Project Flare aims to bring pervasive signaling infrastructure for
NAT traversal with hole punching in libp2p applications. During Phase
0/1, we are alpha testing and collecting metrics using a fixed (limited) relay
and a presence service. You can participate in alpha testing by
running the flarec
binary, with a configuration supplied by the test
administrator.
Contact us at libp2p-at-libp2p.io if you want to participate in the ongoing alpha testing.
Checkout the repo and run the flarec
binary using the supplied configuration.
Please leave the program running in the background for a few days, so that we can collect
metrics about hole punching success.
To build:
$ git clone git@github.com:vyzo/libp2p-flare-test.git
$ cd libp2p-flare-test/cmd/flarec
$ go build
To run, first place the config.json
file you received into the flarec directory and
the just run flarec
:
$ cd libp2p-flare-test/cmd/flarec
$ cp /path/to/config.json .
$ ./flarec
The flarec
program supports the following command line options:
-idTCP <path>
persistent identity key file path for TCP host; defaults to identity-tcp.
-idUDP <path>
persistent identity key file path for UDP host; defaults to identity-udp.
-config <path>
path to json configuration; defaults to config.json.
-enableTCP[=false]
enable (or disable) TCP host; enabled by default.
-enableUDP[=false]
enable (or disable) UDP host; enabled by default.
-nick <nickname>
nickname for your peer; defaults to user login id.
-quiet
reduce logging output to just ERRORs.
-listPeers
lists peers that have announced presence and exits
-eaterTest
eagerly try to connect to all peers that have announced presence
Running flarec -listPeers
will list the current peers that have announced presence and exit.
Running flarec -eagerTest
will fetch the current peers and attempt to connect with hole punching to all of them.
If you want to run your own testing infrastructure and recruit your own users, you will need two things:
- A limited relay server; see libp2p-relay for implementation.
- The
flared
daemon, available in this package.
Once you have those two daemons up and running, create a config.json
client configuration file (see cmd/flarec/config.go
), distribute it to your
users, and you are ready to go!
© vyzo; MIT License.