sourCEntral - mobile manpages

pdf

ALFRED

NAME

alfred − Almighty Lightweight Fact Remote Exchange Daemon

SYNOPSIS

alfred [options]

DESCRIPTION

alfred is a user space daemon for distributing arbitrary local information over the mesh/network in a decentralized fashion. This data can be anything which appears to be useful - originally designed to replace the batman-adv visualization (vis), you may distribute hostnames, phone books, administration information, DNS information, the local weather forecast ...

alfred runs as daemon in the background of the system. A user may insert information by using the alfred binary on the command line, or use special programs to communicate with alfred (done via unix sockets). alfred then takes care of distributing the local information to other alfred servers on other nodes. This is done via IPv6 link-local multicast, and does not require any configuration. A user can request data from alfred, and will receive the information available from all alfred servers in the network.

OPTIONS

−v, −−version

Print the version

−h, −−help

Display a brief help message.

−u, −−unix-path path

path to unix socket used for client-server communication.

CLIENT OPTIONS

−s, −−set−data data−type

Sets new data to distribute from stdin for the supplied data type (0−255).

Note that 0 - 63 are reserved (please send an e-mail to the authors if you want to register a datatype), and can not be used on the commandline. Information must be periodically written again to alfred, otherwise it will timeout and alfred will forget about it (after 10 minutes).

−r, −−request data−type

Collect data from the network and prints it on the network

−d, −−verbose

Show extra information in the data output

−V, −−req−version version

Specify the data version set for −s

Skipping the parameter entirely has the same effect as setting the parameter to 0 (’−V 0’).

−M, −−modeswitch mode

master
Switch daemon to mode master
slave

Switch daemon to mode slave

−I, −−change−interface interface

Change the alfred server to use the new interface(s)

SERVER OPTIONS

−i, −−interface face

Specify the interface (or comma separated list of interfaces) to listen on

−b batmanif

Specify the batman-adv interface configured on the system (default: bat0). Use ’none’ to disable the batman-adv based best server selection.

The −b option is optional, and only needed if you run alfred on a batman-adv interface not called bat0, or if you don’t use batman-adv at all (use ’−b none’). In this case, alfred will still work but will not be able to find the best next master server based on metrics.

−m, −−master

Start up the daemon in master mode, which accepts data from slaves and syncs it with other masters.

alfred servers may either run as master or slave in the network. Masters will announce their status via broadcast, so that slaves can find them. Slaves will then send their data to their nearest master (based on TQ). Masters will exchange their data (which they have received from slaves or got on their own) with other masters. By using masters and slaves, overhead can be reduced while still keeping redundancy (by having multiple masters). Obviously, at least one master must be present in the network to let any data exchange happen. Also having all nodes in master mode is possible (for maximum decentrality and overhead).

−c, −−update-command command

Specify command to execute on data change. It will be called with data-type list as arguments.

EXAMPLES

Start an alfred server listening on bridge br0 (assuming that this bridge includes the batman interface bat0):
alfred −i br0 −m

Send data to the alfred server and store it under id 65:
cat /etc/hostname | alfred -s 65

Retrieve all data stored as id 65 from all connected alfred servers:
alfred -r 65

{ "fe:f1:00:00:01:01", "OpenWRT−node−1\x0a" },
{ "fe:f1:00:00:02:01", "OpenWRT−node−2\x0a" },
{ "fe:f1:00:00:03:01", "OpenWRT−node−3\x0a" },

SEE ALSO

batadv-vis(8), batctl(8)

AUTHOR

alfred was written by Simon Wunderlich <sw AT simonwunderlich DOT de> and Sven Eckelmann <sven AT open-mesh DOT com>.

This manual page was written by Simon Wunderlich <sw AT simonwunderlich DOT de> and Sven Eckelmann <sven AT open-mesh DOT com>.

pdf