A window to your nodes

Before we devise a way to look at and interact with our remote application, let's analyze how Elixir, given its Erlang heritage, works in a distributed environment. When you run an IEx shell or the ElixirDrip release, an Erlang VM starts. Each VM is called a node, and you can have many nodes running on the same computer.

To start a node, you define its name and magic cookie, and the node then tries to register itself on the local Erlang Port Mapper Daemon (EPMD). This EPMD is a kind of name server that by default runs on port 4369 and registers which nodes are running in each host.

The cookie is indeed described as magic; check out the Erlang documentation at http://erlang.org/doc/reference_manual/distributed.html

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