ServerPage 0 0 722 650 6 0 Network Configuration Automatic (UPnP) Firewalled Manually Forwarded Port 75 true <html><head/><body><p>This Retroshare node is running in &quot;Hidden Mode&quot;. That means it can only be reached though the Tor network.</p><p>As such, some network options are disabled.</p></body></html> [Hidden mode] Qt::Horizontal QSizePolicy::MinimumExpanding 40 20 200 0 <html><head/><body><p>The DHT allows you to answer connection requests from your friends using BitTorrent's DHT. It greatly improves the connectivity. No information is actually stored in the DHT. It is only used as a proxy system to get in touch with other Retroshare nodes.</p><p>The Discovery service sends node name and ids of your trusted contacts to connected peers, to help them choose new friends. The friendship is never automatic however, and both peers still need to trust each other to allow connection. </p></body></html> Public: DHT & Discovery Private: Discovery Only Inverted: DHT Only Dark Net: None 6 Local Address External Address Dynamic DNS 6 Port: Acceptable ports range from 10 to 65535. Normally Ports below 1024 are reserved by your system. 10 65535 7812 Port: Acceptable ports range from 10 to 65535. Normally ports below 1024 are reserved by your system. 10 65535 7812 6 6 16 16 :/images/ledoff1.png Local network 6 6 16 16 :/images/ledoff1.png <html><head/><body><p>The bullet turns green as soon as Retroshare manages to get your own IP from the websites listed below, if you enabled that action. Retroshare will also use other means to find out your own IP.</p></body></html> External ip address finder 6 6 16 16 :/images/ledoff1.png UPnP Known / Previous IPs: Qt::Horizontal 40 20 <html><head/><body><p>This clears the list of known addresses. This action is useful if for some reason your address list contains an invalid/irrelevant/expired address that you want to avoid passing to your friends as a contact address.</p></body></html> Clear 16777215 150 Show Discovery information in statusbar If you uncheck this, RetroShare can only determine your IP when you connect to somebody. Leaving this checked helps connecting when you have few friends. It also helps if you're behind a firewall or a VPN. Allow RetroShare to ask my ip to these websites: true 0 0 QAbstractItemView::NoEditTriggers 75 true Download limit (KB/s) 0 0 <html><head/><body><p>This download limit covers the whole application. However, in some situations, such as when transfering many small files at once, the estimated bandwidth becomes unreliable and the total value reported by Retroshare might exceed that limit. </p></body></html> kB/s 1 100000 1 6 75 true Upload limit (KB/s) 0 0 <html><head/><body><p>The upload limit covers the entire software. Too small an upload limit might eventually block low priority services (forums, channels). A minimum recommended value is 50KB/s. </p></body></html> kB/s 1 100000 1 showDiscStatusBar allowIpDeterminationCB IPServersLV ipAddressList IP Filters activate IP filtering IP blacklist Qt::CustomContextMenu <html><head/><body><p>This list gets automatically filled with information gathered at multiple sources: masquerading peers reported by the DHT, IP ranges entered by you, and IP ranges reported by your friends. Default settings should protect you against large scale traffic relaying.</p><p>Automatically guessing masquerading IPs can put your friends IPs in the blacklist. In this case, use the context menu to whitelist them.</p></body></html> true QAbstractItemView::SingleSelection false true IP range Status Origin Reason Comment <html><head/><body><p>This is very drastic, be careful. Since masquerading IPs might be actual real IPs, this option might cause disconnection, and will probably force you to add your friends' IPs into the whitelist.</p></body></html> Ban every IP reported by your friends <html><head/><body><p>Another drastic option. If you use it, be prepared to add your friends' IPs into the whitelist when needed.</p></body></html> Ban every masquerading IP reported by your DHT <html><head/><body><p>If used alone, this option protects you quite well from large scale IP masquerading.</p></body></html> Automatically ban ranges of DHT masquerading IPs starting at IPs 2 255 Qt::Horizontal 40 20 IP whitelist Qt::CustomContextMenu <html><head/><body><p>White listed IPs are gathered from the following sources: IPs coming inside a manually exchanged certificate, IP ranges entered by you in this window, or in the security feed items.</p><p>The default behavior for Retroshare is to (1) always allow connection to peers with IP in the whitelist, even if that IP is also blacklisted; (2) optionally require IPs to be in the whitelist. You can change this behavior for each peer in the &quot;Details&quot; window of each Retroshare node. </p></body></html> true QAbstractItemView::SingleSelection false true IP range Status Origin Reason Comment Manual input 0 0 <html><head/><body><p>Enter an IP range. Accepted formats:</p><p>193.190.209.15</p><p>193.190.209.15/24</p><p>193.190.209.15/16</p></body></html> 16 32 8 24 0 0 <html><head/><body><p>Enter any comment you'd like</p></body></html> Add to blacklist Add to whitelist Tor Configuration Outgoing Tor Connections Tor Socks Proxy 10 65535 16 16 :/images/ledoff1.png Tor outgoing Okay 16777215 100 Qt::ScrollBarAlwaysOff true Tor Socks Proxy default: 127.0.01:9050. Set in torrc config and update here. You can connect to Hidden Nodes, even if you are running a standard Node, so why not setup Tor? 0 0 Incoming Tor Connections 10 65535 <html><head/><body><p>This button simulates a SSL connection to your Tor address using the Tor proxy. If your Tor node is reachable, it should cause a SSL handshake error, which RS will interpret as a valid connection state. This operation might also cause several "security warning" about connections from your local host IP (127.0.0.1) in the News Feed if you enabled it,</p></body></html> Test 10 65535 Onion Address Local Address <html><head/><body><p>This is your onion address. It should look like <span style=" font-weight:600;">[something].onion. </span>If you configured a hidden service with Tor, the onion address is generated automatically by Tor. You can get it in e.g. <span style=" font-weight:600;">/var/lib/tor/[service name]/hostname</span></p></body></html> <html><head/><body><p>This is the local address to which the Tor hidden service points at your localhost. Most of the time, <span style=" font-weight:600;">127.0.0.1</span> is the right answer.</p></body></html> 16 16 :/images/ledoff1.png Tor incoming ok Expected torrc Port Configuration: 0 0 0 10 16777215 50 Qt::ScrollBarAlwaysOff true HiddenServiceDir </your/path/to/hidden/directory/service> HiddenServicePort 9191 127.0.0.1:9191 0 0 16777215 100 true To Receive Connections, you must first setup a Tor Hidden Service. See Tor documentation for HOWTO details. Once this is done, paste the Onion Address in the box above. This is your external address on the Tor network. Finally make sure that the Ports match the Tor configuration. If you have issues connecting over Tor check the Tor logs too. Qt::Vertical 20 18 netModeComboBox discComboBox localAddress localPort extAddress extPort dynDNS showDiscStatusBar