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Pinggy

Public URLs for localhost without downloading any binary

Internet of Things
Developer Tools

Pinggy provides secure tunnels to localhost with a single command for developing, testing, and deploying your website or app easily. Create HTTP, TCP or TLS tunnels to your Mac / PC even if it's behind firewalls and NATs. Debug requests with built in debugger.

Top comment

Hey Product Hunters! 👋 We're thrilled to launch Pinggy to the Product Hunt community! Using Pinggy, with a single command, you can share your apps running on localhost over the internet. Just paste this command on your terminal to get a tunnel to port 8000: ssh -p 443 -R0:localhost:8000 [email protected] That's it! No downloads required. Here’s what you can do with Tunnel: ⚡ Instant tunnel, no downloads: One command to put localhost on the web. No package / tool is downloaded. No root access required. 🧑‍💻 Debugger: Built in HTTP request response debugger. 🌐 HTTPS, TCP, TLS tunnels: Connect any service, SSH into your raspberry Pi, remotely connect to your home PC, etc. Pinggy lets you tunnel to any service. 🚀 Get custom domain and persistent URLs 🔐 Password protect your tunnels or set IP whitelist to restrict access.

Comment highlights

Congrats! How does Pinggy handle potential issues like network interruptions or downtime during tunneling?

How does this compare to something like ngrok? Your pricing is a lot better so I'm seriously considering switching.

OMG that's INCREDIBLE! Making local dev so much easier for remote teams (which there are more and more of because, well, that's how things should be). Incredible work!!

This is really cool, I've been thinking of a couple different projects I'd like to have shared with others outside my network and this seems like a great, simple solution to that. Congrats on the launch!

Pinggy is a valuable tool for developers looking to streamline their workflow and enhance their productivity. Congratulations on the launch!

Thanks a lot! It's super easy to try. Just one command on the terminal will start a tunnel.

I'd like to know more about the security measures in place—how does Pinggy ensure the tunnels remain secure, especially with sensitive data? Additionally, does Pinggy have limits on the number of tunnels or restrictions on usage for different account types?

Just created an account on Pinggy. I think Pinggy is the only logical ngrok alternative I have seen in years. I could easily use it to present my notebook and a streamlit app running on my localhost. Super useful for remote presentation of web apps! Great product indeed and very generous pricing.