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Topology file format


From: Vikas Maurya
Subject: Topology file format
Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2020 20:56:04 +0100

Hi,
I was working with topology file while using gnunet-testbed-profiler. I saw the example given here.

<snip>
For example, the following file will result in 5 overlay connections: [2->1], [3->1],[4->3], [0->3], [2->0]  1:2|3 3:4| 0 0: 2
<snip>

I am having difficulty understanding how this actually works when I run gnunet-core to see which peers are connected.
for example after running above example
I saw the following result
<snip>
~$ gnunet-core --config=/tmp/testbedNfC39S/0/config
 Sa Feb 15 20:47:51 2020: connection established         6YNB (timeout in  283 s)
~$ gnunet-core --config=/tmp/testbedNfC39S/1/config
 Sa Feb 15 20:47:57 2020: connection established         DK5W (timeout in  276 s)
 Sa Feb 15 20:47:57 2020: connection established         6DEV (timeout in  276 s)
 Sa Feb 15 20:47:57 2020: connection established         G3FK (timeout in  276 s)
~$ gnunet-core --config=/tmp/testbedNfC39S/2/config
 Sa Feb 15 20:48:01 2020: connection established         6YNB (timeout in  272 s)
~$ gnunet-core --config=/tmp/testbedNfC39S/3/config
 Sa Feb 15 20:48:05 2020: connection established         6YNB (timeout in  268 s)
~$ gnunet-core --config=/tmp/testbedNfC39S/4/config
~$
<snip>

These results doesn't make sense when compared to the explanation given in the example(why does node 4 has zero connections for example).
so I have two questions
1. What exactly does the above example translates to ?
2. When we say 1:2|3 , does that mean the connection will be bidirectional?

Thanks,
Vikas Maurya



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