@node nncp-daemon @section nncp-daemon @example $ nncp-daemon [options] [-maxconn INT] [-bind ADDR] [-ucspi] [-autotoss*] [-nock] [-mcd-once] [-yggdrasil PRV;BIND[,...];[PUB,...];[PEER,...]] @end example Start listening TCP daemon, wait for incoming connections and run @ref{Sync, synchronization protocol} with each of them. You can run @ref{nncp-toss} utility in background to process inbound packets from time to time. @option{-maxconn} option specifies how many simultaneous clients daemon can handle. @option{-bind} option specifies @option{addr:port} it must bind to and listen. It could be run as @url{http://cr.yp.to/ucspi-tcp.html, UCSPI-TCP} service, by specifying @option{-ucspi} option. Pay attention that because it uses @code{stdin}/@code{stdout}, it can not effectively work with IO timeouts and connection closing can propagate up to 5 minutes in practice. Example startup command: @verbatim tcpserver -DHR -l 0 ::0 uucp nncp-daemon -quiet -ucspi @end verbatim Also it is some kind of backward compatible with @command{inetd} interface, just lacking knowledge or remote's address: @verbatim uucp stream tcp6 nowait nncpuser /usr/local/bin/nncp-daemon nncp-daemon -quiet -ucspi @end verbatim @option{-autotoss} option runs tosser on node's spool every second during the call. All @option{-autotoss-*} options is the same as in @ref{nncp-toss} command. Read @ref{CfgNoCK, more} about @option{-nock} option. @option{-mcd-once} option sends @ref{MCD} announcements once and quits. Could be useful with inetd-based setup, where daemons are not running. With @option{-yggdrasil} option daemon acts as a @ref{Yggdrasil} listener daemon.