4 BINARY = gnunet-service-arm
5 ACCEPT_FROM = 127.0.0.1;
8 # Special case, uses user runtime dir even for per-system service.
9 UNIXPATH = $GNUNET_USER_RUNTIME_DIR/gnunet-service-arm.sock
13 # In the "-l" option, format characters from 'strftime' are allowed;
14 # In the GLOBAL_POSTFIX, "{}" stands for the name of the respective
15 # service. Thus the following option would introduce per-service
16 # logging with a new log file each day. Note that only the last 3
17 # log files are preserved.
18 # GLOBAL_POSTFIX = -l $GNUNET_CACHE_HOME/{}-%Y-%m-%d.log
21 # By default, when launching GNUnet via gnunet-arm, log
22 # everything to a simple flat log file.
23 OPTIONS = -l $GNUNET_CACHE_HOME/gnunet-%Y-%m-%d.log
25 # If set to YES, ARM will only start services that are marked as
26 # system-level services (and we'll expect a second ARM to be
27 # run per-user to run user-level services). Note that in this
28 # case you must have manually created a different configuration
29 # file with the user where at least this and the START_USER_SERVICES
31 # START_SYSTEM_SERVICES = YES
33 # If set to YES, ARM will only start services that are marked as
34 # per-user services (and we'll expect a system user to run ARM to
35 # provide system-level services). Per-user services enable
36 # better personalization and priviledge separation and in particular
37 # ensures that personal data is stored under $HOME, which might
38 # be important in a multi-user system (or if $HOME is encrypted
41 # Note that if you have different ARM services for SYSTEM and USER,
42 # and you are not on UNIX, you need to change the PORT option for the
43 # USER ARM instances to some free port (counting down from 2085 should
46 # START_USER_SERVICES = YES
48 # File where we should log per-service resource consumption on exit.
49 # RESOURCE_DIAGNOSTICS = resource.log
52 # Name of the user that will be used to provide the service