Files
i2p.itoopie/apps/routerconsole/jsp/config.jsp
zzz 100163e03b * Raise inbound default bandwidth to 32KBps
* Fix config.jsp that showed 0KBps share bandwidth by default
2008-02-21 14:05:33 +00:00

129 lines
7.6 KiB
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<%@page contentType="text/html" %>
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
<html><head>
<title>I2P Router Console - config networking</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="default.css" type="text/css" />
</head><body>
<%@include file="nav.jsp" %>
<%@include file="summary.jsp" %>
<jsp:useBean class="net.i2p.router.web.ConfigNetHelper" id="nethelper" scope="request" />
<jsp:setProperty name="nethelper" property="contextId" value="<%=(String)session.getAttribute("i2p.contextId")%>" />
<div class="main" id="main">
<%@include file="confignav.jsp" %>
<jsp:useBean class="net.i2p.router.web.ConfigNetHandler" id="formhandler" scope="request" />
<jsp:setProperty name="formhandler" property="*" />
<jsp:setProperty name="formhandler" property="contextId" value="<%=(String)session.getAttribute("i2p.contextId")%>" />
<font color="red"><jsp:getProperty name="formhandler" property="errors" /></font>
<i><jsp:getProperty name="formhandler" property="notices" /></i>
<form action="config.jsp" method="POST">
<% String prev = System.getProperty("net.i2p.router.web.ConfigNetHandler.nonce");
if (prev != null) System.setProperty("net.i2p.router.web.ConfigNetHandler.noncePrev", prev);
System.setProperty("net.i2p.router.web.ConfigNetHandler.nonce", new java.util.Random().nextLong()+""); %>
<input type="hidden" name="nonce" value="<%=System.getProperty("net.i2p.router.web.ConfigNetHandler.nonce")%>" />
<input type="hidden" name="action" value="blah" />
<b>Bandwidth limiter</b><br />
Inbound rate:
<input name="inboundrate" type="text" size="2" value="<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="inboundRate" />" /> KBps
bursting up to
<input name="inboundburstrate" type="text" size="2" value="<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="inboundBurstRate" />" /> KBps for
<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="inboundBurstFactorBox" /><br />
Outbound rate:
<input name="outboundrate" type="text" size="2" value="<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="outboundRate" />" /> KBps
bursting up to
<input name="outboundburstrate" type="text" size="2" value="<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="outboundBurstRate" />" /> KBps for
<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="outboundBurstFactorBox" /><br />
<i>KBps = kilobytes per second = 1024 bytes per second.<br />
A negative inbound rate means a default limit of 32KBytes per second.
A negative outbound rate means a default limit of 16KBytes per second.</i><br />
Bandwidth share percentage:
<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="sharePercentageBox" /><br />
<% int share = nethelper.getShareBandwidth();
if (share < 12) {
out.print("<b>NOTE</b>: You have configured I2P to share only " + share + "KBps. ");
out.print("I2P requires at least 12KBps to enable sharing. ");
out.print("Please enable sharing (participating in tunnels) by configuring more bandwidth. ");
out.print("It improves your anonymity by creating cover traffic, and helps the network.<br />");
} else {
out.print("You have configured I2P to share " + share + "KBps. ");
out.print("The higher the share bandwidth the more you improve your anonymity and help the network.<br />");
}
%>
<p>
<input type="submit" name="save" value="Save changes" /> <input type="reset" value="Cancel" /><br />
<hr />
<!--
<b>Enable load testing: </b>
<input type="checkbox" name="enableloadtesting" value="true" <jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="enableLoadTesting" /> />
<p>If enabled, your router will periodically anonymously probe some of your peers
to see what sort of throughput they can handle. This improves your router's ability
to pick faster peers, but can cost substantial bandwidth. Relevant data from the
load testing is fed into the profiles as well as the
<a href="oldstats.jsp#test.rtt">test.rtt</a> and related stats.</p>
<hr />
-->
<b>External UDP address:</b> <i><jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="udpAddress" /></i><br />
<b>Require SSU introductions? </b>
<input type="checkbox" name="requireIntroductions" value="true" <jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="requireIntroductionsChecked" /> /><br />
<p>If you can, please poke a hole in your NAT or firewall to allow unsolicited UDP packets to reach
you on your external UDP address. If you can't, I2P now includes supports UDP hole punching
with "SSU introductions" - peers who will relay a request from someone you don't know to your
router for your router so that you can make an outbound connection to them. I2P will use these
introductions automatically if it detects that the port is not forwarded (as shown by
the <i>Status: OK (NAT)</i> line), or you can manually require them here.
Users behind symmetric NATs, such as OpenBSD's pf, are not currently supported.</p>
<input type="submit" name="recheckReachability" value="Check network reachability..." />
<hr />
<b>Inbound TCP connection configuration:</b><br />
Externally reachable hostname or IP address:
<input name ="ntcphost" type="text" size="16" value="<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="ntcphostname" />" />
(dyndns and the like are fine)<br />
OR use IP address detected by SSU
(currently <jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="udpIP" />)?
<input type="checkbox" name="ntcpAutoIP" value="true" <jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="tcpAutoIPChecked" /> /><br />
<p>
Externally reachable TCP port:
<input name ="ntcpport" type="text" size="6" value="<jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="ntcpport" />" /><br />
OR use the same port configured for SSU
(currently <jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="udpPort" />)?
<input type="checkbox" name="ntcpAutoPort" value="true" <jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="tcpAutoPortChecked" /> /><br />
<p>You do <i>not</i> need to allow inbound TCP connections - outbound connections work with no
configuration. However, if you want to receive inbound TCP connections, you <b>must</b> poke a hole
in your NAT or firewall for unsolicited TCP connections. If you specify the wrong IP address or
hostname, or do not properly configure your NAT or firewall, your network performance will degrade
substantially. When in doubt, leave the hostname and port number blank.</p>
<p><b>Note: changing any of these settings will terminate all of your connections and effectively
restart your router.</b>
<hr />
<!--
<b>Dynamic Router Keys: </b>
<input type="checkbox" name="dynamicKeys" value="true" <jsp:getProperty name="nethelper" property="dynamicKeysChecked" /> /><br />
<p>
This setting causes your router identity to be regenerated every time your IP address
changes. If you have a dynamic IP this option can speed up your reintegration into
the network (since people will have shitlisted your old router identity), and, for
very weak adversaries, help frustrate trivial
<a href="http://www.i2p.net/how_threatmodel#intersection">intersection
attacks</a> against the NetDB. Your different router identities would only be
'hidden' among other I2P users at your ISP, and further analysis would link
the router identities further.</p>
<p>Note that when I2P detects an IP address change, it will automatically
initiate a restart in order to rekey and to disconnect from peers before they
update their profiles - any long lasting client connections will be disconnected,
though such would likely already be the case anyway, since the IP address changed.
</p>
<hr />
-->
<input type="submit" name="save" value="Save changes" /> <input type="reset" value="Cancel" /><br />
</form>
</div>
</body>
</html>