The discovery module defines the seam: DiscoveryProvider (subscribe/ announce over 32-byte TopicKeys) and a signed Announcement carrying root hash, ed25519 author, metadata and provider addresses. Signatures cover a deterministic postcard encoding including the topic (no cross- channel replay) and the provider identities (addresses stay refreshable hints). LanDiscovery conforms to the trait — mdns sightings become locally-authored announcements, one per pinned root — and the daemon's auto-sync now runs entirely through it: verify, index unconditionally, fetch only for trusted authors from allowlisted providers on already- pinned incomplete roots. The milestone-4 real-mdns sync test passes unchanged through the new path. Verification unit tests cover round trip, tampered root, wrong topic, forged author, mismatched signing key, and serde survival. docs/redoal-integration.md sketches the gesture-topic gossip provider against this contract. Also: fix a flaky hang in the socket-activation test (dup2(3,3) leaves CLOEXEC set when the listener already sits on fd 3; parent's listener copy masked daemon death), and give the test client a read-timeout hang guard. Add a top-level README. Dependencies: ed25519-dalek (Signature type; same implementation iroh keys use), postcard (deterministic signed encoding, iroh's canonical compact codec). Co-Authored-By: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
varde
A small, boring, distro-packageable Linux daemon that owns a content-addressed blob store and mirrors content between consenting peers, built on iroh (iroh-blobs 0.35). Applications talk to it over a unix socket: "add this path", "pin this hash", "materialize hash X at path Y". Think: what Windows Delivery Optimization is for updates — generalized, open, legible.
varde (Norwegian): a stone cairn used as a waypoint.
Design ethos
- Infrastructure, not product. No GUI, no self-updater. A daemon, a CLI, a JSON-lines socket protocol, man pages, systemd units.
- Legible to the network. Identifiable mDNS advertisement, DSCP CS1 marking, conservative rate limits (10 MiB/s up default), LAN-only with zero WAN upload by default, all transfers stop on metered connections.
- Consent-tiered. Discovery is open; replication is explicit.
Content is served only to allowlisted peers, except what you
deliberately publish (
--open-lanpins, exported tickets). All fetched data is BLAKE3-verified regardless — trust gates participation, not integrity.
Layout
| crate | role |
|---|---|
varde-proto |
wire types for the socket API (serde, no I/O) |
varde-daemon |
the service: store, endpoint, policy, socket server |
varde-ctl |
CLI client and protocol reference implementation |
dist/ holds systemd units (system + user, socket activation),
scdoc man pages, an example config, and an untested Arch PKGBUILD.
docs/ has per-milestone decision notes and the redoal integration
sketch.
Quick start
$ varde-daemon --user &
$ varde-ctl add ~/dataset -r
added 5b1c…e0 (1234567 bytes)
$ varde-ctl pin 5b1c…e0
$ varde-ctl ticket export 5b1c…e0 # hand this to another machine
$ varde-ctl ticket import <ticket> # ...which runs this
$ varde-ctl materialize 5b1c…e0 /srv/dataset # reflinks when possible
Trusted peers on the same LAN sync overlapping pins automatically:
$ varde-ctl status # shows this daemon's node id
$ varde-ctl peer trust <node-id-of-the-other-machine> # on both ends
Building and testing
$ cargo build --release
$ cargo test --workspace # spawns real daemons; no mocked iroh
$ cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets -- -D warnings
The metered feature (default on) needs D-Bus at runtime only; build
with --no-default-features for systems without it.