Christian Grothoff transcribed 4.1K bytes:
> On 4/29/19 9:48 PM, IC Rainbow wrote:
> > Ah, I see. So, I copy that to `share/gnunet/hellos/` and... that would
> > give me what?
> 
> Exactly what you wanted: a public key of a peer, an IP address and a
> port to connect to for bootstrapping.
> 
> > Is there a handbook section on how to produce and use those files?
> 
> Your peer automatically puts them into
>  ~/.local/share/gnunet/peerinfo/hosts.
> 
> However, you must apply the 'gnunet-hello' program (NOT installed!) to
> them to set the 'expiration' time to 'never' to produce exactly this
> type of file, as the auto-generated files come with a (short-ish)
> expiration time. And no, I don't think this is documented.

Is it worth documenting, for example as gnunet-hello.1?
We do document other, not-intended for average users, applications
already.
 
> > On Mon, Apr 29, 2019 at 10:39 PM Christian Grothoff <[email protected]> 
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> Yes, see commit 6ec7797ac937cb7e903688d5743c7debeda115fc.
> >>
> >> On 4/29/19 9:35 PM, IC Rainbow wrote:
> >>> On Sat, Apr 27, 2019 at 8:53 AM Christian Grothoff <[email protected]> 
> >>> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> Yes, there is, except that the pkey we shipped in 0.11.3 (which had been
> >>>> stable since 0.9.x) changed unexpectedly. So once we release 0.11.4,
> >>>> this will be fixed.
> >>>
> >>> Is this in master yet? I looked through commits and haven't spotted
> >>> any relevant changes.
> >>>
> >>
> 




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