NomadNet
wg-meshconf
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NomadNet | wg-meshconf | |
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8 | 6 | |
430 | 877 | |
- | - | |
8.4 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 14 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
NomadNet
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Reticulum Development Roadmap
Related programs such as Sideband and Nomadnet has also had their repositories updated with more visible roadmaps.
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Are any of you actually working on privacy-related projects?
I have built a few simple communications tools with Reticulum, Nomadnet and Sideband.
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Is there a good chat application for using just over your home ethernet?
While it is definitely not for everyone, you could take a look at Nomad Network and Sideband.
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Using a Th-d74a for more than APRS and Winlink?
If you are in a country that does not disallow encryption on ham radio, you can look at Nomad Network (https://github.com/markqvist/nomadnet) or some of then other things you can do with the Reticulum stack (https://reticulum.network).
- Nomadnet is a resilient and encrypted mesh communications platform for the terminal
- Preparing for a possible shutdown of the internet
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Internet/ Mobile outage preps
https://reticulum.network https://github.com/markqvist/sideband https://github.com/markqvist/nomadnet
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LoRa Text Messaging Networks
Reticulum + LXMF can scale to thousands (or millions) of nodes, and can use LoRa (and many other things) as a physical layer. Nomadnet is a client that allows both instant messaging and delayed-delivery messages (like email): https://github.com/markqvist/nomadnet
wg-meshconf
- Wireguard mesh between 4 pc similar to Tailscale
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Updated MinIO NVMe Benchmarks: 2.6Tpbs on Get and 1.6 on Put
my experience, i dont know if this is comparable, but from my memory (i have not made any notes on that), i've tried min.io in december and switched to seaweed a weeks ago, because my usecase was transition from local file storage to DFS + also enable our developers to transition from local filesystem to s3. Since my resources are limited (vsphere VM) with 3 hosts + different disks, i tried to set up a 3 vm cluster with minio first, after i did some research on different systems (ceph, longhorn.io, ..) i wanted to have an easy setup-able system, which supports s3. I relied a lot on what people measured and chose min.io first because it supported mount via s3. Then i tried to copy over about 34 million files (mostly few bytes, but can also be 1Gbyte), with a mass of about 4.2TB. I tried different methods, rsync, cp, cp with parallelism,.. and i took me about 3 days to copy over 300GB of data at best. Then i also found out that it was impossible to list files. We have one single folder with over 300k projects (guid) beneath (growing). After that i gave seaweed a shot. Why i did not used it firsthand was documentation was a bit confusing and it did not gave me all the answers i needed as fast as minio did.
Now, my seaweed setup is a 3 vm cluster with 3 disks per vm (1TB) each. I configured a wireguard mesh (https://github.com/k4yt3x/wg-meshconf) between the VMs and configured master and volumes server to talk to each other via wireguard IPs securely. I also configured ufw to only allow communication between http/gRPC ports. I also configured a filer (using leveldb3) to use wireguard IPs (master and volumes) and let it communicate with some specific servers on the outside (ufw).
After that i mounted the filer via weed.mount on that specific server and tried to copy over the same files/folders. after 2 days i copied over about 1.5 TB of the data via rsync. There was also no problem with file listing and accessing the filer from different machines while uploading stuff. But there is a overhead when reading and creating lots of small files. File listing is even faster than local btrfs file listing.
chris is also very nice and fast fixing bugs.
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Connect to wireguard server over a wireguard server -> client connection
Hey you should post your wg0.conf If you would like to build a WireGuard mesh try this: https://github.com/k4yt3x/wg-meshconf
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How to add new client to wireguard in VPS without getting public IP changed on the client?
There are two factors at play here. The client's public IP actually depends on the gateway they use on accessing the internet. You can disable routing and your clients will keep their public IP and general internet access won't go through the VPS. However, if you want the traffic between "clients" also skip the VPS, then you want a mesh network. wesher and wg-meshconf can help you on configuring them.
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Wiretrustee: WireGuard-Based Mesh Network
Looks great!
I've been using wg-meshconf[1] to assist in setting up Wireguard Mesh Networks on Linux for a while, works amazing!
A massive use case is to setup Kubernetes clusters, where network encryption is extremely important.
[1]: https://github.com/k4yt3x/wg-meshconf
- WireGuard full mesh configuration generator
What are some alternatives?
meshtastic - Meshtastic project website and documentation
wesher - wireguard overlay mesh network manager
Reticulum - The cryptography-based networking stack for building unstoppable networks with LoRa, Packet Radio, WiFi and everything in between.
headscale - An open source, self-hosted implementation of the Tailscale control server
meshnet-lab - Emulate huge mobile ad-hoc mesh networks using Linux network namespaces.
tinc - a VPN daemon
libremdb - A free & open source IMDb front-end.
cjdns - An encrypted IPv6 network using public-key cryptography for address allocation and a distributed hash table for routing.
disaster-radio - A (paused) work-in-progress long-range, low-bandwidth wireless disaster recovery mesh network powered by the sun.
netbird - Connect your devices into a single secure private WireGuard®-based mesh network with SSO/MFA and simple access controls.
Sideband - LXMF client for Android, Linux and macOS allowing you to communicate with people or LXMF-compatible systems over Reticulum networks using LoRa, Packet Radio, WiFi, I2P, or anything else Reticulum supports.
Netmaker - Netmaker makes networks with WireGuard. Netmaker automates fast, secure, and distributed virtual networks.