I think it depends on the kind of IBR-DTN you are using. IBR-DTN installed using APT usually comes with a service that can run on boot as long as it is enabled. If it fails, you can always run IBR-DTN by including the command sudo ibrdtnd -d -c <conf file> in /etc/rc.local. This is what I have done when I built it from the installation files since it does not include a service.
Dominic B. Solpico Research Engineer, Ateneo Innovation Center
On 30 April 2018 at 16:48, Ian Rafael Ordonez ian.ordonez@eee.upd.edu.ph wrote:
Good day! How do we run IBR-DTN on boot in Linux?
-- !! This message is brought to you via the `ibr-dtn' mailing list. !! Please do not reply to this message to unsubscribe. To unsubscribe or adjust !! your settings, send a mail message to ibr-dtn-request@ibr.cs.tu-bs.de !! or look at https://mail.ibr.cs.tu-bs.de/listinfo/ibr-dtn.