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Raspberry Pi

ngrok allows you to create secure ingress to any app, device, or service without spending hours learning arcane networking technologies. You can get started with a single command or a single line of code.

What is ngrok? ngrok is an ingress-as-a-service platform that removes the hassle of getting code online from developers’ plates by decoupling ingress from infrastructure with one line of code, all without provisioning proxies or VPNs.

In this guide, we'll walk you through the process of installing the ngrok agent on a remote Raspberry Pi device running Linux, ensuring the agent runs integrated into your operating system, restricting traffic to trusted origins, and integrating traffic events with your preferred logging tool.

Step 1: Install the ngrok Agent

To download and install the ngrok agent on your remote Raspberry Pi device, follow these steps:

  1. Open a terminal into your remote Raspberry Pi device.

  2. Download the latest ngrok binary for your Linux distribution. You can find the correct binary on our ngrok download page: Select your operating system, select the version, and copy the link that appears in the Download button. Below is an example for ARM64:

wget https://bin.equinox.io/c/bNyj1mQVY4c/ngrok-v3-stable-linux-arm64.tgz
  1. Unzip the downloaded file and move it to a directory in your PATH. Below is an example for /usr/local/bin:
sudo tar xvzf ./ngrok-v3-stable-linux-arm64.tgz -C /usr/local/bin
  1. Now that you have installed ngrok on your Raspberry Pi device, link it to your ngrok account by using your authtoken:
ngrok authtoken NGROK_AUTHTOKEN

Note: Replace NGROK_AUTHTOKEN with your unique ngrok authtoken found in the ngrok dashboard.

Step 2: Enable SSH access

To enable remote SSH access to your device via ngrok:

  1. Test that the ngrok agent is configured correctly by starting a TCP tunnel on your remove device. Note: If you get an error, ensure your authtoken is configured correctly.
ngrok tcp 22
  1. The ngrok agent assigns you a TCP address and port. Use these values to test the SSH access via ngrok by running the following command from another server or from a desktop.
ssh -p NGROK_PORT USER@NGROK_TCP_ADDRESS

Note: Replace the variables in the command line with the following:

  • NGROK_PORT: The port number of the ngrok agent (i.e. if the agent shows tcp://1.tcp.ngrok.io:12345, your port number is 12345.
  • USER: A valid ssh login to access your remote device's operating system.
  • NGROK_TCP_ADDRESS: The address of the ngrok agent (i.e. if the agent shows tcp://1.tcp.ngrok.io:12345, your TCP address is 1.tcp.ngrok.io.

Step 3: Adding IP restrictions

Once you confirmed that you have connectivity to the device, add some security so that you are the only one who can access it.

Note: This capability requires ngrok's IP Restrictions feature, which is only available with a paid subscription.

  1. On the remote Raspberry Pi device terminal, stop the ngrok process using the ctrl+c command.

  2. Add an allow rule to restrict access to your Raspberry Pi device to an IP address or a range of IP addresses.

ngrok tcp 22 --cidr-allow ALLOWED_IP_ADDRESS_CIDR

Note: Replace ALLOWED_IP_ADDRESS_CIDR with the CIDR notation for the allowed IP Address(es) (i.e. 123.123.123.0/24).

Setting IP restrictions for the entire fleet

Alternatively, you can create an IP policy in the ngrok dashboard (under Security > IP Restrictions), and leverage the same policy to control access to your entire device fleet.

Step 4: Configure ngrok to recover on outages

The ngrok agent works with native OS services like systemd. This helps you ensure that the ngrok service is available even after the machine restarts. Before we do this though, it's useful to reserve a TCP address in the ngrok dashboard which allows you to reuse the same address each time the device is restarted.

  1. Navigate to the ngrok Dashboard and access Cloud Edge > TCP Addresses. Create a new TCP address with a description and click Save. Your new TCP address will look something like 1.tcp.ngrok.io:12345.

Update the ngrok config file in your Raspberry Pi device to start the ngrok agent using this TCP address.

  1. Open the ngrok config file:
ngrok config edit
  1. Add the following to the end of the file and then save it:
tunnels:
device-ssh:
proto: tcp
addr: 22
remote_addr: NGROK_TCP_ADDRESS
ip_restriction:
allow_cidrs:
- ALLOWED_IP_ADDRESS_CIDR

Note: Make sure to replace NGROK_TCP_ADDRESS with the address you reserved earlier in the ngrok dashboard (i.e. 1.tcp.ngrok.io:12345) and ALLOWED_IP_ADDRESS_CIDR with the CIDR notation of the allowed IP Address(es) (i.e. 123.123.123.0/24).

Note: Make note of the location of the ngrok.yml file.

  1. Enable ngrok in service mode:
ngrok service install --config $HOME/.config/ngrok/ngrok.yml

Note: You may need to run this command using sudo depending on your system

  1. Run the following command to ensure your operating system launches ngrok with the ssh ingress whenever your device starts:
ngrok service start

Note: You may need to run this command using sudo depending on your system

  1. With ngrok running on your device, you should be able to SSH into the device using the reserved address from the dashboard.
ssh -p NGROK_PORT user@NGROK_TCP_ADDRESS

What's next?

Now that your device is integrated to ngrok, you can ​​execute tasks at the ngrok dashboard to operationalize your fleet:

Logging Traffic Events from ngrok

Each action that happens in ngrok is published as an event, and Event Subscriptions allow you to subscribe to the events that are interested in and write them to one or more destinations.

An Event Subscription is made up of a set of event sources (some of which can be filtered), and event destinations. Each subscription can send the events to one or more destinations, such as Amazon CloudWatch Logs, Amazon Kinesis (as a data stream), or Amazon Kinesis Firehose (as a delivery stream).

Event subscriptions can be configured through the ngrok Dashboard or the ngrok API.

You can also forward all or some of your traffic events from ngrok to your preferred logging tool.

Remote checks, stop, start, and updates

ngrok provides APIs and a dashboard UI for you to monitor the health of ngrok agents running in your fleet. The interfaces also allow you to remotely stop, start, and update agents.