1.TH IPFS 8 2.SH NAME 3ipfs \- saves and restores information for NAT and state tables. 4.SH SYNOPSIS 5.B ipfs 6[-nv] -l 7.PP 8.B ipfs --- 38 unchanged lines hidden (view full) --- 47.SH OPTIONS 48.TP 49.B \-d 50Change the default directory used with 51.B \-R 52and 53.B \-W 54options for saving state information. |
55.TP |
56.B \-n 57Don't actually take any action that would effect information stored in 58the kernel or on disk. 59.TP 60.B \-v 61Provides a verbose description of what's being done. 62.TP |
63.B \-i <ifname1>,<ifname2> 64Change all instances of interface name ifname1 in the state save file to 65ifname2. Useful if you're restoring state information after a hardware 66reconfiguration or change. 67.TP |
68.B \-N 69Operate on NAT information. 70.TP 71.B \-S 72Operate on filtering state information. 73.TP 74.B \-u 75Unlock state tables in the kernel. 76.TP 77.B \-l |
78Lock state tables in the kernel. |
79.TP 80.B \-r 81Read information in from the specified file and load it into the 82kernel. This requires the state tables to have already been locked 83and does not change the lock once comlete. 84.TP 85.B \-w 86Write information out to the specified file and from the kernel. --- 39 unchanged lines hidden --- |