{
"type": "trojan",
"tag": "trojan-tls-quic-in",
"listen": "::",
"listen_port": 8880,
"users": [{
"name": "bitcoinvps.cloud",
"password": "yemufratad9YlYuwaBrA"
}],
"tls": {
"enabled": true,
"server_name": "subdomain.example.com",
"alpn": [
"http/1.1"
],
"min_version": "1.2",
"max_version": "1.3",
"acme": {
"domain": [
"subdomain.example.com"
],
"data_directory": "/etc/sing-box",
"default_server_name": "",
"email": "singbox@example.com",
"provider": "letsencrypt"
}
},
"transport": {
"type": "quic"
}
}
Code language: JSON / JSON with Comments (json)
Download “Trojan TLS over QUIC” inbound to your Sing-Box server:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bitcoinvps/singbox-vpn/main/trojan-tls-quic/server/config.json > /etc/sing-box/config.json
Code language: Bash (bash)
Trojan TLS over QUIC inbound requires a TLS certificate, so we need to create a subdomain.
The subdomain should point to your VPS server’s IP address. You can either use IPv4 or IPv6, depending on the capability of your VPS server.
Replace “subdomain.example.com” with the subdomain you created in the previous step, and replace “singbox@example.com” with the email address you want to use to obtain your certificate.
After testing a successful connection, you can edit the “listen,” “listen_port,” “auth,” and “auth_str” settings as desired, but make sure to match your client’s Trojan TLS over QUIC outbound config.json.
Finally, you can enable singbox service.