Finding neighboring mesh nodes
From HacDC Wiki
Assumptions
- There is at least one mesh node.
- Meshes are not built through collusion, i.e., each person setting up a node does not do so knowing that others are as well.
- Mesh nodes are able to broadcast the existence of services they run ("I run a microblog!")
- Services can be activated on a node (implying that their presence will be announced) or deactivated (implying that their presence will not be announced)
- Mesh nodes continually listen for announcements of services from neighboring mesh nodeds
- Mesh nodes maintain directories of services running on neighboring mesh nodes
- ...except when a service is designed to automatically federate with others of a like type (i.e., announcements of content from one will automatically be incorporated into cached announcements on the node)
- Clients neither broadcast nor listen for service announcements
- Smartphones
- MP3 players
- Computers not running Byzantium
Existing protocols
- Avahi/ZeroConf/mDNS
- Included in Porteus Linux
- Host can publish running services
- Host can be informed of services running on other hosts
- User does not have to specifically configure any of this
- Host admins may have to configure this
- Bindings for multiple languages are available
- Protocol in a nutshell:
- Ad-hoc DHS over IP multicast (224.0.0.251, port 5353/UDP)
- Each node has a resource record for each service
- SRV
- TXT
- PTR
- Types documented in /usr/share/avahi/service-types on Windbringer. File is part of Avahi on all systems.
- HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH dnsmasq!
- Resolution is done by the host running an Avahi implementation - broadcast a resolution request to the multicast domain and listen for a response
- Node needs to have its hostname set (machinename.local)
- Ignores point-to-point links by default. Add "allow-point-to-point=yes" in avahi-daemon.conf
- Do mesh interfaces have the POINTTOPOINT flag?
- wide-area functionality seems relevant to a mesh.
- deny-interfaces=eth0 in avahi-daemon.conf may be necessary to prevent mDNS traffic from going over gateways.
- avahi-daemon implements service announcement and listening, and interfaces with Avahi-enabled client apps.
- avahi-dnsconfd connects to avahi-daemon and keeps track of unicast DNSes detected.
- Read manage for avahi-daemon.conf!
- Will need an /etc/avahi/services/foo.service XML file for each service offered by a node.
- Manpage avahi.service(5) documents all required XML tags.
- XMPP service discovery
- XEP-0030
- DHCP
- XRDS
Notes
- KDE comes with something called Personal File Server, which allows arbitrary directories to be made available over HTTP(S?). It's Avahi-enabled. KDE is packagedwith Porteus. There's our file dump.
- avahi-bookmarks allows the user to access HTTP resources with a web browser.
- nss-mdns should be enabled in /etc/nssswitch.conf.