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***********************
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Understanding Reticulum
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***********************
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This document will briefly describe the overall purpose and operating principles of Reticulum, a
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networking stack designed for reliable and secure communication over high-latency, low-bandwidth
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links. It should give you an overview of how the stack works, and an understanding of how to
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develop networked applications using Reticulum.
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This document is not an exhaustive source of information on Reticulum, at least not yet. Currently,
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the best place to go for such information is the Python reference implementation of Reticulum. Both
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the reference implementation and this document may (and will) change rapidly in the current phase
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of development, but historical versions will always be available in the Git repositories.
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After reading this document, you should be well-equipped to understand how a Reticulum network
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operates, what it can achieve, and how you can use it yourself. If you want to help out with the
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development, this is also the place to start, since it will also provide a pretty clear overview of the
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sentiments and the philosophy behind Reticulum.
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Motivation
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==========
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The primary motivation for designing and implementing Reticulum has been the current lack of
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reliable, functional and secure minimal-infrastructure modes of digital communication. It is my
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belief that it is highly desirable to create a cheap and reliable way to set up a wide-range digital
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communication network that can securely allow exchange of information between people and
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machines, with no central point of authority, control, censorship or barrier to entry.
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Almost all of the various networking stacks in wide use today share a common limitation, namely
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that they require large amounts of coordination and trust to work. You can’t just plug in a bunch of
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ethernet cables to the same switch, or turn on a number of WiFi radios, and expect such a setup to
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provide a reliable platform for communication.
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This need for coordination and trust inevitably leads to an environment of control, where it's very
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easy for infrastructure operators or governments to control or alter traffic.
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Reticulum aims to require as little coordination and trust as possible. In fact, the only
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“coordination” required is to know how to get connected to a Reticulum network. Since Reticulum
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is medium agnostic, this could be whatever is best suited to the situation. In some cases, this might
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be 1200 baud packet radio links over VHF frequencies, in other cases it might be a microwave
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network using off-the-shelf radios. At the time of release of this document, the recommended setup
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is using cheap LoRa radio modules with an open source firmware (see the chapter *Reference System
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Setup* ), connected to a small computer like a Raspberry Pi. As an example, the default reference
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setup provides a channel capacity of 5.4 Kbps, and a usable direct node-to-node range of around 15
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kilometers (indefinitely extendable by using multiple hops).
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Goals
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=====
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To be as widely usable and easy to implement as possible, the following goals have been used to
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guide the design of Reticulum:
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* **Fully useable as open source software stack**
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Reticulum must be implemented, and be able to run using only open source software. This is
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critical to ensuring availability, security and transparency of the system.
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* **Hardware layer agnosticism**
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Reticulum shall be fully hardware agnostic, and should be useable over a wide range
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physical networking layers, such as data radios, serial lines, modems, handheld transceivers,
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wired ethernet, wifi, or anything else that can carry a digital data stream. Hardware made for
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dedicated Reticulum use shall be as cheap as possible and use off-the-shelf components, so
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it can be easily replicated.
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* **Very low bandwidth requirements**
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Reticulum should be able to function reliably over links with a data capacity as low as *1,*
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*bps*.
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* **Encryption by default**
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Reticulum must use encryption by default where possible and applicable.
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* **Unlicensed use**
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Reticulum shall be functional over physical communication mediums that do not require any
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form of license to use. Reticulum must be designed in a way, so it is usable over ISM radio
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frequency bands, and can provide functional long distance links in such conditions.
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* **Supplied software**
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Apart from the core networking stack and API, that allows any developer to build
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applications with Reticulum, a basic communication suite using Reticulum must be
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implemented and released at the same time as Reticulum itself. This shall serve both as a
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functional communication suite, and as an example and learning resource to others wishing
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to build applications with Reticulum.
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* **Ease of use**
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The reference implementation of Reticulum is written in Python, to make it very easy to use
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and understand. Any programmer with only basic experience should be able to use
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Reticulum in their own applications.
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* **Low cost**
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It shall be as cheap as possible to deploy a communication system based on Reticulum. This
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should be achieved by using cheap off-the-shelf hardware that potential users might already
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own. The cost of setting up a functioning node should be less than $100 even if all parts
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needs to be purchased.
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Introduction & Basic Functionality
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==================================
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Reticulum is a networking stack suited for high-latency, low-bandwidth links. Reticulum is at it’s
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core *message oriented* , but can provide connection oriented sessions. It is suited for both local
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point-to-point or point-to-multipoint scenarios where alle nodes are within range of each other, as
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well as scenarios where packets need to be transported over multiple hops to reach the recipient.
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Reticulum does away with the idea of addresses and ports known from IP, TCP and UDP. Instead
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Reticulum uses the singular concept of *destinations*. Any application using Reticulum as it’s
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networking stack will need to create one or more destinations to receive data, and know the
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destinations it needs to send data to.
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Reticulum encrypts all data by default using public-key cryptography. Any message sent to a
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destination is encrypted with that destinations public key. Reticulum also offers symmetric key
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encryption for group-oriented communications, as well as unencrypted packets for broadcast
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purposes, or situations where you need the communication to be in plain text. The multi-hop
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transport, coordination, verification and reliability layers are fully autonomous and based on public
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key cryptography.
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Reticulum can connect to a variety of interfaces such as radio modems, data radios and serial ports,
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and offers the possibility to easily tunnel Reticulum traffic over IP links such as the Internet or
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private IP networks.
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Destinations
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------------
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To receive and send data with the Reticulum stack, an application needs to create one or more
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destinations. Reticulum uses three different basic destination types, and one special:
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* **Single**
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The *single* destination type defines a public-key encrypted destination. Any data sent to this
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destination will be encrypted with the destination’s public key, and will only be readable by
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the creator of the destination.
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* **Group**
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The *group* destination type defines a symmetrically encrypted destination. Data sent to this
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destination will be encrypted with a symmetric key, and will be readable by anyone in
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possession of the key. The *group* destination can be used just as well by only two peers, as it
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can by many.
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* **Plain**
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A *plain* destination type is unencrypted, and suited for traffic that should be broadcast to a
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number of users, or should be readable by anyone.
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* **Link**
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A *link* is a special destination type, that serves as an abstract channel between two *single*
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destinations, directly connected or over multiple hops. The *link* also offers reliability and
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more efficient encryption, and as such is useful even when nodes are directly connected.
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Destination Naming
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Destinations are created and named in an easy to understand dotted notation of *aspects* , and
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represented on the network as a hash of this value. The hash is a SHA-256 truncated to 80 bits. The
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top level aspect should always be the a unique identifier for the application using the destination.
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The next levels of aspects can be defined in any way by the creator of the application. For example,
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a destination for a messaging application could be made up of the application name and a username,
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and look like this:
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.. code-block::
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name: simplemessenger.someuser hash: 2a7ddfab5213f916dea
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For the *single* destination, Reticulum will automatically append the associated public key as a
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destination aspect before hashing. This is done to ensure only the correct destination is reached,
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since anyone can listen to any destination name. Appending the public key ensures that a given
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packet is only directed at the destination that holds the corresponding private key to decrypt the
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packet. It is important to understand that anyone can use the destination name
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*simplemessenger.myusername* , but each person that does so will still have a different destination
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hash, because their public keys will differ. In actual use of *single* destination naming, it is advisable
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not to use any uniquely identifying features in aspect naming, though. In the simple messenger
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example, when using *single* destinations, we would instead use a destination naming scheme such
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as *simplemessenger.user* where appending the public key expands the destination into a uniquely
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identifying one.
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To recap, the destination types should be used in the following situations:
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* **Single**
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When private communication between two endpoints is needed. Supports routing.
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* **Group**
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When private communication between two or more endpoints is needed. More efficient in
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data usage than *single* destinations. Supports routing indirectly, but must first be established
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through a *single* destination.
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* **Plain**
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When plain-text communication is desirable, for example when broadcasting information.
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To communicate with a *single* destination, you need to know it’s public key. Any method for
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obtaining the public key is valid, but Reticulum includes a simple mechanism for making other
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nodes aware of your destinations public key, called the *announce*.
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Note that this information could be shared and verified in many other ways, and that it is therefore
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not required to use the announce functionality, although it is by far the easiest, and should probably
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be used if you are not confident in how to verify public keys and signatures manually.
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Public Key Announcements
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------------------------
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An *announce* will send a special packet over any configured interfaces, containing all needed
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information about the destination hash and public key, and can also contain some additional,
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application specific data. The entire packet is signed by the sender to ensure authenticity. It is not
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required to use the announce functionality, but in many cases it will be the simplest way to share
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public keys on the network. As an example, an announce in a simple messenger application might
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contain the following information:
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* The announcers destination hash
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* The announcers public key
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* Application specific data, in this case the users nickname and availability status
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* A random blob, making each new announce unique
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* A signature of the above information, verifying authenticity
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With this information, any Reticulum node that receives it will be able to reconstruct an outgoing
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destination to securely communicate with that destination. You might have noticed that there is one
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piece of information lacking to reconstruct full knowledge of the announced destination, and that is
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the aspect names of the destination. These are intentionally left out to save bandwidth, since they
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will be implicit in almost all cases. If a destination name is not entirely implicit, information can be
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included in the application specific data part that will allow the receiver to infer the naming.
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It is important to note that announcements will be forwarded throughout the network according to a
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certain pattern. This will be detailed later. Seeing how *single* destinations are always tied to a
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private/public key pair leads us to the next topic.
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Identities
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----------
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In Reticulum, an *identity* does not necessarily represent a personal identity, but is an abstraction that
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can represent any kind of *verified entity*. This could very well be a person, but it could also be the
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control interface of a machine, a program, robot, computer, sensor or something else entirely. In
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general, any kind of agent that can act, or be acted upon, or store or manipulate information, can be
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represented as an identity.
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As we have seen, a *single* destination will always have an *identity* tied to it, but not *plain* or *group*
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destinations. Destinations and identities share a multilateral connection. You can create a
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destination, and if it is not connected to an identity upon creation, it will just create a new one to use
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automatically. This may be desirable in some situations, but often you will probably want to create
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the identity first, and then link it to created destinations.
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Building upon the simple messenger example, we could use an identity to represent the user of the
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application. Destinations created will then be linked to this identity to allow communication to
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reach the user. In such a case it is of great importance to store the user’s identity securely and
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privately.
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Getting Further
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---------------
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The above functions and principles form the core of Reticulum, and would suffice to create
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functional networked applications in local clusters, for example over radio links where all interested
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nodes can hear each other. But to be truly useful, we need a way to go further. In the next chapter,
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two concepts that allow this will be introduced, *paths* and *resources*.
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Reticulum Transport
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===================
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I have purposefully avoided the term routing until now, and will continue to do so, because the
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current methods of routing used in IP based networks are fundamentally incompatible for the link
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types that Reticulum was designed to handle. These routing methodologies assume trust at the
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physical layer. Since Reticulum is designed to run over open radio spectrum, no such trust exists.
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Furthermore, existing routing protocols like BGP or OSPF carry too much overhead to be
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practically useable over bandwidth-limited, high-latency links.
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To overcome such challenges, Reticulum’s *Transport* system uses public-key cryptography to
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implement the concept of *paths* that allow discovery of how to get information to a certain
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destination, and *resources* that help alleviate congestion and make reliable communication more
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efficient and less bandwidth-hungry.
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Threading a Path
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----------------
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In networks with changing topology and trustless connectivity, nodes need a way to establish
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*verified connectivity* with each other. To do this, the following process is employed:
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* First, the node that wishes to establish connectivity will send out a special packet, that
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traverses the network and locates the desired destination. Along the way, the nodes that
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forward the packet will take note of this *link request*.
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* Second, if the destination accepts the *link request* , it will send back a packet that proves the
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authenticity of it’s identity (and the receipt of the link request) to the initiating node. All
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nodes that initially forwarded the packet will also be able to verify this proof, and thus
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accept the validity of the *link* throughout the network.
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* When the validity of the *link* has been accepted by forwarding nodes, these nodes will
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remember the *link* , and it can subsequently be used by referring to a hash representing it.
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* As a part of the *link request* , a Diffie-Hellman key exchange takes place, that sets up an
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efficient symmetrically encrypted tunnel between the two nodes, using elliptic curve
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cryptography. As such, this mode of communication is preferred, even for situations when
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nodes can directly communicate, when the amount of data to be exchanged numbers in the
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tens of packets.
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* When a *link* has been set up, it automatically provides message receipt functionality, so the
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sending node can obtain verified confirmation that the information reached the intended
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recipient.
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In a moment, we will discuss the specifics of how this methodology is implemented, but let’s first
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recap what purposes this serves. We first ensure that the node answering our request is actually the
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one we want to communicate with, and not a malicious actor pretending to be so. At the same time
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we establish an efficient encrypted channel. The setup of this is relatively cheap in terms of
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bandwidth, so it can be used just for a short exchange, and then recreated as needed, which will also
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rotate encryption keys (keys can also be rotated over an existing path), but the link can also be kept
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alive for longer periods of time, if this is more suitable to the application. The amount of bandwidth
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used on keeping a link open is practically negligible. The procedure also inserts the *link id* , a hash
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calculated from the link request packet, into the memory of forwarding nodes, which means that the
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communicating nodes can thereafter reach each other simply by referring to this *link id*.
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**Step 1, pathfinding**
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The pathfinding method builds on the *announce* functionality discussed earlier. When an announce
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is sent out by a node, it will be forwarded by any node receiving it, but according to some specific
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rules:
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* If this announce has already been received before, ignore it.
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* Record into a table which node the announce was received from, and how many times in
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total it has been retransmitted to get here.
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* If the announce has been retransmitted *m+1* times, it will not be forwarded. By default, *m* is
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set to 18.
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* The announce will be assigned a delay *d* = *ch* seconds, where *c* is a decay constant, by
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default 2, and *h* is the amount of times this packet has already been forwarded.
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* The packet will be given a priority *p = 1/d*.
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* If at least *d* seconds has passed since the announce was received, and no other packets with a
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priority higher than *p* are waiting in the queue (see Packet Prioritisation), and the channel is
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not utilized by other traffic, the announce will be forwarded.
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* If no other nodes are heard retransmitting the announce with a greater hop count than when
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it left this node, transmitting it will be retried *r* times. By default, *r* is set to 2. Retries follow
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same rules as above, with the exception that it must wait for at least *d = ch+1 + t* seconds, ie.,
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the amount of time it would take the next node to retransmit the packet. By default, *t* is set to
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10.
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* If a newer announce from the same destination arrives, while an identical one is already in
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the queue, the newest announce is discarded. If the newest announce contains different
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application specific data, it will replace the old announce, but will use *d* and *p* of the old
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announce.
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Once an announce has reached a node in the network, any other node in direct contact with that
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node will be able to reach the destination the announce originated from, simply by sending a packet
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addressed to that destination. Any node with knowledge of the announce will be able to direct the
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packet towards the destination by looking up the next node with the shortest amount of hops to the
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destination. The specifics of this process is detailed in *Path Calculation*.
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According to these rules and default constants, an announce will propagate throughout the network
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in a predictable way. In an example network utilising the default constants, and with an average link
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distance of *Lavg =* 15 kilometers, an announce will be able to propagate outwards to a radius of 180
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kilometers in 34 minutes, and a *maximum announce radius* of 270 kilometers in approximately 3
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days. Methods for overcoming the distance limitation of *m * Lavg* will be introduced later in this
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chapter.
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**Step 2, link establishment**
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After seeing how the conditions for finding a path through the network are created, we will now
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explore how two nodes can establish reliable communications over multiple hops. The *link* in
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Reticulum terminology should not be viewed as a direct node-to-node link on the physical layer, but
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as an abstract channel, that can be open for any amount of time, and can span an arbitrary number
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of hops, where information will be exchanged between two nodes.
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* When a node in the network wants to establish verified connectivity with another node, it
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will create a *link request* packet, and broadcast it.
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* The *link request* packet contains the destination hash *Hd* , and an asymmetrically encrypted
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part containing the following data: The source hash *Hs* , a symmetric key *Lk* , a truncated
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hash of a random number *Hr* , and a signature *S* of the plaintext values of *Hd* , *Hs* , *Lk* and *Hr*.
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* The broadcasted packet will be directed through the network according to the rules laid out
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previously.
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* Any node that forwards the link request will store a *link id* in it’s *link table* , along with the
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amount of hops the packet had taken when received. The link id is a hash of the entire link
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request packet. If the path is not *proven* within some set amount of time, the entry will be
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dropped from the table again.
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* When the destination receives the link request packet, it will decide whether to accept the
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request. If it is accepted, it will create a special packet called a *proof*. A *proof* is a simple
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construct, consisting of a truncated hash of the message that needs to be proven, and a
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signature (made by the destination’s private key) of this hash. This *proof* effectively verifies
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that the intended recipient got the packet, and also serves to verify the discovered path
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through the network. Since the *proof* hash matches the *path id* in the intermediary nodes’
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*path tables* , the intermediary nodes can forward the proof all the way back to the source.
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* When the source receives the *proof* , it will know unequivocally that a verified path has been
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established to the destination, and that information can now be exchanged reliably and
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securely.
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It’s important to note that this methodology ensures that the source of the request does not need to
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reveal any identifying information. Only the intended destination will know “who called”, so to
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speak. This is a huge improvement to protocols like IP, where by design, you have to reveal your
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own address to communicate with anyone, unless you jump through a lot of hoops to hide it.
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Reticulum offers initiator anonymity by design.
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When using *links* , Reticulum will automatically verify anything sent over the link, and also
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automates retransmissions if parts of a message was lost along the way. Due to the caching features
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of Reticulum, such a retransmission does not need to travel the entire length of an established path.
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If a packet is lost on the 8th hop of a 12 hop path, it can be fetched from the last hop that received it
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reliably.
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Crossing Continents
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-------------------
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When a packet needs to travel farther than local network topology knowledge stretches, a system of
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geographical or topological hinting is used to direct the packet towards a network segment with
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direct knowledge of the intended destination. This functionality is currently left out of the protocol
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for simplicity of testing other parts, but will be activated in a future release. For more information
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on when, refer to the roadmap on the website.
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Resourceful Memory
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------------------
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In traditional networks, large amounts of data is rapidly exchanged with very low latency. Links of
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several thousand kilometers will often only have round-trip latency in the tens of milliseconds, and
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as such, traditional protocols are often designed to not store any transmitted data at intermediary
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hops. If a transmission error occurs, the sending node will simply notice the lack of a packet
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acknowledgement, and retransmit the packet all the way, until it hears back from the receiver that it
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got the intended data.
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In bandwidth-limited and high-latency conditions, such behaviour quickly causes congestion on the
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network, and communications that span many hops become exceedingly expensive in terms of
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bandwidth usage, due to the higher risk of some packets failing.
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Reticulum alleviates this in part with it’s *path* discovery methodology, and in part by implementing
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*resource* caching at all nodes that can support it. Network operation can be made much more
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efficient by caching everything for a period of time, and given the availability of cheap memory and
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storage, this is a very welcome tradeoff. A gigabyte of memory can store millions of Reticulum
|
||
packets, and since everything is encrypted by default, the storing poses very little privacy risk.
|
||
|
||
In a Reticulum network, any node that is able to do so, should cache as many packets as it’s
|
||
memory will allow for. When a packet is received, a timestamp and a hash of the packet is stored
|
||
along with the full packet itself, and it will be kept in storage until the allocated cache storage is
|
||
full, whereupon the packet that was last accessed in the cache will be deleted. If a packet is accessed
|
||
from the cache, it’s timestamp will be updated to the current time, to ensure that packets that are
|
||
used stay in the cache, and packets that are not used are dropped from memory.
|
||
|
||
Some packet types are stored in separate caching tables, that allow easier lookup for other nodes.
|
||
For example, an announce is stored in a way, that allows other nodes to request the public key for a
|
||
certain destination, and as such the network as a whole operates as a distributed key ledger.
|
||
|
||
For more details on how the caching works and is used, see the reference implementation source
|
||
code.
|
||
|
||
Reference System Setup
|
||
======================
|
||
|
||
This section will detail the recommended *Reference System Setup* for Reticulum. It is important to
|
||
note that Reticulum is designed to be usable over more or less any medium that allows you to send
|
||
and receive data in a digital form, and satisfies some very low minimum requirements. The
|
||
communication channel must support at least half-duplex operation, and provide an average
|
||
throughput of around 1000 bits per second, and supports a physical layer MTU of 500 bytes. The
|
||
Reticulum software should be able to run on more or less any hardware that can provide a Python
|
||
runtime environment.
|
||
|
||
That being said, the reference setup has been outlined to provide a common platform for anyone
|
||
who wants to help in the development of Reticulum, and for everyone who wants to know a
|
||
recommended setup to get started. A reference system consists of three parts:
|
||
|
||
|
||
* **A channel access device**
|
||
Or *CAD* , in short, provides access to the physical medium whereupon the communication
|
||
takes place, for example a radio with an integrated modem. A setup with a separate modem
|
||
connected to a radio would also be termed a “channel access device”.
|
||
* **A host device**
|
||
Some sort of computing device that can run the necessary software, communicates with the
|
||
channel access device, and provides user interaction.
|
||
* **A software stack**
|
||
The software implementing the Reticulum protocol and applications using it.
|
||
|
||
The reference setup can be considered a relatively stable platform to develop on, and also to start
|
||
building networks on. While details of the implementation might change at the current stage of
|
||
development, it is the goal to maintain hardware compatibility for as long as entirely possible, and
|
||
the current reference setup has been determined to provide a functional platform for many years
|
||
into the future. The current Reference System Setup is as follows:
|
||
|
||
|
||
* **Channel Access Device**
|
||
A data radio consisting of a LoRa radio module, and a microcontroller with open source
|
||
firmware, that can connect to host devices via USB. It operates in either the 430, 868 or 900
|
||
MHz frequency bands. More details on the exact parts and how to get/make one can be
|
||
found on the website.
|
||
* **Host device**
|
||
Any computer device running Linux and Python. A Raspberry Pi with Raspbian is
|
||
recommended.
|
||
* **Software stack**
|
||
The current Reference Implementation Release of Reticulum, running on a Debian based
|
||
operating system.
|
||
|
||
It is very important to note, that the reference channel access device **does not** use the LoRaWAN
|
||
standard, but uses a custom MAC layer on top of the plain LoRa modulation! As such, you will
|
||
need a plain LoRa radio module connected to an MCU with the correct Reticulum firmware. Full
|
||
details on how to get or make such a device is available on the website.
|
||
|
||
With the current reference setup, it should be possible to get on a Reticulum network for around 70$
|
||
even if you have none of the hardware already.
|
||
|
||
Protocol Specifics
|
||
==================
|
||
|
||
This chapter will detail protocol specific information that is essential to the implementation of
|
||
Reticulum, but non critical in understanding how the protocol works on a general level. It should be
|
||
treated more as a reference than as essential reading.
|
||
|
||
Node Types
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
Currently Reticulum defines two node types, the *Station* and the *Peer*. A node is a *station* if it fixed
|
||
in one place, and if it is intended to be kept online at all times. Otherwise the node is a *peer*. This
|
||
distinction is made by the user configuring the node, and is used to determine what nodes on the
|
||
network will help forward traffic, and what nodes rely on other nodes for connectivity.
|
||
|
||
Packet Prioritisation
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
*The packet prioritisation algorithms are subject to rapid change at the moment, and for now, they
|
||
are not documented here. See the reference implementation for more info on how this functionality
|
||
works.*
|
||
|
||
Path Calculation
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
*The path calculation algorithms are subject to rapid change at the moment, and for now, they are
|
||
not documented here. See the reference implementation for more info on how this functionality
|
||
works.*
|
||
|
||
Binary Packet Format
|
||
--------------------
|
||
|
||
*The binary packet format is subject to rapid change at the moment, and for now, it is not
|
||
documented here. See the reference implementation for the specific details on this topic.*
|