Using cjdnsadmin.py is trivially simple, you can connect to a router and issue it commands in 3 steps:
Make sure cjdnsadmin/cjdnsadmin.py
and cjdnsadmin/bencode.py
are in your
path, the easiest thing to do is put cjdnsadmin/
in the same directory
as your script.
This takes 3 parameters, the ip address of the listening router, it's port number, and the password to connect to it. These can be found in your cjdroute.conf here:
"admin":
{
// Port to bind the admin RPC server to.
"bind": "127.0.0.1:11234",
// Password for admin RPC server.
"password": "4s8mshm4hbb2lbdwz4bxfdn9w7"
},
To connect to this node, you would use:
cjdns = connect('127.0.0.1', 11234, '4s8mshm4hbb2lbdwz4bxfdn9w7');
The password will be checked when you connect and if it's incorrect you will get an exception.
Or just use
from cjdnsadmin.cjdnsadmin import connectWithAdminInfo;
cjdns = connectWithAdminInfo();
It get data from ~/.cjdnsadmin
The cjdns
object returned from connect()
and connectWithAdminInfo()
contains functions corrisponding to each of the RPC calls in the router.
There is a field called cjdns.functions
which contains a list of the
functions and their parameters.
user@debo8:~/wrk/play$ python
Python 2.7.2+ (default, Jan 20 2012, 17:51:10)
[GCC 4.6.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from cjdnsadmin.cjdnsadmin import connectWithAdminInfo;
>>> cjdns = connectWithAdminInfo();
>>> cjdns.functions();
RouterModule_pingNode(required String path)
UDPInterface_scrambleKeys(required String xorValue)
ping()
AuthorizedPasswords_add(Int authType, required String password)
AuthorizedPasswords_flush()
memory()
NodeStore_dumpTable()
UDPInterface_beginConnection(required String publicKey, String password, required String address)
>>> print cjdns.AuthorizedPasswords_add(1, 1);
{'error': 'Entry [password] is required and must be of type [String]'}
>>> print cjdns.AuthorizedPasswords_add(1, 'abcd');
{'error': 'none'}
>>> print cjdns.memory();
{'bytes': 750556}
>>> routes = cjdns.NodeStore_dumpTable();
>>> print routes;
{'routingTable': [{'ip': 'fc45:a51e:89eb:6d57:ad43:5723:e1d3:5d51', 'link': 4294967295, 'path': '0000.0000.0000.0001'}, {'ip': 'fcf1:a7a8:8ec0:589b:c64c:cc95:1ced:3679', 'link': 266287520, 'path': '0000.0000.0000.0006'}, {'ip': 'fce5:de17:cbde:c87b:5289:0556:8b83:c9c8', 'link': 0, 'path': '0000.0000.0000.0004'}]}
>>> for route in routes['routingTable']: print route['ip'] + "@" + route['path'] + "\n";
...
fc45:a51e:89eb:6d57:ad43:5723:e1d3:[email protected]
fcf1:a7a8:8ec0:589b:c64c:cc95:1ced:[email protected]
fce5:de17:cbde:c87b:5289:0556:8b83:[email protected]
>>> cjdns.disconnect();
>>> exit(0)
For convenience, you can directly start ./cjdnsa
#peerStats
./peerStats --help
usage: peerStats [-h]
-h, --humanreadable human readable output of transmitted bytes
--help this list