This is the actual implementation of ZeroTier One, a service providing connectivity to ZeroTier virtual networks for desktops, laptops, servers, VMs, etc. (Mobile versions for iOS and Android have their own implementations in native Java and Objective C that leverage only the ZeroTier core engine.)
A file called `local.conf` in the ZeroTier home folder contains configuration options that apply to the local node. It can be used to set up trusted paths, blacklist physical paths, set up physical path hints for certain nodes, and define trusted upstream devices (federated roots). In a large deployment it can be deployed using a tool like Puppet, Chef, SaltStack, etc. to set a uniform configuration across systems. It's a JSON format file that can also be edited and rewritten by ZeroTier One itself, so ensure that proper JSON formatting is used.
Settings available in `local.conf` (this is not valid JSON, and JSON does not allow comments):
* **trustedPathId**: A trusted path is a physical network over which encryption and authentication are not required. This provides a performance boost but sacrifices all ZeroTier's security features when communicating over this path. Only use this if you know what you are doing and really need the performance! To set up a trusted path, all devices using it *MUST* have the *same trusted path ID* for the same network. Trusted path IDs are arbitrary positive non-zero integers. For example a group of devices on a LAN with IPs in 10.0.0.0/24 could use it as a fast trusted path if they all had the same trusted path ID of "25" defined for that network.
Values POSTed to the JSON API are *extremely* type sensitive. Things *must* be of the indicated type, otherwise they will be ignored or will generate an error. Anything quoted is a string so booleans and integers must lack quotes. Booleans must be *true* or *false* and nothing else. Integers cannot contain decimal points or they are floats (and vice versa). If something seems to be getting ignored or set to a strange value, or if you receive errors, check the type of all JSON fields you are submitting against the types listed below. Unrecognized fields in JSON objects are also ignored.
API requests must be authenticated via an authentication token. ZeroTier One saves this token in the *authtoken.secret* file in its working directory. This token may be supplied via the *auth* URL parameter (e.g. '?auth=...') or via the *X-ZT1-Auth* HTTP request header. Static UI pages are the only thing the server will allow without authentication.
A *jsonp* URL argument may be supplied to request JSONP encapsulation. A JSONP response is sent as a script with its JSON response payload wrapped in a call to the function name supplied as the argument to *jsonp*.
To join a network, POST to it. Since networks have no mandatory writable parameters, POST data is optional and may be omitted. Example: POST to /network/8056c2e21c000001 to join the public "Earth" network. To leave a network, DELETE it e.g. DELETE /network/8056c2e21c000001.