRD: .taskmaster/docs/prd_reflect_over_quic.txt
Tasks: 39-46 all completed

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-11 12:29:07 +04:00

WarzonePhone

Custom lossy VoIP protocol built in Rust. E2E encrypted, FEC-protected, adaptive quality, designed for hostile network conditions.

Quick Start

# Build
cargo build --release

# Run relay
./target/release/wzp-relay --listen 0.0.0.0:4433

# Send a test tone
./target/release/wzp-client --send-tone 5 relay-addr:4433

# Web bridge (browser calls)
./target/release/wzp-web --port 8080 --relay 127.0.0.1:4433 --tls
# Open https://localhost:8080/room-name in two browser tabs

Architecture

See docs/ARCHITECTURE.md for the full system architecture with Mermaid diagrams covering:

  • System overview and data flow
  • Crate dependency graph (8 crates)
  • Wire formats (MediaHeader, MiniHeader, TrunkFrame, SignalMessage)
  • Cryptographic handshake (X25519 + Ed25519 + ChaCha20-Poly1305)
  • Identity model (BIP39 seed, featherChat compatible)
  • Quality profiles (GOOD/DEGRADED/CATASTROPHIC)
  • FEC protection (RaptorQ with interleaving)
  • Adaptive jitter buffer (NetEq-inspired)
  • Telemetry stack (Prometheus + Grafana)
  • Deployment topology

Features

  • 3 quality tiers: Opus 24k (28.8 kbps) / Opus 6k (9 kbps) / Codec2 1200 (2.4 kbps)
  • RaptorQ FEC: Recovers from 20-100% packet loss depending on tier
  • E2E encryption: ChaCha20-Poly1305 with X25519 key exchange
  • Adaptive jitter buffer: EMA-based playout delay tracking
  • Silence suppression: VAD + comfort noise (~50% bandwidth savings)
  • ML noise removal: RNNoise (nnnoiseless pure Rust port)
  • Mini-frames: 67% header compression for steady-state packets
  • Trunking: Multiplex sessions into batched datagrams
  • featherChat integration: Shared BIP39 identity, token auth, call signaling
  • Prometheus metrics: Relay, web bridge, inter-relay probes
  • Grafana dashboard: Pre-built JSON with 18 panels

Documentation

Document Description
ARCHITECTURE.md Full system architecture with diagrams
TELEMETRY.md Prometheus metrics specification
INTEGRATION_TASKS.md featherChat integration tracker
WZP-FC-SHARED-CRATES.md Shared crate strategy
grafana-dashboard.json Importable Grafana dashboard

Binaries

Binary Description
wzp-relay Relay daemon (SFU room mode, forward mode, probes)
wzp-client CLI client (send-tone, record, live mic, echo-test, drift-test, sweep)
wzp-web Browser bridge (HTTPS + WebSocket + AudioWorklet)
wzp-bench Component benchmarks

Linux Build

./scripts/build-linux.sh --prepare   # Create Hetzner VM + install deps
./scripts/build-linux.sh --build     # Build release binaries
./scripts/build-linux.sh --transfer  # Download to target/linux-x86_64/
./scripts/build-linux.sh --destroy   # Delete VM

Tests

cargo test --workspace   # 272 tests

License

MIT OR Apache-2.0

Description
No description provided
Readme 147 MiB
Languages
Rust 78%
Kotlin 7.9%
Shell 6.7%
TypeScript 3.2%
C++ 1.5%
Other 2.6%