Jabit Server

This is the server node using the Jabit library. You can run it by calling

java -jar jabit-server.jar

The interface will be available on port 9000, Bitmessage as usual on Port 8444.

There are still a few problems with the interface (the idea is to allow collecting and displaying broadcasts).

On first startup it will create a config file (allowing you to configure the Bitmessage port), a whitelist, a blacklist and a shortlist. If the whitelist isn't empty, the blacklist will be irrelevant. You can disable the feature by simply adding a valid Bitmessage address to the whitelist. For shortlisted addresses, only the last five broadcasts are displayed and stored (useful e.g. for time services or Q's Aktivlist).

Building / Development

You can build the jar file with

./gradlew build

As there is a problem with the build order, you'll need to do this twice.

To deploy on a Ubuntu server (might work on other Linuxes as well), create a file /etc/init/jabit.conf with the following contents:

chdir /srv/jabit

exec su -s /bin/sh -c 'exec "$0" "$@"' jabit -- /usr/bin/java -jar jabit-server.jar --server.port=9000 > /dev/null

start on runlevel [2345]
stop on runlevel [^2345]

there must be a user jabit and a folder /srv/jabit where this user has write permission containing jabit-server.jar.

Description
This is a simple Bitmessage server application made with Jabit. It can be used as a trusted node for the Abit, both for simple synchronization and ‘server proof-of-work’.
https://dissem.ch/jabit-server/
Readme 248 KiB
Languages
Java 67.6%
Gradle 32.4%