On Thu, 2015-06-25 at 18:03 +0100, Geeb wrote: > Hello! > Are there any recommended hardware requirements for the running of > GNUnet?
A device with "reasonable" resources should be sufficient. We run gnunet on a raspberry pi and rather old machines. > > Many of the GNUnet tools have a GTK GUI, and whilst there will almost > certainly be underlying command-line ways of achieving the same > results, the documentation commonly refers to the the GUI tools. GUI > stuff kind of implies desktop machines. The gui is not required to run gnunet, all functionality can be accessed using command line tools. > > > I'm sure I read somewhere in the documentation that ideally, the > GNUnet host should be permanently powered up and connected to the > Internet. The usual peer-to-peer paradigm applies here: the network expects peers to join and leave the network frequently without prior coordination. > Small low-powered PC-on-a-board ARM type hardware (e.g. Raspberry Pi > etc) would be certainly more economical to run 24/7 to this ends. gnunet runs fine on a raspberry pi. > These type of hosts would obviously be under-powered compared to the > average desktop machine. Would this be a serious problem for a GNUnet > host? nope... matthias > > > Thanks, > > > Geeb > _______________________________________________ > Help-gnunet mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnunet
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