<h1>The CLI</h1>
- <p>Prefer the command-line? Run <cite>tahoe --help</cite> (the same command-line tool that is used to start and stop nodes serves to navigate and use the decentralized filesystem). To make commands like <cite>tahoe ls</cite> work without the <cite>--dir-cap=</cite> option, you have to put a directory capability (e.g. <cite>http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/URI:DIR2-RO:ouwgdnis7c9fapzbpz8phfc7je:rfxzi5ykrmysf17ezfhipt6hc94nu1cwpt13wk81qyf4mdc4i7jo</cite>) into <cite>~/.tahoe/private/root_dir.cap</cite>.</p>
+ <p>Prefer the command-line? Run <cite>tahoe --help</cite> (the same command-line tool that is used to start and stop nodes serves to navigate and use the decentralized filesystem). To make commands like <cite>tahoe ls</cite> work without the <cite>--dir-cap=</cite> option, you have to put a directory capability (e.g. <cite>http://127.0.0.1:8123/uri/URI:DIR2:yar9nnzsho6czczieeesc65sry:upp1pmypwxits3w9izkszgo1zbdnsyk3nm6h7e19s7os7s6yhh9y</cite>) into <cite>~/.tahoe/private/root_dir.cap</cite>.</p>
<p>As with the WUI (and with all current interfaces to Tahoe), you are responsible for remembering directory capabilities yourself. If you create a new directory and lose the capability to it, then you cannot access that directory ever again.</p>
<p>P.S. "CLI" is pronounced "clee".</p>