+----------------------------------------------------------------------- | Running ${PKGSTEM} on OpenBSD +----------------------------------------------------------------------- Keybase and KBFS ================ The keybase package includes two daemons which you need to run as regular user to access to the most of the Keybase features. "keybase" is the main daemon and you can control it with "keybase ctl". KBFS is a distributed and encrypted filesystem. Also, it's used as a remote for the encrypted git repos. You need to run "kbfsfuse" to be able to use the "keybase fs" commands to access the files on KBFS. The git remote helper can work directly with the keybase daemon and it doesn't need the kbfsfuse daemon running. Despite the name the daemon will not use FUSE, so you can run it without root access. The "kbfsfuse" daemon will wait until the keybase daemon is ready. You can start both in parallel without worrying about the order. Upstream uses these commands to autostart the daemons (the logs are saved in ~/.cache/keybase): - keybase --debug --use-default-log-file service --auto-forked - kbfsfuse -debug -log-to-file -mode default The default mode of KBFS uses part of the memory to speed up the access to the most used files on KBFS. Upstream provides the mode "constrained" for systems with limited resources which they use for phones but can work also on computers. If KBFS is still consuming too much resources, try "memoryLimited". It will use the minimal memory required to work but the access to files will be slow. Using the Keybase services requires an account on keybase.io. If you don't have an account, use "keybase signup" to register a new account and "keybase login" to provision every new computer. If you have a weak connection to the internet, you can speed up the access to the KBFS files with an encrypted local cache: "keybase fs sync enable /keybase/private/youruser".