Do I run it in a command line? Do I run it as a GUI application? I think it discovers resources available through a local network and assigns addresses to the resources. What happens next? Is this information written to some file which I can read by other application? Can I put addresses generated by zeroconf into the address line of my browser and reach the web server (under condition that a web server is running on the resource)?
1 Answers
Typically each machine that offers a service will run a Zeroconf daemon, and clients will search for that on the network. On this Debian box, for instance, there's a process called avahi-daemon
. To advertise a service, a program talks to the daemon. An easy way to do that is with the program avahi-publish
, which registers a service with the daemon:
avahi-publish -s myservice _http._tcp 12345 "Here it is"
Until that program terminates, avahi-browse
will find it:
$ avahi-browse -t _http._tcp
= eth0 IPv4 myservice Web Site local
hostname = [mymachine.local]
address = [192.168.1.123]
port = [12345]
txt = ["Here it is"]
Most of the time you won't want to run a separate program just to publish the service, so your daemon will have a bit of code to do it. Here are some nice examples of how to do it in Python. There's a simple function which you call like this:
# Downloaded from http://stackp.online.fr/?p=35
# Thanks to Pierre
#
from ZeroconfService import ZeroconfService
import time
service = ZeroconfService(name="Joe's awesome FTP server",
port=3000, stype="_ftp._tcp")
service.publish()
Again, most of the time you don't have to run avahi-browse, because your browser can probably find these things for itself. Safari can on the Mac, for example - look for the "Bonjour" menu.
You can also find machines using zeroconf. My machine is addressible using the .local
domain:
ssh mymachine.local
will work even if the machine isn't in DNS. Very useful for a home network!

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