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collections/system_administrators/mycelium/information.md
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collections/system_administrators/mycelium/information.md
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<h1>Additional Information</h1>
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<h2>Table of Contents</h2>
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- [Introduction](#introduction)
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- [Connect to Other Nodes](#connect-to-other-nodes)
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- [Hosted Public Nodes](#hosted-public-nodes)
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- [Default Port](#default-port)
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- [Check Network Information](#check-network-information)
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- [Test the Network](#test-the-network)
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- [Key Pair](#key-pair)
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- [Running without TUN interface](#running-without-tun-interface)
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- [API](#api)
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- [Message System](#message-system)
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- [Inspecting Node Keys](#inspecting-node-keys)
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- [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting)
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- [Root Access](#root-access)
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- [Enable IPv6 at the OS Level](#enable-ipv6-at-the-os-level)
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- [VPN Can Block Mycelium](#vpn-can-block-mycelium)
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- [Add Peers](#add-peers)
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***
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## Introduction
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We provide additional information concerning Mycelium and how to properly use it.
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## Connect to Other Nodes
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If you want to connect to other nodes, you can specify their listening address as
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part of the command (combined with the protocol they are listening on, usually TCP);
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```sh
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mycelium --peers tcp://83.231.240.31:9651 quic://185.206.122.71:9651
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```
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If you are using other tun inferface, e.g. utun3 (default), you can set a different utun inferface
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```sh
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mycelium --peers tcp://83.231.240.31:9651 quic://185.206.122.71:9651 --tun-name utun9
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```
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## Hosted Public Nodes
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A couple of public nodes are provided, which can be freely connected to. This allows
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anyone to join the global network. These are hosted in 3 geographic regions, on both
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IPv4 and IPv6, and supporting both the Tcp and Quic protocols. The nodes are the
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following:
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| Node ID | Region | IPv4 | IPv6 | Tcp port | Quic port |
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| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
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| 01 | DE | 188.40.132.242 | 2a01:4f8:221:1e0b::2 | 9651 | 9651 |
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| 02 | DE | 136.243.47.186 | 2a01:4f8:212:fa6::2 | 9651 | 9651 |
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| 03 | BE | 185.69.166.7 | 2a02:1802:5e:0:8478:51ff:fee2:3331 | 9651 | 9651 |
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| 04 | BE | 185.69.166.8 | 2a02:1802:5e:0:8c9e:7dff:fec9:f0d2 | 9651 | 9651 |
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| 05 | FI | 65.21.231.58 | 2a01:4f9:6a:1dc5::2 | 9651 | 9651 |
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| 06 | FI | 65.109.18.113 | 2a01:4f9:5a:1042::2 | 9651 | 9651 |
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These nodes are all interconnected, so 2 peers who each connect to a different node
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(or set of disjoint nodes) will still be able to reach each other. For optimal performance,
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it is recommended to connect to all of the above at once however. An example connection
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string could be:
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`--peers tcp://188.40.132.242:9651 "tcp://[2a01:4f8:212:fa6::2]:9651" quic://185.69.166.7:9651 "tcp://[2a02:1802:5e:0:8c9e:7dff:fec9:f0d2]:9651" tcp://65.21.231.58:9651 "quic://[2a01:4f9:5a:1042::2]:9651"`
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It is up to the user to decide which peers he wants to use, over which protocol.
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Note that quotation may or may not be required, depending on which shell is being
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used.
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## Default Port
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By default, the node will listen on port `9651`, though this can be overwritten with the `-p` flag.
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## Check Network Information
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You can check your Mycelium network information by running the following line:
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```bash
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mycelium inspect --json
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```
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Where a typical output would be:
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```
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{
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"publicKey": "abd16194646defe7ad2318a0f0a69eb2e3fe939c3b0b51cf0bb88bb8028ecd1d",
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"address": "3c4:c176:bf44:b2ab:5e7e:f6a:b7e2:11ca"
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}
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```
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## Test the Network
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You can easily test that the network works by pinging to anyone in the network.
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```
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ping6 3c4:c176:bf44:b2ab:5e7e:f6a:b7e2:11ca
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```
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## Key Pair
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The node uses a `x25519` key pair from which its identity is derived. The private key of this key pair
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is saved in a local file (32 bytes in binary format). You can specify the path to this file with the
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`-k` flag. By default, the file is saved in the current working directory as `priv_key.bin`.
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## Running without TUN interface
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It is possible to run the system without creating a TUN interface, by starting with the `--no-tun` flag.
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Obviously, this means that your node won't be able to send or receive L3 traffic. There is no interface
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to send packets on, and consequently no interface to send received packets out of. From the point of
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other nodes, your node will simply drop all incoming L3 traffic destined for it. The node **will still
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route traffic** as normal. It takes part in routing, exchanges route info, and forwards packets not
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intended for itself.
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The node also still allows access to the [message subsystem](#message-system).
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## API
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The node starts an HTTP API, which by default listens on `localhost:8989`. A different listening address
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can be specified on the CLI when starting the system through the `--api-server-addr` flag. The API
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allows access to [send and receive messages](#message-system), and will later be expanded to allow
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admin functionality on the system. Note that message are sent using the identity of the node, and a
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future admin API can be used to change the system behavior. As such, care should be taken that this
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API is not accessible to unauthorized users.
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## Message System
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A message system is provided which allows users to send a message, which is essentially just "some data"
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to a remote. Since the system is end-to-end encrypted, a receiver of a message is sure of the authenticity
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and confidentiality of the content. The system does not interpret the data in any way and handles it
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as an opaque block of bytes. Messages are sent with a deadline. This means the system continuously
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tries to send (part of) the message, until it either succeeds, or the deadline expires. This happens
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similar to the way TCP handles data. Messages are transmitted in chunks, which are embedded in the
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same data stream used by L3 packets. As such, intermediate nodes can't distinguish between regular L3
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and message data.
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The primary way to interact with the message system is through [the API](#API). The message API is
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documented in [here](./api_yaml.md). For some more info about how to
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use the message system, see [the Message section](./message.md).
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## Inspecting Node Keys
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Using the `inspect` subcommand, you can view the address associated with a public key. If no public key is provided, the node will show
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its own public key. In either case, the derived address is also printed. You can specify the path to the private key with the `-k` flag.
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If the file does not exist, a new private key will be generated. The optional `--json` flag can be used to print the information in json
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format.
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```sh
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mycelium inspect a47c1d6f2a15b2c670d3a88fbe0aeb301ced12f7bcb4c8e3aa877b20f8559c02
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```
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Where the output could be something like this:
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```sh
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Public key: a47c1d6f2a15b2c670d3a88fbe0aeb301ced12f7bcb4c8e3aa877b20f8559c02
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Address: 27f:b2c5:a944:4dad:9cb1:da4:8bf7:7e65
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```
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## Troubleshooting
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### Root Access
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You might need to run Mycelium as root. Some error messages could be something like: `Error: NixError(EPERM)`.
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### Enable IPv6 at the OS Level
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You need to enable IPv6 at the OS level. Some error messages could be something like: `Permission denied (os error 13)`.
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- Check if IPv66 is enabled
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- If disabled, output is 1, if enabled, output is 0
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```
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sysctl net.ipv6.conf.all.disable_ipv6
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```
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- Enable IPv6
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```
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sudo sysctl net.ipv6.conf.all.disable_ipv6=0
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```
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Here's some commands to troubleshoot IPv6:
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```
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sudo ip6tables -S INPUT
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sudo ip6tables -S OUTPUT
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```
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### VPN Can Block Mycelium
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You might need to disconnect your VPN when using Mycelium.
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### Add Peers
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It can help to connect to other peers. Check the Mycelium repository for [peers](https://github.com/threefoldtech/mycelium?tab=readme-ov-file#hosted-public-nodes).
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