GNUNET-SEARCH(1) | General Commands Manual | GNUNET-SEARCH(1) |
NAME¶
gnunet-search
— a
command line interface to search for content on GNUnet
SYNOPSIS¶
gnunet-search |
[-a LEVEL |
--anonymity= LEVEL]
[-b | --bookmark-only ]
[-c FILENAME |
--config= FILENAME]
[-F FORMAT |
--dir-printf= FORMAT]
[-f FORMAT |
--printf= FORMAT]
[-h | --help ]
[-i FORMAT |
--iter-printf= FORMAT]
[-L LOGLEVEL |
--loglevel= LOGLEVEL]
[-l FILENAME |
--logfile= FILENAME]
[-o FILENAME |
--output= FILENAME]
[-n | --no-network ]
[-N VALUE |
--results= VALUE]
[-s | --silent ]
[-t DELAY |
--timeout= DELAY]
[-v | --version ]
[-V | --verbose ]
⟨KEYWORD⟩ ⟨+KEYWORD⟩ |
⟨URI⟩
⟨+URI⟩ |
DESCRIPTION¶
Search for content on GNUnet. The keywords are case-sensitive.
gnunet-search
can be used both for a search in the
global namespace as well as for searching a private subspace. The options
are as follows:
-a
LEVEL |--anonymity=
LEVEL- This option can be used to specify additional anonymity constraints. The default is 1. If set to 0, GNUnet will publish the file non-anonymously and in fact sign the advertisement for the file using your peer's private key. This will allow other users to download the file as fast as possible, including using non-anonymous methods (discovery via DHT and CADET transfer). If you set it to 1 (default), you use the standard anonymous routing algorithm (which does not explicitly leak your identity). However, a powerful adversary may still be able to perform traffic analysis (statistics) to over time discovery your identity. You can gain better privacy by specifying a higher level of anonymity (using values above 1). This tells FS that it must hide your own requests in equivalent-looking cover traffic. This should confound an adversaries traffic analysis, increasing the time and effort it would take to discover your identity. However, it also can significantly reduce performance, as your requests will be delayed until sufficient cover traffic is available. The specific numeric value (for anonymity levels above 1) is simple: Given an anonymity level L (above 1), each request FS makes on your behalf must be hidden in L-1 equivalent requests of cover traffic (traffic your peer routes for others) in the same time-period. The time-period is twice the average delay by which GNUnet artificially delays traffic. Note that regardless of the anonymity level you choose, peers that cache content in the network always use anonymity level 1.
-b
|--bookmark-only
- Do not search, print only the URI that points to the search with the given keywords.
-c
FILENAME |--config=
FILENAME- Use the configuration file FILENAME (default: ~/.config/gnunet.conf).
-F
FORMAT |--dir-printf=
FORMAT- Write the search results for directories according to
FORMAT. The directives supported here are identical
to those supported in the
--printf
argument (please refer to it for more information). If missing,--dir-printf
defaults to--printf
. If--printf
is missing too--dir-printf
defaults to ‘#%n:\ngnunet-download -o "%f" -R %u\n\n
’. -f
FORMAT |--printf=
FORMAT- Write the search results according to FORMAT, in
which ‘
\
’ and ‘%
’ directives are interpreted as follows:\\
- a literal backslash (‘
\
’) \a
- an alarm bell
\b
- a backspace
\e
- an escape
\f
- a form feed
\n
- a newline
\r
- a carriage return
\t
- a horizontal tab
\v
- a vertical tab
\0
- an ASCII NUL.
\N...
- the character whose ASCII code is N..., expressed in octal digits
\xX...
- the character whose ASCII code is X..., expressed in hexadecimal digits
Note: The ‘
\
’ character followed by any other character not listed above is treated as an ordinary character, so both characters are printed.%%
- a percent sign
%a
- the complete list of all the printable metadata properties available,
displayed according to the
--iter-printf
argument; this specifier optionally supports metatype filtering via hash sign (e.g. ‘%2#a
’ prints all embedded file names, if present - see libextractor's metatypes for the complete list of numerical identifiers) %f
- the file's name
%j
- the first printable metadata property available, displayed according
to the
--iter-printf
argument; this specifier optionally supports metatype filtering via hash sign (e.g. ‘%5#j
’ prints a book title, if present); see libextractor's metatypes for the complete list of numerical identifiers) %l
- the file name's length
%m
- the file's mime type
%n
- the search result number
%s
- the file's size in bytes
%u
- the file's URI
Note: The ‘
%
’ character followed by any other character not listed above is treated as an ordinary character, so both characters are printed.If missing,
--printf
defaults to ‘#%n:\ngnunet-download -o "%f" %u\n\n
’. -h
|--help
- Print the help page.
-i
FORMAT |--iter-printf=
FORMAT- When the ‘
%a
’ or ‘%j
’ format specifiers appear in--printf
or--dir-printf
, list each metadata property according to FORMAT, in which the ‘\
’ directives are interpreted as in--printf
and--dir-printf
, while the ‘%
’ directives are interpreted as follows:%%
- a percent sign
%p
- the property's content
%l
- the property content's length in bytes
%i
- the property type's unique identifier
%n
- the property number
%t
- the property type (available only if compiled with libextractor)
%w
- the name of the plugin that provided the information
Note: The ‘
%
’ character followed by any other character not listed above is treated as an ordinary character, so both characters are printed.If missing,
--iter-printf
defaults to ‘%t: %p\n
’ or ‘MetaType #%i: %p\n
’, depending on whether the program was compiled with libextractor or not. -L
LOGLEVEL |--loglevel=
LOGLEVEL- Change the loglevel. Possible values for LOGLEVEL are ERROR, WARNING, INFO and DEBUG.
-l
FILENAME |--logfile=
FILENAME- Write logs to FILENAME.
-o
FILENAME |--output=
FILENAME- Writes a GNUnet directory containing all of the search results to
FILENAME (e.g.
‘
gnunet-search --output=commons.gnd commons
’). -n
|--no-network
- Only search locally, do not forward requests to other peers.
-N
VALUE |--results=
VALUE- Automatically terminate the search after receiving VALUE results.
-s
|--silent
- Enable silent mode and do not print any result (the
--output
argument is required). -t
DELAY |--timeout=
DELAY- Automatically timeout search after DELAY. The value given must be a number followed by a space and a time unit, for example "500 ms". Note that the quotes are required on the shell. Without a unit it defaults to microseconds (1000000 = 1 second). If 0 or omitted the search runs until gnunet-search is aborted with CTRL-C.
-v
|--version
- print the version number
-V
|--verbose
- append ‘
%a\n
’ to the default--printf
and--dir-printf
arguments – ignored when these are provided by the user
It is possible to run gnunet-search
with
an URI instead of a keyword. The URI can have the format for a namespace
search or for a keyword search. For a namespace search, the format is
For a keyword search, use
If the format does not correspond to a GNUnet URI, GNUnet will automatically assume that keywords are supplied directly.
If multiple keywords are passed,
gnunet-search
will look for content matching any of
the keywords. The ‘+
’ prefix makes a
keyword mandatory.
FILES¶
~/.config/gnunet.conf GNUnet configuration file; specifies the default value for the timeout
EXAMPLES¶
Example 1:
$ gnunet-search 'Das
Kapital'
searches for content matching the keyword “Das Kapital”
Example 2:
$ gnunet-search Das
Kapital
searches for content matching either keyword “Das” or keyword “Kapital”
Example 3:
$ gnunet-search +Das
+Kapital
searches for content matching both mandatory keywords “Das” and “Kapital”
Search results are printed by
gnunet-search
like this:
gnunet-download -o "COPYING" gnunet://fs/chk/HASH1.HASH2.SIZE
Description: The GNU General Public License
Mime-type: text/plain
...
The first line contains the command to run to download the file.
The suggested filename in the example is
‘COPYING
’. The GNUnet URI consists of
the key and query hash of the file and finally the size of the file. If the
--verbose
option was provided, after the command to
download the file, GNUnet will print metadata about the file as advertised
in the search result. The metadata here is the description (“The GNU
General Public License”) and the mime-type
(“text-plain”). See the options for
gnunet-publish(1) on how to supply metadata by hand.
The --printf
(-f
),
--dir-printf
(-F
) and
--iter-printf
(-i
) arguments
offer powerful tools for manipulating the output printed. For instance,
Example 4:
$ gnunet-search -f '%f (%s bytes)\n' commons
will print a simple list of the results that match the “commons” keyword, with only the file name and the size printed, without any URI. Or, for instance,
Example 5:
#!/bin/sh
{
printf '<list>'
gnunet-search -f '
<file uri="%u">
<filename len="%l">%f</filename>
<size>%s</size>
<mimetype>%m</mimetype>
<result_id>%n</result_id>
<metadata>%a
</metadata>
</file>' \
-i '
<property tid="%i" type="%t">
<content len="%l">%p</content>
<property_id>%n</property_id>
<provided_by>%w</provided_by>
</property>' \
-t '2 s' commons
printf '\n</list>\n'
} > commons.xml
will run for two seconds and then create a file named commons.xml, containing the search results that match the “commons” keyword in XML format.
SEE ALSO¶
gnunet-download(1), gnunet-fs-gtk(1), gnunet-publish(1), gnunet.conf(5)
The full documentation for GNUnet is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info(1) and gnunet packages 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>.
February 12, 2022 | Debian |