# InfraNet Distributed & E2EE self-hosting. The goal is to have nodes voluntarily join the mesh and participate in the network providing compute and storage. ## Tenets * End-to-end encrypted E2EE is a requirement for privacy. * Collabrative Members of the network are expected to cooperate to the best of their abilities, whether it's technical, financial or resources. * Distributed, resilient, reliable and dynamic Nodes should be able to join and leave without too much disruption. Bootstrapping, joining and autodiscovery should be as easy as possible, allowing for easy scaling across all members of the network. * Free and open All components should be free and open. * Shared responsibility Knowledge of components will be documented and shared and responsibility for the uptime and maintainence should be shared where possible. ## Design principles * Tested All components and goals should be testable to ensure changes don't impact existing functionality or reliabilty. * Monitored All components should be monitored and raise appropriate alerts to ensure good health and early detection of potential problems. * Containerised Simple, versioned components that can be resource constrained, when required, would be of great benefit. * IPv6 Avoiding issues with IPv4 NAT, etc. would be desirable. * Multi-architecture The underlaying hardware type shouldn't be a constraint, within reason. ## Lighthouse installation 1. Clone the repo. 2. Create a directory to hold the config and certificates. 3. Copy `lighthouse-config.yaml` as `config.yaml` in the new directory. 4. Update the `docker-compose-lighthouse.yaml` to bind mount the newly created directory to `/etc/nebula`; check and set a value for the `/storage` bind mount. 5. Run the container with `docker-compose up -d`. This will create two files, `host.key` and `host.csr`. 6. Send the contents of the `host.csr` file to a cluster admin to sign. 7. The returned, signed certificate should go alongside the `host.csr` file and be called, `host.crt`. 8. Start the container again and it should find the config and certificates and then connect to the existing cluster. 9. Update the `static_host_map` entry in the repo's `node-config.yaml` with the new Lighthouse mesh and public IP address and encourage node admins to update their nodes' config files from the repo. ## Node installation 1. Clone the repo. 2. Create a directory to hold the config and certificates. 3. Copy `node-config.yaml` as `config.yaml` in the new directory. 4. Update the `docker-compose-node.yaml` to bind mount the newly created directory to `/etc/nebula`; check and set a value for the `/storage` bind mount. 5. Run the container with `docker-compose up -d`. This will create two files, `host.key` and `host.csr`. 6. Send the contents of the `host.csr` file to a cluster admin to sign. 7. The returned, signed certificate should go alongside the `host.csr` file and be called, `host.crt`. 8. Start the container again and it should find the config and certificates and then connect to the existing cluster.