diff options
-rw-r--r-- | doc/man/gnunet.conf.5 | 4 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5 b/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5 index 3df3b437a..455247e81 100644 --- a/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5 +++ b/doc/man/gnunet.conf.5 | |||
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ gnunet.conf \- GNUnet configuration file | |||
6 | .SH DESCRIPTION | 6 | .SH DESCRIPTION |
7 | .PP | 7 | .PP |
8 | 8 | ||
9 | A GNUnet setup typically consists of a a set of service processes run by a user "gnunet" and a set of user-interface processes run by a standard account. The default location for the configuration file for the services is "~gnunet/.config/gnunet.conf"; however, as normal users also may need read-access to this configuration, you might want to instead put the service process configuration in "/etc/gnunet.conf". gnunet\-setup (part of the GTK package) can be used to edit this configuration. The parts of GNUnet that is ran as a normal user may have config options too and they read from "$HOME/.config/gnunet.conf". The latter config file can skip any options for the services. | 9 | A GNUnet setup typically consists of a set of service processes run by a user "gnunet" and a set of user-interface processes run by a standard account. The default location for the configuration file for the services is "~gnunet/.config/gnunet.conf"; however, as normal users also may need read-access to this configuration, you might want to instead put the service process configuration in "/etc/gnunet.conf". gnunet\-setup (part of the GNUnet GTK package) can be used to edit this configuration. The parts of GNUnet that are run as a normal user may have config options too and they read from "$HOME/.config/gnunet.conf". The latter config file can skip any options for the services. |
10 | 10 | ||
11 | .TP | 11 | .TP |
12 | The basic structure of the configuration file is the following. The file is split into sections. Every section begins with "[SECTIONNAME]" and contains a number of options of the form "OPTION=VALUE". Empty lines and lines beginning with a "#" are treated as comments. Almost all options are optional and the tools resort to reasonable defaults if they are not present. | 12 | The basic structure of the configuration file is the following. The file is split into sections. Every section begins with "[SECTIONNAME]" and contains a number of options of the form "OPTION=VALUE". Empty lines and lines beginning with a "#" are treated as comments. Almost all options are optional and the tools resort to reasonable defaults if they are not present. |
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ The following options are generic and shared by all services: | |||
73 | 73 | ||
74 | .SH EXAMPLES | 74 | .SH EXAMPLES |
75 | 75 | ||
76 | This example is a simple way to get started, using a server that has a known list of peers to get you started. Most users will be behind a firewal on IPv4, as such NAT is enabled. Please rememeber to change your IP address to the actual external address for your usage. | 76 | This example is a simple way to get started, using a server that has a known list of peers to get you started. Most users will be behind a firewall on IPv4, as such NAT is enabled. Please rememeber to change your IP address to the actual external address for your usage. |
77 | .PP | 77 | .PP |
78 | [hostlist] | 78 | [hostlist] |
79 | OPTIONS = \-b | 79 | OPTIONS = \-b |