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gnunet-directory(1) [debian man page]

gnunet-directory(1)					      General Commands Manual					       gnunet-directory(1)

NAME
gnunet-directory - display directories SYNOPSIS
gnunet-directory [OPTIONS] (FILENAME)* DESCRIPTION
gnunet-directory lists the contents of one or more GNUnet directories. A GNUnet directory is a binary file that contains a list of GNUnet file-sharing URIs and meta data. The names of the directory files must be passed as command-line arguments to gnunet-directory. -c FILENAME, --config=FILENAME configuration file to use (useless option since gnunet-directory does not really depend on any configuration options) -h, --help print help page -L LOGLEVEL, --loglevel=LOGLEVEL Change the loglevel. Possible values for LOGLEVEL are ERROR, WARNING, INFO and DEBUG. -v, --version print the version number NOTES
A GNUnet directory is a file containing a list of GNUnet URIs and meta data. The keys can point to files, other directories or files in namespaces. In other words, a GNUnet directory is similar to UNIX directories. The difference to tar and zip is that GNUnet directory does not contain the actual files (except if they are really small, in which case they may be inlined), just symbolic (links), similar to directories with symbolic links in UNIX filesystems. The benefit is that the individual files can be retrieved separately (if desired) and if some of the files are inserted to another node in GNUnet, this just increases their availability but does not produce useless duplicates (for example, it is a better idea to publish a collection of pictures or compressed sound files using a GNUnet directory instead of pro- cessing them with archivers such as tar or zip first). Directories can contain arbitrary meta data for each file. If a directory has missing blocks (for example, some blocks failed to download), GNUnet is typically able to retrieve information about other files in the directory. Files in a GNUnet directory have no particular order; the GNUnet code that generates a directory can reorder the entries in order to better fit the information about files into blocks of 32k. Respecting 32k boundaries where possible makes it eas- ier for gnunet-directory (and other tools) to recover information from partially downloaded directory files. At the moment, directories can be created by gnunet-fs-gtk and gnunet-publish. Just like ordinary files, a directory can be published in a namespace. GNUnet directories use the (unregistered) mimetype application/gnunet-directory. They can show up among normal search results. The direc- tory file can be downloaded to disk by gnunet-download(1) for later processing or be handled more directly by gnunet-fs-gtk(1). REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs by using mantis <https://gnunet.org/bugs/> or by sending electronic mail to <gnunet-developers@gnu.org> SEE ALSO
gnunet-fs-gtk(1), gnunet-publish(1), gnunet-search(1), gnunet-download(1) GNUnet 25 Feb 2012 gnunet-directory(1)

Check Out this Related Man Page

GNUNET-ARM(1)						      General Commands Manual						     GNUNET-ARM(1)

NAME
gnunet-arm - control GNUnet services SYNOPSIS
gnunet-arm [options] DESCRIPTION
gnunet-arm can be used to start or stop GNUnet services, including the ARM service itself. The ARM service is a supervisor for GNUnet's service processes. ARM starts services on-demand or as configured and re-starts them if they crash. OPTIONS
-c FILENAME, --config=FILENAME Use the configuration file FILENAME. -e, --end Shutdown all GNUnet services (including ARM itself). Running "gnunet-arm -e" is the usual way to shutdown a GNUnet peer. -h, --help Print short help on options. -L LOGLEVEL, --loglevel=LOGLEVEL Use LOGLEVEL for logging. Valid values are DEBUG, INFO, WARNING and ERROR. -i SERVICE, --init=SERVICE Starts the specified SERVICE if it is not already running. More specifically, this makes the service behave as if it were in the default services list. -k SERVICE, --kill=SERVICE Stop the specified SERVICE if it is running. While this will kill the service right now, the service may be restarted immediately if other services depend on it (service is then started 'on-demand'). If the service used to be a 'default' service, its default- service status will be revoked. If the service was not a default service, it will just be (temporarily) stopped, but could be re- started on-demand at any time. -s, --start Start all GNUnet default services on this system (and also ARM). Naturally, if a service is demanded by a default service, it will then also be started. Running "gnunet-arm -s" is the usual way to start a GNUnet peer. -I, --info List all running services. -v, --version Print GNUnet version number. BUGS
Report bugs by using Mantis <https://gnunet.org/bugs/> or by sending electronic mail to <gnunet-developers@gnu.org> SEE ALSO
gnunet-service-arm(1) GNUnet Jan 4, 2012 GNUNET-ARM(1)
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