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| 2 | .\" Copyright (C) 2007 Fredrik Tolf <fredrik@dolda2000.com> |
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| 24 | .TH DOLDACOND.CONF 5 "@DATE@" "" "Dolda Connect manual" |
| 25 | .SH NAME |
| 26 | doldacond.conf \- Dolda Connect daemon configuration file |
| 27 | .SH DESCRIPTION |
| 28 | The \fBdoldacond\fP(8) daemon will examine the doldacond.conf file |
| 29 | upon startup and reception of SIGHUP. The file is written in a |
| 30 | line-oriented ASCII format, using the following rules. |
| 31 | .P |
| 32 | A line is either empty, a comment, or a configuration directive. Empty |
| 33 | lines are permitted to contain horizontal whitespace, but nothing |
| 34 | else. A comment line begins with a hash sign (`#'), optionally |
| 35 | preceded by whitespace. A configuration directive is a line with at |
| 36 | least one token, each token being a series of non-whitespace |
| 37 | characters or quoted whitespace characters. Quoting can be done either |
| 38 | by surrounding the characters to be quoted with double quotation |
| 39 | marks, or by preceding a single character to be quoted with a |
| 40 | backslash. The first token is considered the directive to be |
| 41 | evaluated, and the rest being arguments to the directive. Each of the |
| 42 | possible configuration directives are described in their own sections. |
| 43 | .SH CONFIGURATION VARIABLES |
| 44 | The vast majority of the daemon's configuration is controlled via |
| 45 | named configuration variables. The \fBset\fP directive is used to set |
| 46 | the value of the configuration variables, which obeys the following |
| 47 | syntax: |
| 48 | .P |
| 49 | \fBset\fP \fIvariable\fP \fIvalue\fP |
| 50 | .P |
| 51 | The value of a variable is either a boolean, an integer, a string or |
| 52 | an IPv4 address. Which one depends on the variable. A boolean may be |
| 53 | specified using either \fBtrue\fP/\fBfalse\fP, \fBon\fP/\fBoff\fP, |
| 54 | \fByes\fP/\fBno\fP or \fB1\fP/\fB0\fP. Integers may be given in either |
| 55 | decimal, octal or hexadecimal format, using standard C syntax \- that |
| 56 | is, hexadecimal numbers prefixed with \fB0x\fP, octal numbers prefixed |
| 57 | with \fB0\fP, or directly entered decimal numbers. Strings may contain |
| 58 | arbitrary Unicode characters, and are decoded according to the |
| 59 | system's default character coding. IPv4 addresses are specified in |
| 60 | dotted quad decimal notation. A list of all the known configuration |
| 61 | variables follows. |
| 62 | @VARIABLES@ |
| 63 | .SH SHARES |
| 64 | A very central function of a file-sharing daemon is to share files. To |
| 65 | determine what files are to be shared, the \fBshare\fP directive is |
| 66 | used, according to the following syntax: |
| 67 | .P |
| 68 | \fBshare\fP \fIsharename\fP \fIpath\fP |
| 69 | .P |
| 70 | The \fIsharename\fP is the name of the share as seen by other peers on |
| 71 | the network. The \fIpath\fP is the path in the real filesystem to a |
| 72 | directory containing the files to be shared. All files under the |
| 73 | specified directory will be shared, except for files that begin with a |
| 74 | dot, or files that do not match the criteria given by the |
| 75 | \fBclient.scanfilemask\fP and \fBclient.scandirmask\fP variables, as |
| 76 | described above. |
| 77 | .P |
| 78 | The \fBshare\fP directive may be used multiple times to define several |
| 79 | shares. |
| 80 | .SH USER AUTHORIZATION |
| 81 | In multi-user mode (when running as root), the \fBdoldacond\fP(8) |
| 82 | daemon can serve multiple users, but commonly not every user on the |
| 83 | system should be authorized to be served. To specify which users to |
| 84 | serve, and to assign permissions to the users to be served, the |
| 85 | \fBuser\fP directive is used, according to the following syntax: |
| 86 | .P |
| 87 | \fBuser\fP {\fIusername\fP|\fBdefault\fP} [-]\fIpermission\fP... |
| 88 | .P |
| 89 | As indicated by the syntax, the special username \fBdefault\fP can be |
| 90 | used to specify permissions for users not matched by any other user |
| 91 | directive (if you have a user called \fBdefault\fP, tough luck). |
| 92 | .P |
| 93 | The assignable permissions are as follows: |
| 94 | .P |
| 95 | .TP |
| 96 | .B admin |
| 97 | Involves commands controlling the function of the daemon, such as |
| 98 | shutting it down remotely. |
| 99 | .TP |
| 100 | .B fnetctl |
| 101 | Allows connecting and disconnecting fnetnodes (a.k.a. hubs). |
| 102 | .TP |
| 103 | .B trans |
| 104 | Allows queuing of transfers. |
| 105 | .TP |
| 106 | .B transcu |
| 107 | Allows cancelling of uploads. |
| 108 | .TP |
| 109 | .B chat |
| 110 | Allows sending and receiving of chat messages. |
| 111 | .TP |
| 112 | .B srch |
| 113 | Allows submitting of search requests. |
| 114 | .TP |
| 115 | .B disallow |
| 116 | A negative permission, used to prevent a user from being |
| 117 | authorized. Mostly useful for the \fBdefault\fP user. |
| 118 | .TP |
| 119 | .B all |
| 120 | Sets all the above permssions. |
| 121 | .P |
| 122 | A permissions may be prefixed with a minus sign, which means that that |
| 123 | permission should be removed (commonly used after \fBall\fP, since |
| 124 | permissions are scanned from left to right). |
| 125 | .P |
| 126 | Note that the \fBall\fP pseudo-permission really turns on \fIall\fP |
| 127 | other permissions, including \fBdisallow\fP. Thus, to allow a user |
| 128 | jdoe full control over the daemon, one would normally use "\fBuser |
| 129 | jdoe all -disallow\fP". |
| 130 | .SH TOS VALUES |
| 131 | Some configuration variables specify IP Type of Service values. Valid |
| 132 | values for those variables are as follows: |
| 133 | .TP |
| 134 | 0 |
| 135 | System default TOS. |
| 136 | .TP |
| 137 | 1 |
| 138 | Minimize cost |
| 139 | .TP |
| 140 | 2 |
| 141 | Maximize reliability |
| 142 | .TP |
| 143 | 3 |
| 144 | Maximize throughput |
| 145 | .TP |
| 146 | 4 |
| 147 | Minimize delay |
| 148 | .P |
| 149 | How routers interpret TOS values is defined by the administrator of |
| 150 | those routers. For IPv6 connections, which use Diffserv instead of the |
| 151 | older IPv4 TOS values, the Diffserv values to use are specified by the |
| 152 | \fBnet.diffserv-mincost\fP, \fBnet.diffserv-maxrel\fP, |
| 153 | \fBnet.diffserv-maxtp\fP and \fBnet.diffserv-mindelay\fP configuration |
| 154 | variables, as described above. For a way to use DSCP in IPv4 as well, |
| 155 | see the \fBnet.dscp-tos\fP option above. |
| 156 | .SH FILES |
| 157 | All file names specified in the configuration file, and the |
| 158 | configuration file itself, are looked up by the daemon in a rather |
| 159 | flexible manner. The only difference between the main configuration |
| 160 | file and all other files is that the configuration must always be |
| 161 | named \fBdoldacond.conf\fP, while the name of all other files may be |
| 162 | specified in the configuration file. In all else, lookup is done |
| 163 | according to the following rules: |
| 164 | .TP |
| 165 | 1 |
| 166 | If the specified name contains any slashes (not applicable for |
| 167 | doldacond.conf), it will be considered absolute, and no locations |
| 168 | other than the explicitly specified will be examined. |
| 169 | .TP |
| 170 | 2 |
| 171 | The home directory of the user running the daemon (as specified by |
| 172 | either the \fBHOME\fP environment variable or as returned by the |
| 173 | \fBgetpwuid\fP(3) function) is checked for a dot-file with the |
| 174 | specified name. |
| 175 | .TP |
| 176 | 3 |
| 177 | If the \fBPATH\fP environment variable exists, the directories it |
| 178 | specifies are iterated, the last path element of each is replaced by |
| 179 | `etc', and the resulting directories are checked for the existence of |
| 180 | the specified file. For example, if \fBPATH\fP is |
| 181 | /bin:/opt/doldaconnect/bin:/usr/bin, the directories /etc, |
| 182 | /opt/doldaconnect/etc and /usr/etc will be checked for the file. |
| 183 | .TP |
| 184 | 4 |
| 185 | If the \fBPATH\fP environment variable does not exist (but \fInot\fP |
| 186 | if \fBPATH\fP does exist and the file simply could not be found |
| 187 | according to the previous rule), the directories /usr/local/etc, /etc |
| 188 | and /usr/etc are checked for the file. |
| 189 | .P |
| 190 | For files that are created on the fly, such as the hash cache, the |
| 191 | file will be overwritten in place if found. If not found, it will be |
| 192 | created in the home directory of the user running the daemon. If the |
| 193 | home directory cannot be determined, the file will be created in /etc. |
| 194 | .SH BUGS |
| 195 | The TOS-related options have a number of interesting quirks: |
| 196 | .TP |
| 197 | 1 |
| 198 | It is currently unclear to me whether Linux has an API to set IPv6 |
| 199 | DSCP values, so it is left unimplemented for now. |
| 200 | .TP |
| 201 | 2 |
| 202 | I am rather sure that Linux lacks an API to set IPv4 DSCP |
| 203 | values. However, it seems that it is possible to use the TOS API to |
| 204 | set DSCP values, so it has been implemented as an option (see the |
| 205 | \fBnet.dscp-tos\fP options above). |
| 206 | .TP |
| 207 | 3 |
| 208 | Even though Linux lacks an explicit API to set the DSCP field in IPv4, |
| 209 | the TOS API is "DSCP compliant" in the interesting way that it masks |
| 210 | away the two least significant bits. Therefore, the minimum cost TOS |
| 211 | value cannot currently be set on Linux. |
| 212 | .TP |
| 213 | 4 |
| 214 | I have not examined how these issues compare to other operating |
| 215 | systems, like FreeBSD. |
| 216 | .SH AUTHOR |
| 217 | Fredrik Tolf <fredrik@dolda2000.com> |
| 218 | .SH SEE ALSO |
| 219 | \fBdoldacond\fP(8) |