tahoe-lafs/docs/magic-folder-howto.rst
meejah 798bf57e28 Add 'tahoe invite' and 'tahoe create-node --join' commands
This opens a wormhole and sends appropriate JSON down
it to a tahoe-gui using a wormhole server running on
tahoe-lafs.org

The other end uses the 'tahoe create-node' command (with
new --join option) to read the configuration JSON from
a 'tahoe invite' command
2017-08-08 18:27:06 -06:00

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4.8 KiB
ReStructuredText

.. _magic-folder-howto:
=========================
Magic Folder Set-up Howto
=========================
#. `This document`_
#. `Setting up a local test grid`_
#. `Setting up Magic Folder`_
#. `Testing`_
This document
=============
This is preliminary documentation of how to set up Magic Folder using a test
grid on a single Linux or Windows machine, with two clients and one server.
It is aimed at a fairly technical audience.
For an introduction to Magic Folder and how to configure it
more generally, see :doc:`frontends/magic-folder`.
It it possible to adapt these instructions to run the nodes on
different machines, to synchronize between three or more clients,
to mix Windows and Linux clients, and to use multiple servers
(if the Tahoe-LAFS encoding parameters are changed).
Setting up a local test grid
============================
Linux
-----
Run these commands::
mkdir ../grid
bin/tahoe create-introducer ../grid/introducer
bin/tahoe start ../grid/introducer
export FURL=`cat ../grid/introducer/private/introducer.furl`
bin/tahoe create-node --introducer="$FURL" ../grid/server
bin/tahoe create-client --introducer="$FURL" ../grid/alice
bin/tahoe create-client --introducer="$FURL" ../grid/bob
Windows
-------
Run::
mkdir ..\grid
bin\tahoe create-introducer ..\grid\introducer
bin\tahoe start ..\grid\introducer
Leave the introducer running in that Command Prompt,
and in a separate Command Prompt (with the same current
directory), run::
set /p FURL=<..\grid\introducer\private\introducer.furl
bin\tahoe create-node --introducer=%FURL% ..\grid\server
bin\tahoe create-client --introducer=%FURL% ..\grid\alice
bin\tahoe create-client --introducer=%FURL% ..\grid\bob
Both Linux and Windows
----------------------
(Replace ``/`` with ``\`` for Windows paths.)
Edit ``../grid/alice/tahoe.cfg``, and make the following
changes to the ``[node]`` and ``[client]`` sections::
[node]
nickname = alice
web.port = tcp:3457:interface=127.0.0.1
[client]
shares.needed = 1
shares.happy = 1
shares.total = 1
Edit ``../grid/bob/tahoe.cfg``, and make the following
change to the ``[node]`` section, and the same change as
above to the ``[client]`` section::
[node]
nickname = bob
web.port = tcp:3458:interface=127.0.0.1
Note that when running nodes on a single machine,
unique port numbers must be used for each node (and they
must not clash with ports used by other server software).
Here we have used the default of 3456 for the server,
3457 for alice, and 3458 for bob.
Now start all of the nodes (the introducer should still be
running from above)::
bin/tahoe start ../grid/server
bin/tahoe start ../grid/alice
bin/tahoe start ../grid/bob
On Windows, a separate Command Prompt is needed to run each
node.
Open a web browser on http://127.0.0.1:3457/ and verify that
alice is connected to the introducer and one storage server.
Then do the same for http://127.0.0.1:3568/ to verify that
bob is connected. Leave all of the nodes running for the
next stage.
Setting up Magic Folder
=======================
Linux
-----
Run::
mkdir -p ../local/alice ../local/bob
bin/tahoe -d ../grid/alice magic-folder create magic: alice ../local/alice
bin/tahoe -d ../grid/alice magic-folder invite magic: bob >invitecode
export INVITECODE=`cat invitecode`
bin/tahoe -d ../grid/bob magic-folder join "$INVITECODE" ../local/bob
bin/tahoe restart ../grid/alice
bin/tahoe restart ../grid/bob
Windows
-------
Run::
mkdir ..\local\alice ..\local\bob
bin\tahoe -d ..\grid\alice magic-folder create magic: alice ..\local\alice
bin\tahoe -d ..\grid\alice magic-folder invite magic: bob >invitecode
set /p INVITECODE=<invitecode
bin\tahoe -d ..\grid\bob magic-folder join %INVITECODE% ..\local\bob
Then close the Command Prompt windows that are running the alice and bob
nodes, and open two new ones in which to run::
bin\tahoe start ..\grid\alice
bin\tahoe start ..\grid\bob
Testing
=======
You can now experiment with creating files and directories in
``../local/alice`` and ``/local/bob``; any changes should be
propagated to the other directory.
Note that when a file is deleted, the corresponding file in the
other directory will be renamed to a filename ending in ``.backup``.
Deleting a directory will have no effect.
For other known issues and limitations, see :ref:`Known Issues in
Magic-Folder`.
As mentioned earlier, it is also possible to run the nodes on
different machines, to synchronize between three or more clients,
to mix Windows and Linux clients, and to use multiple servers
(if the Tahoe-LAFS encoding parameters are changed).
Configuration
=============
There will be a ``[magic_folder]`` section in your ``tahoe.cfg`` file
after setting up Magic Folder.
There is an option you can add to this called ``poll_interval=`` to
control how often (in seconds) the Downloader will check for new things
to download.