Currently you must build it and distribute it to your server manually.
To reduce latency, the tcp-relay should be as close as possible to the nodes it is serving. A datacenter in the same city or the LAN would be ideal.
### Build
`cd tcp-relay`
`make`
### Point your node at it
The default tcp relay is at `204.80.128.1/443` -an anycast address.
#### Option 1 - local.conf configuration
See [Service docs](https://github.com/zerotier/ZeroTierOne/blob/e0acccc3c918b59678033e585b31eb000c68fdf2/service/README.md) for more info on local.conf
In this example, `forceTcpRelay` is enabled. This is helpful for testing or if you know you'll need tcp relay. It takes a few minutes for zerotier-one to realize it needs to relay otherwise.
#### Option 2 - redirect 204.80.128.1 to your own IP
If you are the admin of the network that is blocking ZeroTier UDP, you can transparently redirect 204.80.128.1 to one of your IP addresses. Users won't need to edit their local client configuration.
Configuring this in your Enterprise Firewall is left as an exercise to the reader.
Here is an iptables example for illustrative purposes: