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author | Nils Gillmann <ng0@n0.is> | 2018-10-10 06:47:47 +0000 |
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committer | Nils Gillmann <ng0@n0.is> | 2018-10-10 06:47:47 +0000 |
commit | 552cb91724fe714ca989959f84346884d1770e3d (patch) | |
tree | 234ced116fa77f67992e8177df780c25e4a56526 /doc | |
parent | 697b2ed1273cefc78d2068a6425830935a9f9f22 (diff) | |
download | gnunet-552cb91724fe714ca989959f84346884d1770e3d.tar.gz gnunet-552cb91724fe714ca989959f84346884d1770e3d.zip |
installation: likewise.
Signed-off-by: Nils Gillmann <ng0@n0.is>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/documentation/chapters/installation.texi | 30 |
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/doc/documentation/chapters/installation.texi b/doc/documentation/chapters/installation.texi index 559a97f96..6bf67ee97 100644 --- a/doc/documentation/chapters/installation.texi +++ b/doc/documentation/chapters/installation.texi | |||
@@ -224,8 +224,9 @@ This section describes a quick, casual way to check if your GNUnet | |||
224 | installation works. However, if it does not, we do not cover | 224 | installation works. However, if it does not, we do not cover |
225 | steps for recovery --- for this, please study the instructions | 225 | steps for recovery --- for this, please study the instructions |
226 | provided in the developer handbook as well as the system-specific | 226 | provided in the developer handbook as well as the system-specific |
227 | instruction in the source code repository@footnote{The system specific | 227 | instruction in the source code repository. |
228 | instructions are not provided as part of this handbook!}. | 228 | Please note that the system specific instructions are not provided |
229 | as part of this handbook!. | ||
229 | 230 | ||
230 | 231 | ||
231 | @menu | 232 | @menu |
@@ -258,19 +259,16 @@ Currently these interfaces cover: | |||
258 | @subsection Statistics | 259 | @subsection Statistics |
259 | @c %**end of header | 260 | @c %**end of header |
260 | 261 | ||
261 | First, you should launch GNUnet gtk@footnote{Obviously you should also | 262 | We assume that you have started gnunet via @code{gnunet-arm} or via your |
262 | start gnunet, via gnunet-arm or the system provided method}. | 263 | system-provided method for starting services. |
264 | First, you should launch GNUnet gtk. | ||
263 | You can do this from the command-line by typing | 265 | You can do this from the command-line by typing |
264 | 266 | ||
265 | @example | 267 | @example |
266 | gnunet-statistics-gtk | 268 | gnunet-statistics-gtk |
267 | @end example | 269 | @end example |
268 | 270 | ||
269 | If your peer@footnote{The term ``peer'' is a common word used in | 271 | If your peer is running correctly, you should see a bunch |
270 | federated and distributed networks to describe a participating device | ||
271 | which is connected to the network. Thus, your Personal Computer or | ||
272 | whatever it is you are looking at the Gtk+ interface describes a | ||
273 | ``Peer'' or a ``Node''.} is running correctly, you should see a bunch | ||
274 | of lines, all of which should be ``significantly'' above zero (at | 272 | of lines, all of which should be ``significantly'' above zero (at |
275 | least if your peer has been running for more than a few seconds). The | 273 | least if your peer has been running for more than a few seconds). The |
276 | lines indicate how many other peers your peer is connected to (via | 274 | lines indicate how many other peers your peer is connected to (via |
@@ -284,6 +282,12 @@ of storage available and used by your peer. Note that "Traffic" is | |||
284 | plotted cumulatively, so you should see a strict upwards trend in the | 282 | plotted cumulatively, so you should see a strict upwards trend in the |
285 | traffic. | 283 | traffic. |
286 | 284 | ||
285 | The term ``peer'' is a common word used in | ||
286 | federated and distributed networks to describe a participating device | ||
287 | which is connected to the network. Thus, your Personal Computer or | ||
288 | whatever it is you are looking at the Gtk+ interface describes a | ||
289 | ``Peer'' or a ``Node''. | ||
290 | |||
287 | @node Peer Information | 291 | @node Peer Information |
288 | @subsection Peer Information | 292 | @subsection Peer Information |
289 | @c %**end of header | 293 | @c %**end of header |
@@ -1240,13 +1244,15 @@ ProxyPassReverse https://gnunet.foo.org:4433/ | |||
1240 | 1244 | ||
1241 | @noindent | 1245 | @noindent |
1242 | More information about the apache mod_proxy configuration can be found | 1246 | More information about the apache mod_proxy configuration can be found |
1243 | in the Apache documentation@footnote{@uref{http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_proxy.html#proxypass, http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_proxy.html#proxypass}} | 1247 | in the |
1248 | @uref{http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_proxy.html#proxypass, Apache documentation}. | ||
1244 | 1249 | ||
1245 | @node Reverse Proxy - Configure your nginx HTTPS webserver | 1250 | @node Reverse Proxy - Configure your nginx HTTPS webserver |
1246 | @subsubsection Reverse Proxy - Configure your nginx HTTPS webserver | 1251 | @subsubsection Reverse Proxy - Configure your nginx HTTPS webserver |
1247 | 1252 | ||
1248 | Since nginx does not support chunked encoding, you first of all have to | 1253 | Since nginx does not support chunked encoding, you first of all have to |
1249 | install the @code{chunkin} module@footnote{@uref{http://wiki.nginx.org/HttpChunkinModule, http://wiki.nginx.org/HttpChunkinModule}} | 1254 | install the @code{chunkin} |
1255 | @uref{http://wiki.nginx.org/HttpChunkinModule, module}. | ||
1250 | 1256 | ||
1251 | To enable chunkin add: | 1257 | To enable chunkin add: |
1252 | 1258 | ||
@@ -1491,7 +1497,7 @@ sections. | |||
1491 | @subsubsection Configuring the GNS nsswitch plugin | 1497 | @subsubsection Configuring the GNS nsswitch plugin |
1492 | 1498 | ||
1493 | The Name Service Switch (NSS) is a facility in Unix-like operating systems | 1499 | The Name Service Switch (NSS) is a facility in Unix-like operating systems |
1494 | @footnote{More accurate: NSS is a functionality of the GNU C Library} | 1500 | (in most cases provided by the GNU C Library) |
1495 | that provides a variety of sources for common configuration databases and | 1501 | that provides a variety of sources for common configuration databases and |
1496 | name resolution mechanisms. | 1502 | name resolution mechanisms. |
1497 | A superuser (system administrator) usually configures the | 1503 | A superuser (system administrator) usually configures the |