1 .TH GNUNET-PEERINFO 1 "March 4, 2013" "GNUnet"
3 gnunet\-peerinfo \- Display information about other peers.
9 \fBgnunet\-peerinfo\fP display the known addresses and trust of known peers.
11 .IP "\-c FILENAME, \-\-config=FILENAME"
12 Load config file (default: ~/.config/gnunet.conf)
13 .IP "\-g, \-\-get\-hello"
18 List all known peers (and their addresses)
19 .IP "\-L LOGLEVEL, \-\-loglevel=LOGLEVEL"
21 .IP "\-l LOGFILE, \-\-logfile=LOGFILE"
22 Log messages to LOGFILE
23 .IP "\-n, \-\-numeric"
24 Disable resolution of IPs to hostnames
25 .IP "\-p, \-\-put\-hello=HELLO"
26 Add given HELLO uri to the database
28 Do not print anything but the peer identities
30 Print only our own identity (together with "\-q", this is the exact
31 line that other peers would have to put in to their friends file in
32 order to consider this peer one of their friends in F2F mode).
33 .IP "\-v, \-\-version"
34 Print the version number
36 Report bugs by using mantis <https://bugs.gnunet.org/> or by sending
37 electronic mail to <gnunet\-developers@gnu.org>
41 The full documentation for
43 is maintained as a Texinfo manual.
48 programs are properly installed at your site, the command
52 should give you access to the complete handbook,
54 .B info gnunet-c-tutorial
56 will give you access to a tutorial for developers.
58 Depending on your installation, this information is also
60 \fBgnunet\fP(7) and \fBgnunet-c-tutorial\fP(7).