Getting Started with NLSR

Getting Source

Important Notes About Configuration

Since v0.4.0, NLSR no longer creates Faces for the neighbors that are specified in nlsr.conf. Instead, it relies on the pre-existence of the Faces in NFD. NLSR will obtain this information from NFD, and configure its neighbors using this information.

For people who were relying on NLSR to automagically configure their networks, this must now be done with nfdc. Its documentation can be found here

Configuration

After installing NLSR from source, you need to create a configuration file for NLSR. Please take a look at nlsr.conf for a sample configuration. For details on configuring a router, please refer to Router Configuration. For details on security configuration, please refer to Security Configuration.

Running

Run nlsr with the following command:

nlsr

NLSR will look for the default configuration file, nlsr.conf, in the current directory.

You can also run nlsr -f with the absolute path of the configuration file:

nlsr -f /usr/local/etc/ndn/nlsr.conf

Logging

NLSR uses the ndn-cxx logging facility. All levels listed below the selected log-level value are enabled.

Valid values:

  TRACE    trace messages (most verbose)
  DEBUG    debugging messages
  INFO     informational messages
  WARN     warning messages
  ERROR    error messages
  FATAL    fatal (will be logged unconditionally)

To obtain logs for NLSR, set the NDN_LOG environment variable with the correct prefix and log-level settings. For example, running the following command will display all log messages in NLSR with a DEBUG level or below.

NDN_LOG='nlsr.*=DEBUG' nlsr

If the user is presented with an error message User does not have read and write permission on the directory it can be circumvented by running the application with sudo:

sudo env NDN_LOG='nlsr.*=DEBUG' nlsr

Use man ndn-log for more detailed instructions.