IPFS Primer
ipfs.ioIPFS Docs
  • Introduction
  • Tutorial: Install and Initialize IPFS
    • Lesson: Download and Install IPFS
    • Lesson: Initialize your IPFS Repository
  • Tutorial: Files on IPFS
    • Lesson: Add Content to IPFS and Retrieve It
    • Lesson: Wrap Filenames and Directory Info around Content
    • Lesson: Pinning - Tell IPFS to Keep a File
  • Tutorial: Going Online - Joining the Distributed Web
    • Lesson: Connect your node to the IPFS network
    • Lesson: Find Peers on the Network
    • Lesson: Retrieve content from a Peer
  • Tutorial: Interacting with the Classical (HTTP) Web
    • Lesson: Use an HTTP browser to retrieve files from local IPFS gateway
    • Lesson: Get content through the public ipfs.io gateway
    • Lesson: Access IPFS content through any IPFS gateway
  • Tutorial: The Myriad ways to Access and Distribute IPFS Content
    • The Power of Content-addressing
    • Retrieving content from a peer
    • Review these lessons from the Tutorial on Interacting with the Classical (HTTP) Web
      • Review: Using an HTTP browser to retrieve files from local IPFS gateway
      • Review: Using the public IPFS gateways at ipfs.io
      • Review: Access IPFS content through any IPFS gateway
    • Lesson: Access IPFS content through Tor gateways (experimental)
    • Lesson: Run IPFS over Tor transport (experimental)
    • Lesson: Access IPFS content through a browser extension
    • Lesson: Sneakernets - moving the data on USB Drives and other Hardware
  • Tutorial: Making Changes on the Permanent Web
    • Lesson: Create a Simple Webpage and Add It to IPFS
    • Lesson: View Your Webpage with IPFS and Publish to IPNS
    • Lesson: Modify Your Webpage and Republish to IPNS
    • Lesson: Generate and Use a New IPNS Name Keypair
  • Tutorial: Merkle Trees and the IPFS DAG
    • Lesson: Turn a File into a Tree of Hashes
    • Lesson: The Cryptographic Hash
    • Lesson: Build a Tree of Data in IPFS Using Cryptographic Hashes to Link the Pieces (a Merkle DAG)
    • Lesson: Explore the types of software that use hash trees to track data (to come)
  • Tutorial: Dynamic Content on IPFS
    • Disclaimer: Dynamic content on IPFS is a Work in Progress (to come)
    • Lesson: Add data to the DAG (locally) (to come)
    • Lesson: Tell peers about your Changes (to come)
    • Lesson: Use hashes to get someone's changes from IPFS (to come)
    • Lesson: Use a pub/sub strategy to pass around messages about changes (to come)
    • Lesson: Resolve conflicts with a merge strategy (CRDTs) (to come)
  • Privacy and Access Controls on the Distributed Web (to come)
    • Reader Privacy & Writer Privacy (to come)
    • Private Networks (to come)
    • Encrypting Content (to come)
    • More dynamic encryption: capabilities-based encryption (to come)
    • Comparing with the classic HTTP web (feudal security, etc) (to come)
  • Keeping Data Alive: Durable Data on the Permanent Web (to come)
    • IPFS Cluster (to come)
    • Filecoin (to come)
  • Distributed Computation (to come)
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  • Goals
  • How to Do It
  • Explanation
  • Next Steps

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  1. Tutorial: The Myriad ways to Access and Distribute IPFS Content
  2. Review these lessons from the Tutorial on Interacting with the Classical (HTTP) Web

Review: Using the public IPFS gateways at ipfs.io

PreviousReview: Using an HTTP browser to retrieve files from local IPFS gatewayNextReview: Access IPFS content through any IPFS gateway

Last updated 3 years ago

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This lesson explains how to retrieve IPFS content from the public IPFS gateways at ipfs.io. This topic is covered in greater depth in the tutorial on .

Goals

After doing this Lesson you will be able to

  • Use the public gateway at ipfs.io to access IPFS content

How to Do It

This process is the same as -- only the address of the gateway is different: If you're using the hash of a specific snapshot of content, use the path https://ipfs.io/ipfs/<your-ipfs-hash>. If you're using an IPNS hash to get the latest version of some content, use the path https://ipfs.io/ipns/<your-ipns-hash>

To view the wikipedia page we're using as an example in all of the lessons in the , use these links:

  • 2017-04-30 snapshot:

  • latest (IPNS): [correct example though this link may be stale]

  • latest (DNS):

Explanation

The IPFS project maintains public IPFS gateways that you can use to access any content from the IPFS network. When sharing HTTP links to IPFS content, people often use ipfs.io addresses but you can use the address of any gateway.

Next Steps

If you want to learn about the many other ways you can use IPFS to access the same content using the same content-addressed link, go to the .

Otherwise proceed to the next lesson to learn how to

Interacting with the Classical (HTTP) Web
using any other IPFS gateway
Tutorial on The Myriad Ways to Access and Distribute IPFS Content
http://ipfs.io/ipfs/Qme2sLfe9ZMdiuWsEtajWMDzx6B7VbjzpSC2VWhtB6GoB1/wiki/Anasayfa.html
http://ipfs.io/ipns/QmQP99yW82xNKPxXLroxj1rMYMGF6Grwjj2o4svsdmGh7S/wiki/Anasayfa.html
http://ipfs.io/ipns/ipfs.io
Tutorial on The Myriad Ways to Access and Distribute IPFS Content
Access IPFS content through any IPFS gateway