Hi maxime,

I think there is already an official doc I was referring to
https://docs.gnunet.org/latest/developers/tutorial.html#how-to-connect-manually
and this is where I am stuck.

Could you provide a configuration file example please?

Le sam. 14 déc. 2024 à 18:12, Maxime Devos <maximede...@telenet.be> a
écrit :

> If you wish to start multiple peers on one machine, you probably need to
> adjust the configuration more.
>
>
>
>    - If things are still the same as when I last worked with this (and
>    IIRC), some things are _*outside*_ GNUNET_HOME. There are some sockets
>    … somewhere (I think under /tmp? Not sure where.). So, GNUnet might be
>    getting confused from this.
>    - Maybe wait a few seconds after doing ‘gnunet-arm […] -s’, instead of
>    the &&. Maybe the TCP or UDP transports haven’t choosen a port yet? I’m not
>    sure this is how it works though – not familiar with this, this is
>    speculation.
>    - I’m not sure if UDP ports are choosen automatically. If they aren’t,
>    then there might be some kind of port conflic. In case of UDP
>    (unidirectional), then the peers would be unable to verify each others
>    existence.
>    - Even if they are choosen automatically, this automation probably had
>    NAT-punching in mind, not this.
>    - For an isolated network, I think you also need to tell GNUnet to
>    bind to ‘localhost’ instead of everything.
>
>
>
> It would be nice to have official documentation on setting up this kind
> isolated one-machine, multiple peers network. It seems quite convenient for
> safely testing things out. (Though for full isolation, a ‘unix’ transport
> would be needed.)
>
>
>
> Best regards,
> Maxime Devos
>

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