Documentation: remove trailing whitespaces

Signed-off-by: Ralf Ramsauer <ralf@ramses-pyramidenbau.de>
This commit is contained in:
Ralf Ramsauer 2017-03-10 23:35:31 -08:00
parent 68443abd60
commit 77dd915ad5

View file

@ -24,11 +24,11 @@ QUICKSTART
----------
Try it out within your own LAN! Follow these simple steps:
- On your server, run: `./iodined -f 10.0.0.1 test.com`.
If you already use the `10.0.0.0` network, use another internal net like
- On your server, run: `./iodined -f 10.0.0.1 test.com`.
If you already use the `10.0.0.0` network, use another internal net like
`172.16.0.0`.
- Enter a password.
- On the client, run: `./iodine -f -r 192.168.0.1 test.com`.
- On the client, run: `./iodine -f -r 192.168.0.1 test.com`.
Replace `192.168.0.1` with your server's ip address.
- Enter the same password.
- Now the client has the tunnel ip `10.0.0.2` and the server has `10.0.0.1`.
@ -149,12 +149,12 @@ server.
#### Testing
The `iodined` server replies to `NS` requests sent for subdomains of the tunnel
domain. If your iodined subdomain is `t1.mydomain.com`, send a `NS` request for
`foo123.t1.mydomain.com` to see if the delegation works.
`foo123.t1.mydomain.com` to see if the delegation works.
`dig` is a good tool for this:
% dig -t NS foo123.t1.mydomain.com
ns.io.citronna.de.
Also, the iodined server will answer requests starting with 'z' for any of the
supported request types, for example:
@ -262,7 +262,7 @@ can also show received and sent queries.
TIPS & TRICKS
-------------
If your port 53 is taken on a specific interface by an application that does
If your port 53 is taken on a specific interface by an application that does
not use it, use `-p` on iodined to specify an alternate port (like `-p 5353`)
and use for instance iptables (on Linux) to forward the traffic:
@ -310,18 +310,18 @@ and mean deviation (indicating spread around the average), in milliseconds.
### Situation 1: `Laptop -> Wifi AP -> Home server -> DSL provider -> Datacenter`
iodine DNS "relay" bind9 DNS cache iodined
downstr. upstream downstr. ping-up ping-down
fragsize kbit/s kbit/s avg +/-mdev avg +/-mdev
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
iodine -> Wifi AP :53
-Tnull (= -Oraw) 982 43.6 131.0 28.0 4.6 26.8 3.4
iodine -> Home server :53
-Tnull (= -Oraw) 1174 48.0 305.8 26.6 5.0 26.9 8.4
iodine -> DSL provider :53
iodine -> DSL provider :53
-Tnull (= -Oraw) 1174 56.7 367.0 20.6 3.1 21.2 4.4
-Ttxt -Obase32 730 56.7 174.7*
-Ttxt -Obase64 874 56.7 174.7
@ -330,23 +330,23 @@ and mean deviation (indicating spread around the average), in milliseconds.
-Tsrv -Obase128 910 56.7 174.7
-Tcname -Obase32 151 56.7 43.6
-Tcname -Obase128 212 56.7 52.4
iodine -> DSL provider :53
iodine -> DSL provider :53
wired (no Wifi) -Tnull 1174 74.2 585.4 20.2 5.6 19.6 3.4
[174.7* : these all have 2frag/packet]
### Situation 2: `Laptop -> Wifi+vpn / wired -> Home server`
iodine iodined
downstr. upstream downstr. ping-up ping-down
fragsize kbit/s kbit/s avg +/-mdev avg +/-mdev
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
wifi + openvpn -Tnull 1186 166.0 1022.3 6.3 1.3 6.6 1.6
wired -Tnull 1186 677.2 2464.1 1.3 0.2 1.3 0.1