-GNUnet uses two types of configuration files, one for the daemon
-(called gnunetd.conf) and one for each user (gnunet.conf). You can
-create and edit these configuration files with the gnunet-setup tool.
-You need to add the option "-d" to gnunet-setup in order to edit
-gnunetd.conf (by default, gnunet-setup will edit gnunet.conf). The
-defaults that are created the first time you run gnunet-setup are
-usually ok, you may want to adjust the limitations (space consumption,
-bandwidth, etc.) though. The configuration files are human-readable;
-gnunetd's configuration is typically located at "/etc/gnunetd.conf".
-The per-user configuration file should be at "~/.gnunet/gnunet.conf".
-A default version of the per-user configuration will automatically
-be created whenever you run any tool that needs that particular
-cofniguration file.
-
-You MUST create /etc/gnunetd.conf explicitly before starting gnunetd,
-and the recommended way to do this is to run gnunet-setup -d (plus
-possibly options to specify which user interface you would perfer).
-
-If you want to use a different configuration file, pass the name of
-the configuration file as an argument with the option "-c" to any
-GNUnet application. Sending a SIGHUP to the gnunetd process will
-cause gnunetd to re-read the configuration file. Note that not all
-options can be changed at runtime this way (e.g. to change any port
-number, you must fully restart gnunetd).
-
-After changing certain options (or updating GNUnet) you must re-run
-gnunet-update.
+GNUnet uses two types of configuration files, one that specifies the
+system-wide defaults (typically located in /usr/share/gnunet/defaults
+.conf) and a second one that overrides default values with
+user-specific preferences. The user-specific configuration file
+should be located in "~/.gnunet/gnunet.conf" or its location can be
+specified by giving the "-c" option to the respective GNUnet
+application.
+
+The defaults that are shipped with the installation are usually ok,
+you may want to adjust the limitations (space consumption, bandwidth,
+etc.) though. The configuration files are human-readable. Note that
+you MUST create "~/.gnunet/gnunet.conf" explicitly before starting
+GNUnet. You can either copy "defaults.conf" or simply create an empty
+file.