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GNUNET-ARM(1) |
General Commands Manual |
GNUNET-ARM(1) |
NAME¶
gnunet-arm - control GNUnet services
SYNOPSIS¶
gnunet-arm [options]
DESCRIPTION¶
gnunet-arm can be used to start or stop GNUnet services, including the
ARM service itself. The ARM service is a supervisor for GNUnet's service
processes. ARM starts services on-demand or as configured and re-starts them
if they crash.
OPTIONS¶
- -c FILENAME, --config=FILENAME
- Use the configuration file FILENAME.
- -e, --end
- Shutdown all GNUnet services (including ARM itself). Running
"gnunet-arm -e" is the usual way to shutdown a GNUnet peer.
- -h, --help
- Print short help on options.
- -L LOGLEVEL, --loglevel=LOGLEVEL
- Use LOGLEVEL for logging. Valid values are DEBUG, INFO, WARNING and
ERROR.
- -i SERVICE, --init=SERVICE
- Starts the specified SERVICE if it is not already running. More
specifically, this makes the service behave as if it were in the default
services list.
- -k SERVICE, --kill=SERVICE
- Stop the specified SERVICE if it is running. While this will kill the
service right now, the service may be restarted immediately if other
services depend on it (service is then started 'on-demand'). If the
service used to be a 'default' service, its default-service status will be
revoked. If the service was not a default service, it will just be
(temporarily) stopped, but could be re-started on-demand at any time.
- -m, --monitor
- Monitor service activity of ARM. In this mode, the command will not
terminate until the user presses CTRL-C.
- -s, --start
- Start all GNUnet default services on this system (and also ARM).
Naturally, if a service is demanded by a default service, it will then
also be started. Running "gnunet-arm -s" is the usual way to
start a GNUnet peer.
- -I, --info
- List all running services.
- -v, --version
- Print GNUnet version number.
SEE ALSO¶
gnunet-service-arm(1)