The easiest way to get going is with the pre-build installers found when on this page (click on the most recent workflow run and scroll down).
Alternatively you can clone the repo here.
Reto has a total trade fee of 0.6% (0.1% taker, 0.5% maker) which goes to arbitrators in it’s entirety, there is no direct network fee.
Join the Reto SimpleX Group to stay up-to-date!
Note:
If you previously installed Haveno, first clear your Haveno app directory to reset things, located at:
-Linux: ~/.local/share/Haveno/
-macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Haveno/
-Windows: ~\AppData\Roaming\Haveno\
12 peers and growing.
For posterity purposes, it should be noted that the very first chat message about it going live occurred at 11.27 a.m. Eastern time on Tuesday, May 14th, 2024.
This will be remembered in the future as the moment governments around the world lost forever.
When trying to create an offer: https://qu.ax/ankv.png
There are currently not many hardcoded arbitrators and one of them is on top of that still offline. We are not entirely sure if simply retrying works or if you have to restart before your client picks an arbitrator that is online. It might also have resolved itself after the network has propagated a bit more.
‘Warning. We did not receive a filter object from the seed nodes. This is a not expected situation. Please inform the Haveno developers.’ Error I’m getting upon launching Haveno Reto.
This can be safely ignored for now.
woodser on Matrix:
the mainnet p2p network requires a filter object to manually filter offers, onions, currencies, payment methods, etc. clearly documented: https://github.com/haveno-dex/haveno/blob/master/docs/create-mainnet.md#set-a-network-filter-on-mainnet
Fixed, thanks.
10 peers and counting, cheers. https://qu.ax/jetF.png
is it normal for it to never stop having the yellow indicator
please consider making this available on tor/i2p in addition to clearnet github
You can configure git to use tor, and github currently works via tor.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27279359/how-to-make-git-work-to-push-commits-to-github-via-tor
git config http.proxy socks5://localhost:9150 # 9150 for TOR browser, 9050 for TOR service git config https.proxy socks5://localhost:9150
^ affects the current repository.
git config --global
if you want it to apply to all repositories, including one you haven’t yet cloned.When cloning a large repository, such as haveno, you then run into the problem that git doesn’t retry when the other end hangs up, which it often does over a slow tor connection.
until git clone https://github.com/retoaccess1/haveno-reto ; do true ; done
will retry until it finally succeeds.
You can create and log into a github account using Tor Browser, just be sure to never use that account without tor browser. If you actually want to contribute using that account, you will need to email github customer service and have them un-shadowban you first.
I just linked somebody to this post who is asking about trading and realized that the link for the binary is out of date, so I suggest maybe posting this link instead.
https://github.com/retoaccess1/haveno-reto/actions And simply telling people to download the most recent version.
Will do so, thanks.
Anyone else a bit weary of downloading or building binaries from non haveno source repo?
You can compare the diffs like so: https://github.com/haveno-dex/haveno/compare/master...retoaccess1:haveno-reto:master but for extra security build the binaries yourself if their repo’s changes look good or as expected from the Haveno setup documentation