To help deployment and better handle locally different configurations, n2n supports the optional use of configuration files for edge
and supernode
.
They are plain text files and contain the desired command line options, one per line.
The exemplary command line
sudo edge -c mynetwork -k mysecretpass -a 192.168.100.1 -f -l supernode.ntop.org:7777
translates into the following edge.conf
file:
-c mynetwork
-k mysecretpass
-a 192.168.100.1
-f
-l supernode.ntop.org:7777
-A5
which can be loaded by
sudo ./edge edge.conf
Comment lines starting with a hash '#' are ignored.
# automated edge configuration
# created by bot7
# on April 31, 2038 – 1800Z
-c mynetwork
-k mysecretpass
-a 192.168.100.1
-f
-A5
# --- supernode section ---
-l supernode.ntop.org:7777
Long options can be used as well. Please note the double minus/dash-character --
, just like you would use them on the command line with long options:
--community mynetwork
-k mysecretpass
-a 192.168.100.1
-f
-A5
-l supernode.ntop.org:7777
If using a configuration file, its filename needs to be supplied as first parameter to edge
or supernode
. If required, additional command line parameters can be supplied afterwards:
sudo edge edge.conf -z1 -I myComputer
Finally, the .conf
file syntax also allows =
between parameter and its option:
-c=mynetwork
-k=mysecretpass
-a=192.168.100.1
-f
-A5
-l=supernode.ntop.org:7777
When used with =
, there is no whitespace allowed between parameter, delimiter (=
), and option. So, do not put -c = mynetwork
– it is required to be -c=mynetwork
.