![]() Which will put it straight in your clipboard. Right-clicking any pinned file will give you a new 'share' action: Unpin works the same as pin, just like a hydrus repository petition. You can search for these files using 'system:file service'. Notice how the IPFS icon appears on your pending and pinned files. This works like hydrus's repository uploads-it won't happen immediately, but instead will be queued up at the pending menu. Thereafter, you will get the option to 'pin' and 'unpin' from a thumbnail's right-click menu, like so: You can click 'test credentials' to make sure everything is working. Hydrus uses the API port, default 5001, so you will probably want to use credentials of 127.0.0.1:5001. IPFS daemons are treated as services inside hydrus, so go to services->manage services->remote->ipfs daemons and add in your information. Your daemon listens for other instances of ipfs using port 4001, so if you know how to open that port in your firewall and router, make sure you do. When it is running, opening this page should download and display an example 'Hello World!' file from ~~~across the internet~~~. ![]() You can kill it with Ctrl + C and restart it with the ipfs daemon call again (you only have to run ipfs init once). The IPFS exe should now be running in that terminal, ready to respond to requests: Extract it somewhere and open up a terminal in the same folder, and then type: Inside should be a very simple 'ipfs' executable that does everything. I haven't used it, but it may be a nicer intro to the program. Note there is now a nicer desktop package here. ![]()
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