6.5 KiB
I2P support in Hush
It is possible to run a Hush or HSC full node as an I2P (Invisible Internet Project) service and connect to such services.
This glossary may be useful to get started with I2P terminology.
Run with an I2P router (proxy)
A running I2P router (proxy) with SAM enabled is required. Options include:
- i2prouter (I2P Router), the official implementation in Java
- i2pd (I2P Daemon) (documentation), a lighter alternative in C++ (successfully tested with version 2.23 and up; version 2.36 or later recommended)
- i2p-zero
- other alternatives
Note the IP address and port the SAM proxy is listening to; usually, it is
127.0.0.1:7656
.
Once an I2P router with SAM enabled is up and running, use the following configuration options:
-i2psam=<ip:port>
I2P SAM proxy to reach I2P peers and accept I2P connections (default:
none)
-i2pacceptincoming
Whether to accept inbound I2P connections (default: 1). Ignored if
-i2psam is not set. Listening for inbound I2P connections is
done through the SAM proxy, not by binding to a local address and
port.
In a typical situation, this suffices:
hushd -i2psam=127.0.0.1:7656
The first time hushd connects to the I2P router, if
-i2pacceptincoming=1
, then it will automatically generate a persistent I2P
address and its corresponding private key. The private key will be saved in a
file named i2p_private_key
in the Hush data directory. The persistent
I2P address is used for accepting incoming connections and for making outgoing
connections if -i2pacceptincoming=1
. If -i2pacceptincoming=0
then only
outbound I2P connections are made and a different transient I2P address is used
for each connection to improve privacy.
Additional configuration options related to I2P
-debug=i2p
Set the debug=i2p
config logging option to see additional information in the
debug log about your I2P configuration and connections.
-onlynet=i2p
Make automatic outbound connections only to I2P addresses. Inbound and manual connections are not affected by this option. It can be specified multiple times to allow multiple networks, e.g. onlynet=onion, onlynet=i2p.
I2P support was added to Hush in version 3.9.3 and there may be fewer I2P peers than Tor or IP ones. Therefore, using I2P alone without other networks may make a node more susceptible to Sybil attacks.
Another consideration with onlynet=i2p
is that the initial blocks download
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/CJDNS), which can provide a potential fallback if one of the networks has issues.
Persistent vs transient I2P addresses
In I2P connections, the connection receiver sees the I2P address of the connection initiator. This is unlike the Tor network where the recipient does not know who is connecting to them and can't tell if two connections are from the same peer or not.
If an I2P node is not accepting incoming connections, then Hush uses random, one-time, transient I2P addresses for itself for outbound connections to make it harder to discriminate, fingerprint or analyze it based on its I2P address.
I2P-related information
There are several ways to see your I2P address if accepting
incoming I2P connections (-i2pacceptincoming
):
- 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
) - in the i2p/i2pd web console under "SAM Sessions"
To see which I2P peers your node is connected to, use hush-cli -netinfo 4
or the getpeerinfo
RPC (e.g. hush-cli getpeerinfo
).
To see which I2P addresses your node knows, use the getnodeaddresses 0 i2p
RPC.
Compatibility
Hush uses the SAM v3.1 protocol to connect to the I2P network. Any I2P router that supports it can be used.
Ports in I2P and Hush
Hush uses the SAM v3.1 protocol. One particularity of SAM v3.1 is that it does not support ports, unlike newer versions of SAM (v3.2 and up) that do support them and default the port numbers to 0. From the point of view of peers that use newer versions of SAM or other protocols that support ports, a SAM v3.1 peer is connecting to them on port 0, from source port 0.
To allow future upgrades to newer versions of SAM, Hush sets its
listening port to 0 when listening for incoming I2P connections and advertises
its own I2P address with port 0. Furthermore, it will not attempt to connect to
I2P addresses with a non-zero port number because with SAM v3.1 the destination
port (TO_PORT
) is always set to 0 and is not in the control of Hush.
Bandwidth
By default, your node shares bandwidth and transit tunnels with the I2P network in order to increase your anonymity with cover traffic, help the I2P router used by your node integrate optimally with the network, and give back to the network. It's important that the nodes of a popular application like Hush contribute as much to the I2P network as they consume.
It is possible, though strongly discouraged, to change your I2P router configuration to limit the amount of I2P traffic relayed by your node.
With i2pd
, this can be done by adjusting the bandwidth
, share
and
transittunnels
options in your i2pd.conf
file. For example, to limit total
I2P traffic to 256KB/s and share 50% of this limit for a maximum of 20 transit
tunnels:
bandwidth = 256
share = 50
[limits]
transittunnels = 20
Similar bandwidth configuration options for the Java I2P router can be found in
http://127.0.0.1:7657/config
under the "Bandwidth" tab.
Before doing this, please see the "Participating Traffic Considerations" section in Embedding I2P in your Application.
In most cases, the default router settings should work fine.
Bundling I2P in a Hush application
Please see the "General Guidance for Developers" section in https://geti2p.net/en/docs/api/samv3 if you are developing a downstream application that may be bundling I2P with Hush.