ipfs-nucleus
specs
ipfs-nucleus | specs | |
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5 | 17 | |
38 | 1,489 | |
- | 0.9% | |
1.2 | 6.5 | |
about 1 year ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | ||
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | - |
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ipfs-nucleus
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Filecoin Foundation Successfully Deploys IPFS in Space
The block auth is very generic, just an extra top level key in cbor maps or a small prefix in raw blocks. The protocol is S3 V4 signatures.
There is a Java implementation of the modified bitswap for this in Nabu [0] and a Go one in ipfs-nucleus [1]. With both of these you can use whatever auth verification protocol you like.
[0] https://github.com/peergos/nabu
[1] https://github.com/peergos/ipfs-nucleus/
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A fully open-source and end-to-end encrypted note taking alternative to Evernote
I love this part: https://github.com/Peergos/ipfs-nucleus
I've tried IPFS before but I hit a bug when using it so gave up on my idea for a side project. Might give this a go!
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Twilio Incident: What Signal Users Need to Know
Yep, we built a super minimal ipfs replacement - ipfs-nucleus (https://github.com/peergos/ipfs-nucleus) with added block level access control, which is also post-quantum.
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Peergos: Open-Source Google Drive Alternative for Self-Hosting
It's actually a mixture of Java, Go, and JS. E.g. all the P2P stuff is handled by ipfs-nucleus: https://github.com/peergos/ipfs-nucleus/
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Peergos: a peer-to-peer encrypted storage, social media and app platform
No one needs to install IPFS. Peergos automatically installs and manages it's own IPFS instance. It's actually a super minimal drop-in IPFS replacement - ipfs-nucleus (https://github.com/peergos/ipfs-nucleus) with extended access control. Self hosting instructions are here: https://github.com/peergos/peergos#usage---self-hosting
specs
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Filecoin Foundation Successfully Deploys IPFS in Space
The beauty of ipfs is the transport protocols are completely modular. They do a pretty good job supporting a lot of variety a separating concerns via https://github.com/libp2p/specs
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BlockChain Engineers
For p2p networking, I'd say things are pretty interesting and boring at the same time. (Read: https://github.com/libp2p/specs if you're interested and decide for yourself)
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Theseus DHT Protocol
At the bottom is the link to the more technical specification: https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/kad-dht/README.m...
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Avoiding HTTP/3 (for a while) as a pragmatic default
The problems you described are specific to implementations, not the protocol itself. I have read all of the QUIC specs in full (since I'm working on an implementation) and have seen nothing in any of them that mandates a centralised certificate infrastructure (caveat: I have not read the HTTP/3 spec, perhaps you point out the relevant section if its in there). Of course, the most common use case requires this, but in that respect it's no different to HTTPS.
IPFS uses QUIC as one of its supported transport protocols, and this works in the most common implementation, Kubo [1]. The spec for the QUIC transport used in IPFS [2] indicates the same certificate trust policy as for the TLS protocol [3]. The latter, in turn, relies on peer-to-peer authentication with automatically-generated self-signed certificates and the use of an additional extension.
IPFS is particularly well suited to the use case of personal websites you've mentioned, as it's specifically designed to operate without any form of centralisation.
[1] https://github.com/ipfs/kubo.
[2] https://github.com/libp2p/specs/tree/master/quic
[3] https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/tls/tls.md
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What about a Zig implementation of lib2p2?
Yes, there is already a Rust version (https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p) that behaves well at this level but I think we can reach a higher level of performance on this point with Zig. Also, if you look at the long term roadmap of libp2p (https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/ROADMAP.md), the mobile devices and IoT integrations for example are part of the considerations.
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IPFS Relay server
A standalone daemon that provides libp2p circuit relay services, for both protocol versions v1 and v2.
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Does peer B (has access to the internet) help other peer A (who is behind the nat) to transfer data from peer C (has access to the internet) using ipfs?
Interestingly, that section also links to one about relay connections, which seems to be closely related to the original question: https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/relay/circuit-v2.md
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Call HN: Decentralized Nat Hole Punching Measurement Campaign
Hi HN,
during December 2022, we are running a measurement campaign to investigate decentralized NAT hole punching success rates using the libp2p DCUtR protocol [0]. Ubiquitous peer-to-peer connectivity is still a big challenge. If successful, NAT Hole Punching can be a game-changer for decentralised applications and networks!
For that we are searching for participants who would run a lean client on their machines that performs hole punches with other peers and then reports back the results to our server. We explained the measurement methodology in this video [1] and the linked repository above.
Running such a client certainly has privacy implications which are documented here [2]. Most importantly, we record public IP addresses, successful NAT port mappings, and the login router page (to draw conclusions about which routers work better than others).
Optionally, you can also sign up here [3] and provide additional information about your personal network and receive a personal API key so that we can link your data to your information. Obviously, this has stronger privacy implications - but this is totally optional.
The most frictionless way to participate is to head to the releases page [4] and download a client that suits your platform and needs. No sign-up required.
[0] https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/relay/DCUtR.md
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CCS Proposal: XMR-BTC Atomic Swaps GUI Desktop App - Continued development for 4 months
Rendezvous point: The rendezvous protocol is a lightweight mechanism for generalized peer discovery. It allows for the discovery of peers in a decentralized fashion. We operate a community rendezvous point through which swap providers can make themselves known to users, and through which users can find swap providers with whom they want to swap.(/dns4/discover.unstoppableswap.net/tcp/8888/p2p/12D3KooWA6cnqJpVnreBVnoro8midDL9Lpzmg8oJPoAGi7YYaamE)
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This dude made an alternative Reddit on a blockchain. Crazy
It's not regular pubsub, it's "peer to peer pubsub". It's a pubsub, but p2p, anyone can join, subscribe, publish. The libp2p project has an implementation of this https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/pubsub/gossipsub/gossipsub-v1.0.md
What are some alternatives?
web-ui - The Web interface for Peergos
tribler - Privacy enhanced BitTorrent client with P2P content discovery
Peergos - A p2p, secure file storage, social network and application protocol
py-ipv8 - Python implementation of Tribler's IPv8 p2p-networking layer
ContactDiscoveryService
komodo-wallet-desktop - Komodo Wallet Desktop GUI
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
xmr-btc-swap - Bitcoin–Monero Cross-chain Atomic Swap
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode
komodo-defi-framework - This is the official Komodo DeFi Framework repository
Publii - The most intuitive Static Site CMS designed for SEO-optimized and privacy-focused websites.
whitepaper