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Diffstat (limited to 'doc/i2p.md')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/i2p.md | 10 |
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/i2p.md b/doc/i2p.md index e45b5efb9b..39f65c4e5f 100644 --- a/doc/i2p.md +++ b/doc/i2p.md @@ -80,15 +80,15 @@ phase when syncing up a new node can be very slow. This phase can be sped up by using other networks, for instance `onlynet=onion`, at the same time. In general, a node can be run with both onion and I2P hidden services (or -any/all of IPv4/IPv6/onion/I2P), which can provide a potential fallback if one -of the networks has issues. +any/all of IPv4/IPv6/onion/I2P/CJDNS), which can provide a potential fallback if +one of the networks has issues. ## I2P-related information in Bitcoin Core There are several ways to see your I2P address in Bitcoin Core: -- in the debug log (grep for `AddLocal`, the I2P address ends in `.b32.i2p`) -- in the output of the `getnetworkinfo` RPC in the "localaddresses" section -- in the output of `bitcoin-cli -netinfo` peer connections dashboard +- in the "Local addresses" output of CLI `-netinfo` +- in the "localaddresses" output of RPC `getnetworkinfo` +- in the debug log (grep for `AddLocal`; the I2P address ends in `.b32.i2p`) To see which I2P peers your node is connected to, use `bitcoin-cli -netinfo 4` or the `getpeerinfo` RPC (e.g. `bitcoin-cli getpeerinfo`). |