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README 24 KB

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  1. Welcome to GNUnet
  2. ToC
  3. ===
  4. * ToC
  5. * What is GNUnet?
  6. * Dependencies
  7. o Build tools
  8. o Dependencies of GNUnet
  9. o Dependencies of optional components/functionality
  10. o Test suite dependencies
  11. o Recommended developer tools
  12. * Notes on setuid
  13. * Scope of Operating System support
  14. * How to install
  15. o binary packages
  16. o Building GNUnet from source
  17. o Notes on compiling from Git
  18. * Configuration
  19. * Usage
  20. * Hacking GNUnet
  21. * Running HTTP on port 80 and HTTPS on port 443
  22. * Further Reading
  23. * Stay tuned
  24. What is GNUnet?
  25. ===============
  26. GNUnet is peer-to-peer framework providing a network abstractions and
  27. applications focusing on security and privacy. So far, we have
  28. created applications for anonymous file-sharing, decentralized naming
  29. and identity management, decentralized and confidential telephony and
  30. tunneling IP traffic over GNUnet. GNUnet is currently developed by a
  31. worldwide group of independent free software developers. GNUnet is a
  32. GNU package (http://www.gnu.org/).
  33. This is an ALPHA release. There are known and significant bugs as
  34. well as many missing features in this release.
  35. GNUnet is free software released under the GNU Affero General Public
  36. License (v3 or later). For details see the COPYING file in this
  37. directory. If you fork this software, you MUST adjust GNUNET_AGPL_URL
  38. in src/include/gnunet_util_lib.h to point to the source code of your
  39. fork!
  40. Additional documentation about GNUnet can be found at
  41. https://gnunet.org/ and in the 'doc/' folder.
  42. Online documentation is provided at
  43. 'https://docs.gnunet.org' and 'https://tutorial.gnunet.org'.
  44. Dependencies:
  45. =============
  46. The dependencies for building GNUnet will require around 0.74 GiB
  47. diskspace. GNUnet itself will require 8 - 9.2 MiB depending on
  48. configuration.
  49. Build tools for compiling GNUnet from source:
  50. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  51. - gcc or clang
  52. - autoconf >= 2.59 (building from git)
  53. - automake >= 1.11.1 (building from git)
  54. - libtool >= 2.2
  55. - makeinfo >= 4.8
  56. - make[*3]
  57. - pkgconf or pkg-config
  58. - Texinfo >= 5.2 [*1]
  59. Direct dependencies of GNUnet:
  60. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  61. - Bash (for some scripts)
  62. - gettext
  63. - gnutls >= 3.2.12 (highly recommended a gnutls
  64. linked against libunbound)
  65. - curl (ideally built against gnutls) or gnurl:
  66. * libgnurl >= 7.35.0 (recommended, available from
  67. https://gnunet.org/en/gnurl.html)
  68. or
  69. * libcurl >= 7.35.0 (alternative to libgnurl)
  70. - libgcrypt >= 1.6
  71. - libunistring >= 0.9.2
  72. - libidn:
  73. * libidn2 (preferred)
  74. or
  75. * libidn >= 1.0
  76. - libmicrohttpd >= 0.9.63
  77. - libjansson
  78. - nss (certutil binary, for
  79. gnunet-gns-proxy-setup-ca)
  80. - openssl >= 1.0 (binary, used to generate
  81. X.509 certificate
  82. for gnunet-gns-proxy-setup-ca)
  83. - libltdl >= 2.2 (part of GNU libtool)
  84. - sqlite >= 3.8 (default database, required)
  85. - which (contrib/apparmor(?), gnunet-bugreport,
  86. and possibly more)
  87. - zlib
  88. - libsodium >= 1.0.17 (for elliptic curve cryptography)
  89. - certtool (gnutls or openssl) (certtool binary (for convenient
  90. installation of GNS proxy))
  91. Dependencies of optional components/functionality:
  92. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  93. - Database plugins (alternatives to sqlite):
  94. * mysql >= 5.1
  95. * postgres >= 9.5
  96. - Transport plugins:
  97. * bluez (bluetooth transport)
  98. - Conversation service:
  99. * libopus >= 1.0.1
  100. * libpulse >= 2.0
  101. * libogg >= 1.3.0
  102. - File-sharing metadata (highly recommended[*5]):
  103. * libextractor >= 0.6.1
  104. - NAT uPnP support:
  105. * miniupnpc
  106. - gnunet-qr (Read/write GNUnet URIs from/to QR codes):
  107. * libzbar >= 0.10
  108. - gnunet-bcd (GNS business card generator):
  109. * TeX Live >= 2012 (for gnunet-bcd[*])
  110. - Documentation:
  111. * TeX Live >= 2012 (for gnunet-bcd[*])
  112. * texi2mdoc (for automatic mdoc generation [*2], not
  113. the texi2mdoc script distributed with
  114. autogen but the texi2mdoc C application)
  115. - Attribute-Based Encryption (experimental):
  116. * libpbc >= 0.5.14
  117. * libgabe
  118. Additional dependencies to run the GNUnet testsuite:
  119. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  120. - Bash (for some tests[*4])
  121. - A Posix Shell (for some tests)
  122. - python >= 3.4 (3.4 and higher technically supported,
  123. at least python 3.7 tested to work)
  124. - base tools
  125. - mostly:
  126. - bc,
  127. - curl,
  128. - sed,
  129. - awk,
  130. - which
  131. Recommended software for developer tools:
  132. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  133. - awk (for linting tests)
  134. - Bash (for Docker and Vagrant)
  135. - grof (for linting of man pages)
  136. - mandoc (for linting of man pages, generation of
  137. html output of man pages (not part of
  138. the regular build))
  139. - perl5 (for some utilities)
  140. [*] Mandatory for compiling the info output of the documentation,
  141. a limited subset ('texlive-tiny' in Guix) is enough.
  142. [*1] The default configuration is to build the info output of the
  143. documentation, and therefore require texinfo. You can pass
  144. '--disable-documentation' to the configure script to change this.
  145. [*2] If you still prefer to have documentation, you can pass
  146. '--enable-texi2mdoc-generation' to build the mdocml ("mandoc")
  147. documentation (experimental stages in gnunet).
  148. If this proves to be reliable, we will
  149. include the mdocml output in the release tarballs.
  150. Contrary to the name, texi2mdoc does not require Texinfo,
  151. It is a standalone ISO C utility.
  152. [*3] GNU make introduced the != operator in version 4.0.
  153. GNU make was released in october 2013, reasonable to
  154. be widespread by now. If this is not working out for
  155. you, open a bug so that we can get a more portable
  156. fix in.
  157. [*4] We are commited to portable tools and solutions
  158. where possible. New scripts should be Posix sh
  159. compatible, current and older scripts are
  160. in the process of being rewritten to comply
  161. with this requirement.
  162. [*5] While libextractor ("LE") is optional, it is recommended to
  163. build gnunet against it. If you install it later,
  164. you won't benefit from libextractor.
  165. If you are a distributor, we recommend to split
  166. LE into basis + plugins rather than making LE
  167. an option as an afterthought by the user.
  168. LE itself is very small, but its dependency chain
  169. on first, second, third etc level can be big.
  170. There is a small effect on privacy if your LE build
  171. differs from one which includes all
  172. plugins (plugins are build as shared objects):
  173. if users publish a directory with a mixture of file
  174. types (for example mpeg, jpeg, png, gif) the
  175. configuration of LE could leak which plugins are
  176. installed for which filetypes are not providing
  177. more details.
  178. However, this leak is just a minor concern.
  179. Notes on setuid
  180. ===============
  181. For a correct functionality depending on the host OS, you need
  182. to run the equivalent of these steps after installation.
  183. Replace $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir) with the appropriate paths,
  184. for example /usr/local/lib/gnunet/libexec/. Note that this
  185. obviously must be run as priviledged user.
  186. chown root:root $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-vpn
  187. chmod u+s $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-vpn
  188. chown root:root $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-transport-wlan
  189. chmod u+s $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-transport-wlan
  190. chown root:root $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-transport-bluetooth
  191. chmod u+s $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-transport-bluetooth
  192. chown root $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-dns
  193. chgrp $(GNUNETDNS_GROUP) $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-dns
  194. chmod 4750 $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-dns
  195. chgrp $(GNUNETDNS_GROUP) $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-dns
  196. chown gnunet:$(GNUNETDNS_GROUP) $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-dns
  197. chmod 2750 $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-dns
  198. chown root:root $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-exit
  199. chmod u+s $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-exit
  200. chown root:root $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-nat-server
  201. chown root:root $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-nat-client
  202. chmod u+s $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-nat-server
  203. chmod u+s $(DESTDIR)$(libexecdir)/gnunet-helper-nat-client
  204. Scope of Operating System support
  205. =================================
  206. We actively support GNUnet on a broad range of Free Software Operating
  207. Systems.
  208. For proprietary Operating Systems, like for example Microsoft Windows
  209. or Apple OS X, we accept patches if they don't break anything for
  210. other Operating Systems.
  211. If you are implementing support for a proprietary Operating System,
  212. you should be aware that progress in our codebase could break
  213. functionality on your OS and cause unpredicted behavior we can
  214. not test. However, we do not break support on Operating Systems
  215. with malicious intent.
  216. Regressions which do occur on these Operating Systems are 3rd
  217. class issues and we expect users and developers of these
  218. Operating Systems to send proposed patches to fix regressions.
  219. For more information about our stand on some of the motivating
  220. points here, read the 'Philosophy' Chapter of our handbook.
  221. How to install?
  222. ===============
  223. binary packages
  224. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  225. We recommend to use binary packages provided by the package manager integrated
  226. within your Operating System. GNUnet is reportedly available for at least:
  227. ALT Linux, Archlinux, Debian, Deepin, Devuan, GNU Guix, Hyperbola,
  228. Kali Linux, LEDE/OpenWRT, Manjaro, Nix, Parabola, Pardus, Parrot,
  229. PureOS, Raspbian, Rosa, Trisquel, and Ubuntu.
  230. If GNUnet is available for your Operating System and it is missing,
  231. send us feedback so that we can add it to this list. Furthermore, if
  232. you are interested in packaging GNUnet for your Operating System,
  233. get in touch with us at gnunet-developers@gnu.org if you require
  234. help with this job.
  235. If you were using an Operating System with the apt package manager,
  236. GNUnet could be installed as simple as:
  237. $ apt-get install gnunet
  238. Generic installation instructions are in the INSTALL file in this
  239. directory.
  240. Building GNUnet from source
  241. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  242. IMPORTANT: You can read further notes about compilation from source in
  243. the handbook under doc/handbook/, which includes notes about specific
  244. requirements for operating systems aswell. If you are a package
  245. mantainer for an Operating System we invite you to add your notes if
  246. you feel it is necessary and can not be covered in your Operating
  247. System's documentation.
  248. Two prominent examples which currently lack cross-compilation
  249. support in GNUnet (and native binaries) are MS Windows and Apple macOS.
  250. For macOS we recommend you to do the build process via Homebrew and a
  251. recent XCode installation. We don't recommend using GNUnet with any
  252. recent MS Windows system as it officially spies on its users (according
  253. to its T&C), defying some of the purposes of GNUnet.
  254. Note that some functions of GNUnet require "root" access. GNUnet will
  255. install (tiny) SUID binaries for those functions is you run "make
  256. install" as root. If you do not, GNUnet will still work, but some
  257. functionality will not be available (including certain forms of NAT
  258. traversal).
  259. GNUnet requires the GNU MP library (https://www.gnu.org/software/gmp/)
  260. and libgcrypt (https://www.gnupg.org/). You can specify the path to
  261. libgcrypt by passing "--with-gcrypt=PATH" to configure. You will also
  262. need either sqlite (http://www.sqlite.org/), MySQL
  263. (http://www.mysql.org/) or PostGres (http://www.postgres.org/).
  264. If you install from source, you need to install GNU libextractor first
  265. (download from https://www.gnu.org/software/libextractor/). We also
  266. recommend installing GNU libmicrohttpd (download from
  267. https://www.gnu.org/software/libmicrohttpd/). Furthermore we recommend
  268. libgnurl (from https://gnunet.org/en/gnurl.html).
  269. Then you can start the actual GNUnet compilation process with:
  270. $ export GNUNET_PREFIX=/usr/local/lib # or other directory of your choice
  271. # addgroup gnunetdns
  272. # adduser --system --home "/var/lib/gnunet" --group gnunet --shell /bin/sh
  273. # ./configure --prefix=$GNUNET_PREFIX/.. --with-extractor=$LE_PREFIX
  274. $ make
  275. And finally install GNUnet with:
  276. # make install
  277. Complete the process by either adjusting one of our example service files
  278. in 'contrib/services' or by running:
  279. # sudo -u gnunet gnunet-arm -s
  280. Note that you must read paragraph "Notes on setuid", which documents steps you
  281. have to follow after the installation, as a priviledged user. We require some
  282. binaries to be setuid. The most portable approach across all supported
  283. platforms and targets is to let this be handled manually.
  284. The installation will work if you do not run these steps as root, but some
  285. components may not be installed in the perfect place or with the right
  286. permissions and thus won't work.
  287. This will create the users and groups needed for running GNUnet
  288. securely and then compile and install GNUnet to $GNUNET_PREFIX/../bin/,
  289. $GNUNET_PREFIX/ and $GNUNET_PREFIX/../share/ and start the system
  290. with the default configuration. It is strongly recommended that you
  291. add a user "gnunet" to run "gnunet-arm". You can then still run the
  292. end-user applications as another user.
  293. If you create a system user "gnunet", it is recommended that you edit
  294. the configuration file slightly so that data can be stored in the
  295. system user home directory at "/var/lib/gnunet". Depending on what
  296. the $HOME-directory of your "gnunet" user is, you might need to set
  297. the SERVICEHOME option in section "[PATHS]" to "/var/lib/gnunet" to
  298. do this. Depending on your personal preferences, you may also want to
  299. use "/etc/gnunet.conf" for the location of the configuration file in
  300. this case (instead of ~gnunet/.config/gnunet.conf"). In this case,
  301. you need to start GNUnet using "gnunet-arm -s -c /etc/gnunet.conf" or
  302. set "XDG_CONFIG_HOME=/etc/".
  303. You can avoid running 'make install' as root if you have extensive sudo rights
  304. (can run "chmod +s" and "chown" via 'sudo'). If you run 'make install' as a
  305. normal user without sudo rights (or the configure option), certain binaries
  306. that require additional privileges will not be installed properly (and
  307. autonomous NAT traversal, WLAN, DNS/GNS and the VPN will then not work).
  308. If you run 'configure' and 'make install' as root, GNUnet's build system will
  309. install "libnss_gns*" libraries to "/lib/" regardless (!) of the
  310. $GNUNET_PREFIX you might have specified, as those libraries must be in
  311. "/lib/". If you are packaging GNUnet for binary distribution, this may cause
  312. your packaging script to miss those plugins, so you might need to do some
  313. additional manual work to include those libraries in your binary package(s).
  314. Similarly, if you want to use the GNUnet Name System and did NOT run
  315. GNUnet's 'make install' process with priviledged rights, the libraries will be
  316. installed to "$GNUNET_PREFIX" and you will have to move them to "/lib/"
  317. manually.
  318. Notes on compiling from Git
  319. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  320. Finally, if you are compiling the code from git, you have to
  321. run "sh ./bootstrap" before running "./configure". If you receive an error during
  322. the running of "sh ./bootstrap" that looks like "macro `AM_PATH_GTK'
  323. not found in library", you may need to run aclocal by hand with the -I
  324. option, pointing to your aclocal m4 macros, i.e.
  325. $ aclocal -I /usr/local/share/aclocal
  326. Configuration
  327. =============
  328. Note that additional, per-user configuration files can be created by
  329. each user. However, this is usually not necessary as there are few
  330. per-user options that normal users would want to modify. The defaults
  331. that are shipped with the installation are usually just fine.
  332. The gnunet-setup tool is particularly useful to generate the master
  333. configuration for the peer. gnunet-setup can be used to configure and
  334. test (!) the network settings, choose which applications should be run
  335. and configure databases. Other options you might want to control
  336. include system limitations (such as disk space consumption, bandwidth,
  337. etc). The resulting configuration files are human-readable and can
  338. theoretically be created or edited by hand.
  339. gnunet-setup is a separate download and requires somewhat recent
  340. versions of GTK+ and Glade. You can also create the configuration file
  341. by hand, but this is not recommended. For more general information
  342. about the GNU build process read the INSTALL file.
  343. GNUnet uses two types of configuration files, one that specifies the
  344. system-wide defaults (typically located in
  345. $GNUNET_PREFIX/../share/gnunet/config.d/) and a second one that overrides
  346. default values with user-specific preferences. The user-specific
  347. configuration file should be located in "~/.config/gnunet.conf" or its
  348. location can be specified by giving the "-c" option to the respective
  349. GNUnet application.
  350. For more information about the configuration (as well as usage) refer
  351. to the 'GNUnet User Handbook' chapter of the documentation, included
  352. in this software distribution.
  353. Usage
  354. =====
  355. For detailed usage notes, instructions and examples, refer to the
  356. included 'GNUnet Handbook'.
  357. First, you must obtain an initial list of GNUnet hosts. Knowing a
  358. single peer is sufficient since after that GNUnet propagates
  359. information about other peers. Note that the default configuration
  360. contains URLs from where GNUnet downloads an initial hostlist
  361. whenever it is started. If you want to create an alternative URL for
  362. others to use, the file can be generated on any machine running
  363. GNUnet by periodically executing
  364. $ cat $SERVICEHOME/data/hosts/* > the_file
  365. and offering 'the_file' via your web server. Alternatively, you can
  366. run the build-in web server by adding '-p' to the OPTIONS value
  367. in the "hostlist" section of gnunet.conf and opening the respective
  368. HTTPPORT to the public.
  369. If the solution with the hostlist URL is not feasible for your
  370. situation, you can also add hosts manually. Simply copy the hostkeys
  371. to "$SERVICEHOME/data/hosts/" (where $SERVICEHOME is the directory
  372. specified in the gnunet.conf configuration file). You can also use
  373. "gnunet-peerinfo -g" to GET a URI for a peer and "gnunet-peerinfo -p
  374. URI" to add a URI from another peer. Finally, GNUnet peers that use
  375. UDP or WLAN will discover each other automatically (if they are in the
  376. vicinity of each other) using broadcasts (IPv4/WLAN) or multicasts
  377. (IPv6).
  378. The local node is started using "gnunet-arm -s". We recommend to run
  379. GNUnet 24/7 if you want to maximize your anonymity, as this makes
  380. partitioning attacks harder.
  381. Once your peer is running, you should then be able to access GNUnet
  382. using the shell:
  383. $ gnunet-search KEYWORD
  384. This will display a list of results to the console. You can abort
  385. the command using "CTRL-C". Then use
  386. $ gnunet-download -o FILENAME GNUNET_URI
  387. to retrieve a file. The GNUNET_URI is printed by gnunet-search
  388. together with a description. To publish files on GNUnet, use the
  389. "gnunet-publish" command.
  390. The GTK user interface is shipped separately.
  391. After installing gnunet-gtk, you can invoke the setup tool and
  392. the file-sharing GUI with:
  393. $ gnunet-setup
  394. $ gnunet-fs-gtk
  395. For further documentation, see our webpage or the 'GNUnet User Handbook',
  396. included in this software distribution.
  397. Hacking GNUnet
  398. ==============
  399. Contributions are welcome. Please submit bugs you find to
  400. https://bugs.gnunet.org/ or our bugs mailinglist.
  401. Please make sure to run the script "contrib/scripts/gnunet-bugreport"
  402. and include the output with your bug reports. More about how to
  403. report bugs can be found in the GNUnet FAQ on the webpage. Submit
  404. patches via E-Mail to gnunet-developers@gnu.org, formated with
  405. `git format-patch`.
  406. In order to run the unit tests by hand (instead of using "make check"),
  407. you need to set the environment variable "GNUNET_PREFIX" to the
  408. directory where GNUnet's libraries are installed.
  409. Before running any testcases, you must complete the installation.
  410. Quick summary:
  411. $ ./configure --prefix=$SOMEWHERE
  412. $ make
  413. $ make install
  414. $ export $GNUNET_PREFIX=$SOMEWHERE
  415. $ make check
  416. Some of the testcases require python >= 3.4, and the python module
  417. "pexpect" to be installed.
  418. If any testcases fail to pass on your system, run
  419. "contrib/scripts/gnunet-bugreport" (in the repository) or "gnunet-bugreport"
  420. when you already have GNUnet installed and report its output together with
  421. information about the failing testcase(s) to the Mantis bugtracking
  422. system at https://bugs.gnunet.org/.
  423. Running HTTP on port 80 and HTTPS on port 443
  424. =============================================
  425. In order to hide GNUnet's HTTP/HTTPS traffic perfectly, you might
  426. consider running GNUnet's HTTP/HTTPS transport on port 80/443.
  427. However, we do not recommend running GNUnet as root. Instead, forward
  428. port 80 to say 1080 with this command (as root, in your startup
  429. scripts):
  430. # iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-ports 1080
  431. or for HTTPS
  432. # iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp -m tcp --dport 443 -j REDIRECT --to-ports 4433
  433. Then set in the HTTP section of gnunet.conf the "ADVERTISED_PORT" to
  434. "80" and "PORT" to 1080 and similarly in the HTTPS section the
  435. "ADVERTISED_PORT" to "443" and "PORT" to 4433.
  436. You can do the same trick for the TCP and UDP transports if you want
  437. to map them to a priviledged port (from the point of view of the
  438. network). However, we are not aware of this providing any advantages
  439. at this point.
  440. If you are already running an HTTP or HTTPS server on port 80 (or 443),
  441. you may be able to configure it as a "ReverseProxy". Here, you tell
  442. GNUnet that the externally visible URI is some sub-page on your website,
  443. and GNUnet can then tunnel its traffic via your existing HTTP server.
  444. This is particularly powerful if your existing server uses HTTPS, as
  445. it makes it harder for an adversary to distinguish normal traffic to
  446. your server from GNUnet traffic. Finally, even if you just use HTTP,
  447. you might benefit (!) from ISP's traffic shaping as opposed to being
  448. throttled by ISPs that dislike P2P. Details for configuring the
  449. reverse proxy are documented on our website.
  450. Further Reading
  451. ===============
  452. * Documentation
  453. An HTML version of the GNUnet manual is deployed at
  454. https://docs.gnunet.org
  455. which currently displays just GNUnet documentation. In the future
  456. we will add more reading material.
  457. * Academia / papers
  458. In almost 20 years various people in our community have written and
  459. collected a good number of papers which have been implemented in
  460. GNUnet or projects around GNUnet.
  461. There are currently 2 ways to get them:
  462. * Using git (NOTE: 1.1 GiB as of 2019-03-09):
  463. git clone https://git.gnunet.org/bibliography.git
  464. * Using the webbrowser:
  465. https://bib.gnunet.org/
  466. Notes on Packaging
  467. ==================
  468. * GNUnet installs binaries which should not be called by the user into
  469. $PREFIX/lib/gnunet/libexec. This folder must not be confused with the
  470. $PREFIX/libexec. GNUnet does not install anything into the libexec dir
  471. to compliant with https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/ch04s07.html
  472. Stay tuned
  473. ==========
  474. * https://gnunet.org/
  475. * https://bugs.gnunet.org
  476. * https://git.gnunet.org
  477. * http://www.gnu.org/software/gnunet/
  478. * http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnunet-developers
  479. * http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnunet
  480. * http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnunet
  481. * http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnunet-svn