Kubo was the first IPFS implementation and is the most widely used one today. It implements the Interplanetary Filesystem - the Web3 standard for content-addressing, interoperable with HTTP. It is powered by IPLD's data models and libp2p for network communication. Kubo is written in Go. Featureset * Runs an IPFS-Node as a network service * Command Line Interface to IPFS-Nodes * Local Web2-to-Web3 HTTP Gateway functionality * HTTP RPC API (/api/v0) to access and control the daemon * IPFS's internal Webgui can be used to manage the Kubo nodes IPFS is a global, versioned, peer-to-peer filesystem. It combines good ideas from previous systems such as Git, BitTorrent, Kademlia, SFS, and the Web. It is like a single BitTorrent swarm, exchanging git objects. IPFS provides an interface as simple as the HTTP web, but with permanence built-in. You can also mount the world at /ipfs.
Binary packages can be installed with the high-level tool pkgin (which can be installed with pkg_add) or pkg_add(1) (installed by default). The NetBSD packages collection is also designed to permit easy installation from source.
The pkg_admin audit command locates any installed package which has been mentioned in security advisories as having vulnerabilities.
Please note the vulnerabilities database might not be fully accurate, and not every bug is exploitable with every configuration.
Problem reports, updates or suggestions for this package should be reported with send-pr.