table of contents
GNUNET-PEERINFO(1) | General Commands Manual | GNUNET-PEERINFO(1) |
NAME¶
gnunet-peerinfo
—
display information about other peers
SYNOPSIS¶
gnunet-peerinfo |
[-c FILENAME |
--config= FILENAME]
[-g | --get-hello ]
[-h | --help ]
[-i | --info ]
[-L LOGLEVEL |
--loglevel= LOGLEVEL]
[-l LOGFILE |
--logfile= -ns
LOGFILE] [-n |
--numeric ] [-p
HELLO |
--put-hello= HELLO]
[-q | --quiet ]
[-s | --self ]
[-v | --version ] |
DESCRIPTION¶
gnunet-peerinfo
displays the known
addresses and trust of known peers.
-c
FILENAME |--config=
FILENAME- Load config file, default FILENAME of the config is ~/.config/gnunet.conf.
-g
|--get-hello
- Output HELLO uri(s)
-h
|--help
- Print the help page.
-i
|--info
- List all known peers (and their addresses).
-L
LOGLEVEL |--loglevel=
LOGLEVEL- Set the loglevel
-l
LOGFILE |--logfile=
-ns
LOGFILE- Log messages to LOGFILE
-n
|--numeric
- Disable resolution of IPs to hostnames
-p
HELLO |--put-hello=
HELLO- Add given HELLO uri to the database
-q
|--quiet
- Do not print anything but the peer identities
-s
|--self
- Print only our own identity. Together with
-q
, this is the exact line that other peers would have to put in to their friends file in order to consider this peer one of their friends in F2F mode. -v
|--version
- Print the version number
SEE ALSO¶
The full documentation for gnunet is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info(1) and gnunet programs are properly installed at your site, the command
info gnunet
should give you access to the complete handbook,
info gnunet-c-tutorial
will give you access to a tutorial for developers.
Depending on your installation, this information is also available in gnunet(7) and gnunet-c-tutorial(7).
BUGS¶
Report bugs by using https://bugs.gnunet.org or by sending electronic mail to <gnunet-developers@gnu.org>.
March 4, 2013 | Debian |