forked from I2P_Developers/i2p.i2p

* Expose the HTTP headers to EepGet status listeners * Handle DSA key failures properly (if the signature is not invertable, it is obviously invalid) also, syndie now properly detects whether the remote archive can send a filtered export.zip by examining the HTTP headers for X-Syndie-Export-Capable: true. If the remote archive does not set that header (and neither freesites, nor apache or anything other than the ArchiveServlet will), it uses individual HTTP requests for individual blog posts and metadata fetches.
The routerconsole application is an embedable web server / servlet container. In it there is a bundled routerconsole.war containing JSPs (per jsp/*) that implement a web based control panel for the router. This console gives the user a quick view into how their router is operating and exposes some pages to configure it. The web server itself is Jetty [1] and is contained within the various jar files under lib/. To embed this web server and the included router console, the startRouter script needs to be updated to include those jar files in the class path, plus the router.config needs appropriate entries to start up the server: clientApp.3.main=net.i2p.router.web.RouterConsoleRunner clientApp.3.name=webConsole clientApp.3.args=7657 0.0.0.0 ./webapps/ That instructs the router to fire up the webserver listening on port 7657 on all of its interfaces (0.0.0.0), loading up any .war files under the ./webapps/ directory. The RouterConsoleRunner itself configures the Jetty server to give the ./webapps/routerconsole.war control over the root context, directing a request to http://localhost:7657/index.jsp to the routerconsole.war's index.jsp. Any other .war file will be mounted under their filename's context (e.g. myi2p.war would be reachable at http://localhost:7657/myi2p/index.jsp). [1] http://jetty.mortbay.com/jetty/index.html