.TH YRD 1 "September 2015" "yrd v0.5.3" "User Commands" .SH NAME yrd \- cjdns swiss army knife .SH SYNOPSIS .sp .nf \fIyrd\fR [\-\-help] [] .fi .sp .SH DESCRIPTION yrd is an iproute2 inspired interface to cjdroute. .SH OPTIONS .PP \-\-help .RS 4 Prints the yrd help .RE .SH COMMANDS .TP .BR "start" Starts cjdroute and configures it after it's started. Peers are pulled from .B /etc/yrd/peers.d and to the running cjdroute. Use .B \-\-attach to configure an already running cjdroute. .TP .BR "a, addr" Shows your cjdns address. Use .B \-i to format it as IPv6 address. .TP .BR "n, neighbours" Shows your neighbours you're directly peered with. Use .B \-n to display their neighbours, too. Use .B \-i to format them as IPv6 addresses. .TP .BR "r, route" Shows addresses in your nodestore. Use .B \-f for tailf like behaviour. Use .B \-i to format them as IPv6 addresses. .TP .BR "ping" Ping a node over cjdns, without using icmp. Use .B \-\-switch to do a switch ping or .B \-c to specify how many pings should be sent. .TP .BR "top" Much colors. .TP .BR "mon" Display debug information from cjdroute. .B -l, --level filter by log level .sp .B -f, --file filter by source file .sp .B -n, --line filter by line number .TP .BR "uplinks" Shows known links from a given node in the network.