move most of README into docs, add more pointers
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README.md
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README.md
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@ -19,274 +19,8 @@ and do not need to be memorized.
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* PyCon 2016 presentation: [Slides](http://www.lothar.com/~warner/MagicWormhole-PyCon2016.pdf), [Video](https://youtu.be/oFrTqQw0_3c)
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## Example
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Sender:
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```
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% wormhole send README.md
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Sending 7924 byte file named 'README.md'
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On the other computer, please run: wormhole receive
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Wormhole code is: 7-crossover-clockwork
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Sending (<-10.0.1.43:58988)..
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100%|=========================| 7.92K/7.92K [00:00<00:00, 6.02MB/s]
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File sent.. waiting for confirmation
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Confirmation received. Transfer complete.
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```
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Receiver:
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```
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% wormhole receive
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Enter receive wormhole code: 7-crossover-clockwork
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Receiving file (7924 bytes) into: README.md
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ok? (y/n): y
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Receiving (->tcp:10.0.1.43:58986)..
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100%|===========================| 7.92K/7.92K [00:00<00:00, 120KB/s]
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Received file written to README.md
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```
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## Installation
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```$ pip install magic-wormhole```
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You either want to do this into a "user" environment (putting the
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``wormhole`` executable in ``~/.local/bin/wormhole``) like this:
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```
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pip install --user magic-wormhole
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```
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or put it into a virtualenv, to avoid modifying the system python's
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libraries, like this:
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```
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virtualenv venv
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source venv/bin/activate
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pip install magic-wormhole
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```
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You probably *don't* want to use ``sudo`` when you run ``pip``.
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### OS X
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On OS X, you may need to install `pip` and run `$ xcode-select --install` to
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get GCC.
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Or with `homebrew`:
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`$ brew install magic-wormhole`
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### Linux
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On Debian 9 and Ubuntu 17.04+ with `apt`:
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```$ sudo apt install magic-wormhole```
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On previous versions of the Debian/Ubuntu systems, or if you want to install
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the latest version, you may first need:
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`$ sudo apt-get install python-pip build-essential python-dev libffi-dev libssl-dev`
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On Fedora:
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`$ sudo dnf install python-pip python-devel libffi-devel openssl-devel gcc-c++
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libtool redhat-rpm-config`.
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Note: If you get errors like `fatal error: sodium.h: No such file or
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directory` on Linux, either use `SODIUM_INSTALL=bundled pip install
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magic-wormhole`, or try installing the `libsodium-dev` / `libsodium-devel`
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package. These work around a bug in pynacl which gets confused when the
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libsodium runtime is installed (e.g. `libsodium13`) but not the development
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package.
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### Windows
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On Windows, python2 may work better than python3. On older systems, `$ pip
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install --upgrade pip` may be necessary to get a version that can compile all
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the dependencies. Most of the dependencies are published as binary wheels,
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but in case your system is unable to find these, it will have to compile
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them, for which Microsoft Visual C++ 9.0 may be required. Get it from
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http://aka.ms/vcpython27 .
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## Motivation
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* Moving a file to a friend's machine, when the humans can speak to each
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other (directly) but the computers cannot
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* Delivering a properly-random password to a new user via the phone
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* Supplying an SSH public key for future login use
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Copying files onto a USB stick requires physical proximity, and is
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uncomfortable for transferring long-term secrets because flash memory is hard
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to erase. Copying files with ssh/scp is fine, but requires previous
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arrangements and an account on the target machine, and how do you bootstrap
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the account? Copying files through email first requires transcribing an email
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address in the opposite direction, and is even worse for secrets, because
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email is unencrypted. Copying files through encrypted email requires
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bootstrapping a GPG key as well as an email address. Copying files through
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Dropbox is not secure against the Dropbox server and results in a large URL
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that must be transcribed. Using a URL shortener adds an extra step, reveals
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the full URL to the shortening service, and leaves a short URL that can be
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guessed by outsiders.
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Many common use cases start with a human-mediated communication channel, such
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as IRC, IM, email, a phone call, or a face-to-face conversation. Some of
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these are basically secret, or are "secret enough" to last until the code is
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delivered and used. If this does not feel strong enough, users can turn on
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additional verification that doesn't depend upon the secrecy of the channel.
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The notion of a "magic wormhole" comes from the image of two distant wizards
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speaking the same enchanted phrase at the same time, and causing a mystical
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connection to pop into existence between them. The wizards then throw books
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into the wormhole and they fall out the other side. Transferring files
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securely should be that easy.
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## Design
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The `wormhole` tool uses PAKE "Password-Authenticated Key Exchange", a family
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of cryptographic algorithms that uses a short low-entropy password to
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establish a strong high-entropy shared key. This key can then be used to
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encrypt data. `wormhole` uses the SPAKE2 algorithm, due to Abdalla and
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Pointcheval[1].
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PAKE effectively trades off interaction against offline attacks. The only way
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for a network attacker to learn the shared key is to perform a
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man-in-the-middle attack during the initial connection attempt, and to
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correctly guess the code being used by both sides. Their chance of doing this
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is inversely proportional to the entropy of the wormhole code. The default is
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to use a 16-bit code (use --code-length= to change this), so for each use of
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the tool, an attacker gets a 1-in-65536 chance of success. As such, users can
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expect to see many error messages before the attacker has a reasonable chance
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of success.
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## Timing
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The program does not have any built-in timeouts, however it is expected that
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both clients will be run within an hour or so of each other. This makes the
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tool most useful for people who are having a real-time conversation already,
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and want to graduate to a secure connection. Both clients must be left
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running until the transfer has finished.
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## Relays
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The wormhole library requires a "Rendezvous Server": a simple WebSocket-based
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relay that delivers messages from one client to another. This allows the
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wormhole codes to omit IP addresses and port numbers. The URL of a public
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server is baked into the library for use as a default, and will be freely
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available until volume or abuse makes it infeasible to support. Applications
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which desire more reliability can easily run their own relay and configure
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their clients to use it instead. Code for the Rendezvous Server is included
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in the library.
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The file-transfer commands also use a "Transit Relay", which is another
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simple server that glues together two inbound TCP connections and transfers
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data on each to the other. The `wormhole send` file mode shares the IP
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addresses of each client with the other (inside the encrypted message), and
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both clients first attempt to connect directly. If this fails, they fall back
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to using the transit relay. As before, the host/port of a public server is
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baked into the library, and should be sufficient to handle moderate traffic.
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The protocol includes provisions to deliver notices and error messages to
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clients: if either relay must be shut down, these channels will be used to
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provide information about alternatives.
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## CLI tool
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* `wormhole send [args] --text TEXT`
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* `wormhole send [args] FILENAME`
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* `wormhole send [args] DIRNAME`
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* `wormhole receive [args]`
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Both commands accept additional arguments to influence their behavior:
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* `--code-length WORDS`: use more or fewer than 2 words for the code
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* `--verify` : print (and ask user to compare) extra verification string
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## Library
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The `wormhole` module makes it possible for other applications to use these
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code-protected channels. This includes Twisted support, and (in the future)
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will include blocking/synchronous support too. See docs/api.md for details.
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The file-transfer tools use a second module named `wormhole.transit`, which
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provides an encrypted record-pipe. It knows how to use the Transit Relay as
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well as direct connections, and attempts them all in parallel.
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`TransitSender` and `TransitReceiver` are distinct, although once the
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connection is established, data can flow in either direction. All data is
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encrypted (using nacl/libsodium "secretbox") using a key derived from the
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PAKE phase. See `src/wormhole/cli/cmd_send.py` for examples.
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## Development
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* Bugs and Patches: https://github.com/warner/magic-wormhole
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* Chat: #magic-wormhole on irc.freenode.net
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To set up Magic Wormhole for development, you will first need to
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install [virtualenv][].
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Once you've done that, ``git clone`` the repo, ``cd`` into the root of the
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repository, and run:
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```
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virtualenv venv
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source venv/bin/activate
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pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
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```
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Now your virtualenv has been activated. You'll want to re-run
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`source venv/bin/activate` for every new terminal session you open.
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To install Magic Wormhole and its development dependencies into your
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virtualenv, run:
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```
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pip install -e .[dev]
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```
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While the virtualenv is active, running ``wormhole`` will get you the
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development version.
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### Running Tests
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Within your virtualenv, the command-line program `trial` will
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run the test suite:
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```
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trial wormhole
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```
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This tests the entire `wormhole` package. If you want to run
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only the tests for a specific module, or even just a specific test,
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you can specify it instead via Python's standard dotted
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import notation, e.g.:
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```
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trial wormhole.test.test_cli.PregeneratedCode.test_file_tor
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```
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Developers can also just clone the source tree and run `tox` to run the unit
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tests on all supported (and installed) versions of python: 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, and
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3.6.
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### Troubleshooting
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Every so often, you might get a traceback with the following
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kind of error:
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```
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pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'magic-wormhole==0.9.1-268.g66e0d86.dirty' distribution was not found and is required by the application
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```
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If this happens, run `pip install -e .[dev]` again.
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[virtualenv]: http://python-guide-pt-br.readthedocs.io/en/latest/dev/virtualenvs/
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### Other
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Relevant [xkcd](https://xkcd.com/949/) :-)
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For complete documentation, please see https://magic-wormhole.readthedocs.io
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or the docs/ subdirectory.
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## License, Compatibility
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@ -296,7 +30,3 @@ This library is compatible with python2.7, 3.4, 3.5, and 3.6 . It is
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probably compatible with py2.6, but the latest Twisted (>=15.5.0) is
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not.
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<!-- footnotes -->
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[1]: http://www.di.ens.fr/~pointche/Documents/Papers/2005_rsa.pdf "RSA 2005"
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@ -10,16 +10,17 @@ Magic-Wormhole: Get Things From One Computer To Another, Safely
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:maxdepth: 2
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:caption: Contents:
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introduction
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attacks
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welcome
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tor
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introduction
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api
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transit
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server-protocol
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client-protocol
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file-transfer-protocol
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attacks
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journal
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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
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# Introduction
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# Protocol/API/Library Introduction
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The magic-wormhole (Python) distribution provides several things: an
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executable tool ("bin/wormhole"), an importable library (`import wormhole`),
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