NAME¶
ipppd - (ISDN) Point to Point Protocol daemon
SYNOPSIS¶
/usr/sbin/ipppd [
options ] [
device ]
DESCRIPTION¶
The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) provides a method for transmitting datagrams
over serial point-to-point links. PPP is composed of three parts: a method for
encapsulating datagrams over serial links, an extensible Link Control Protocol
(LCP), and a family of Network Control Protocols (NCP) for establishing and
configuring different network-layer protocols.
The encapsulation scheme is provided by driver code in the kernel.
ipppd
provides the basic LCP, authentication support, and an NCP for establishing
and configuring the Internet Protocol (IP) (called the IP Control Protocol,
IPCP).
NOTES for (ISDN) IPPPD¶
This special (ISDN) PPP daemon is a modified version of pppd and provides
synchronous PPP for ISDN connections.
If you need asynchronous PPP over ISDN lines use pppd instead with the ISDN
character devices, see
ttyI(4).
The
ipppd can handle multiple devices. This is necessary to link several
connections together to one bundle.
ipppd should be started once. It
opens the devices and waits for connections. If the connections is closed
ipppd reopens the device automatically (the device, that's it ... not
the link to the remote). So you shouldn't kill the ipppd to close a link.
Instead, trigger a hangup on the netdevice layer by 'isdnctrl hangup
<device>'.
The facility to configure the daemon via file /etc/ppp/ioptions.<devname>
is disabled. The 'file' option or the command line may be used for individual
configuration.
Do not set the permissions of the program to 'setuid to root on execution'. Call
the daemon as root instead. No common user should have the need to call the
daemon!
OPTIONS¶
- <device>
- Communicate over the named device. The string
"/dev/" is prepended if necessary. If no device name is given,
or if the name of the controlling terminal is given, ipppd will use
the controlling terminal, and will not fork to put itself in the
background.
- <local_IP_address>:<remote_IP_address>
- Set the local and/or remote interface IP addresses. Either
one may be omitted. The IP addresses can be specified with a host name or
in decimal dot notation (e.g. 150.234.56.78). The default local address is
the (first) IP address of the system (unless the noipdefault option
is given). The remote address will be obtained from the peer if not
specified in any option. Thus, in simple cases, this option is not
required. If a local and/or remote IP address is specified with this
option, ipppd will not accept a different value from the peer in
the IPCP negotiation, unless the ipcp-accept-local and/or
ipcp-accept-remote options are given, respectively.
- active-filter filter-expression
- Specifies a packet filter to be applied to data packets to
determine which packets are to be regarded as link activity, and therefore
reset the idle timer, or cause the link to be brought up in
demand-dialling mode. This option is useful in conjunction with the
idle option if there are packets being sent or received regularly
over the link (for example, routing information packets) which would
otherwise prevent the link from ever appearing to be idle. The
filter-expression syntax is as described for tcpdump(1), except
that qualifiers which are inappropriate for a PPP link, such as
ether and arp, are not permitted. Generally the filter
expression should be enclosed in single-quotes to prevent whitespace in
the expression from being interpreted by the shell. This option is
currently only available if both the kernel and ipppd were compiled with
IPPP_FILTER defined.
- -ac
- Disable Address/Control compression negotiation (use
default, i.e. address/control field compression disabled).
- -all
- Don't request or allow negotiation of any options for LCP
and IPCP (use default values).
- auth
- Require the peer to authenticate itself before allowing
network packets to be sent or received.
- bsdcomp nr,nt
- Request that the peer compress packets that it sends, using
the BSD-Compress scheme, with a maximum code size of nr bits, and
agree to compress packets sent to the peer with a maximum code size of
nt bits. If nt is not specified, it defaults to the value
given for nr. Values in the range 9 to 15 may be used for nr
and nt; larger values give better compression but consume more
kernel memory for compression dictionaries. Alternatively, a value of 0
for nr or nt disables compression in the corresponding
direction.
- -bsdcomp
- Disables compression; ipppd will not request or
agree to compress packets using the BSD-Compress scheme.
- callback <string>
- Request the peer to call back at the location given in
<string>. Ususally this is a phone number, but it may be interpreted
differently (or ignored) depending on the callback-type option. If
<string> is the empty string, ipppd automatically tries to
negotiate a callback type that does not need a location to be
specified.
- callback-delay <n>
- Callback delay for CBCP in seconds. If callback is
negotiated using CBCP, request that the peer waits at least <n>
seconds before calling back. Ignored if callback is negotiated as
specified in RFC 1570. Legal range is 0..255, default is 5.
- callback-cbcp
- Enable callback negotiation via CBCB (default).
- -callback-cbcp
- Disable callback negotiation via CBCB.
- no-callback-cbcp
- Disable callback negotiation via CBCB.
- callback-cbcp-preferred
- If both CBCP and RFC 1570 style callback negotiation is
enabled, CBCP is preferred (default)
- callback-rfc1570-preferred
- If both CBCP and RFC 1570 style callback negotiation is
enabled, RFC 1570 style is preferred.
- callback-rfc1570
- Enable RFC 1570 style callback negotiation (default).
- -callback-rfc1570
- Disable RFC 1570 style callback negotiation.
- no-callback-rfc1570
- Disable RFC 1570 style callback negotiation (default).
- callback-type <n>
- Specifies how to interpret the location identifier given as
parameter of the callback option. Legal values are 0..4. A value of
0 means that only callback types should be negotiated that need no extra
location id. No location id is sent to the peer in this case. For RFC 1570
style callback negotiation, the values 1..4 indicate how the peer should
interpret the location identifier: 1 - id is a system specific dial
string, 2 - id is used for database lookup by the peer, 3 - id is a phone
number, and 4 id is a name. For CBCP callback negotiation, the location id
is always interpreted as a phone number.
- -ccp
- Necessary for a few netblazers on the remote side.
- noccp
- same as -ccp
- +chap
- Require the peer to authenticate itself using CHAP
[Cryptographic Handshake Authentication Protocol] authentication.
- -chap
- Don't agree to authenticate using CHAP.
- chap-interval <n>
- If this option is given, ipppd will rechallenge the
peer every <n> seconds.
- chap-max-challenge <n>
- Set the maximum number of CHAP challenge transmissions to
<n> (default 10).
- chap-restart <n>
- Set the CHAP restart interval (retransmission timeout for
challenges) to <n> seconds (default 3).
- debug
- Increase debugging level (same as -d). If this
option is given, ipppd will log the contents of all control packets
sent or received in a readable form. The packets are logged through syslog
with facility daemon and level debug. This information can
be directed to a file by setting up /etc/syslog.conf appropriately (see
syslog.conf(5)).
- -d
- Increase debugging level (same as the debug
option).
- defaultroute
- Add a default route to the system routing tables, using the
peer as the gateway, when IPCP negotiation is successfully completed. This
entry is removed when the PPP connection is broken.
- -defaultroute
- Disable the defaultroute option. The system
administrator who wishes to prevent users from creating default routes
with ipppd can do so by placing this option in the
/etc/ppp/ioptions file.
- deldefaultroute
- Replace default route if it already exists. Together with
the option defaultroute, this will replace any existing default
route by a new one through this ipppd's interface when it comes up.
- -detach
- Don't fork to become a background process (otherwise
ipppd will do so if a serial device other than its controlling
terminal is specified).
- domain <d>
- Append the domain name <d> to the local host name for
authentication purposes. For example, if gethostname() returns the name
porsche, but the fully qualified domain name is porsche.Quotron.COM, you
would use the domain option to set the domain name to Quotron.COM.
- file <f>
- Read options from file <f> (the format is described
below).
- -ip
- Disable IP address negotiation. If this option is used, the
remote IP address must be specified with an option on the command line or
in an options file.
- +ip-protocol
- Enable the IPCP and IP protocols. This is the default
condition. This option is only needed if the default setting is
-ip-protocol.
- -ip-protocol
- Disable the IPCP and IP protocols. This should only be used
if you know that you are using a client which only understands IPX and you
don't want to confuse the client with the IPCP protocol.
- +ipx-protocol
- Enable the IPXCP and IPX protocols. This is the default
condition if your kernel supports IPX. This option is only needed if the
default setting is -ipx-protocol. If your kernel does not support IPX then
this option will have no effect.
- -ipx-protocol
- Disable the IPXCP and IPX protocols. This should only be
used if you know that you are using a client which only understands IP and
you don't want to confuse the client with the IPXCP protocol.
- ipcp-accept-local
- With this option, ipppd will accept the peer's idea
of our local IP address, even if the local IP address was specified in an
option.
- ipcp-accept-remote
- With this option, ipppd will accept the peer's idea
of its (remote) IP address, even if the remote IP address was specified in
an option.
- ipcp-max-configure <n>
- Set the maximum number of IPCP configure-request
transmissions to <n> (default 10).
- ipcp-max-failure <n>
- Set the maximum number of IPCP configure-NAKs returned
before starting to send configure-Rejects instead to <n> (default
10).
- ipcp-max-terminate <n>
- Set the maximum number of IPCP terminate-request
transmissions to <n> (default 3).
- ipcp-restart <n>
- Set the IPCP restart interval (retransmission timeout) to
<n> seconds (default 3).
- ipparam string
- Provides an extra parameter to the ip-up and ip-down
scripts. If this option is given, the string supplied is given as
the 6th parameter to those scripts.
- ipx-network <n>
- Set the IPX network number in the IPXCP configure request
frame to <n>. There is no valid default. If this option is not
specified then the network number is obtained from the peer. If the peer
does not have the network number, the IPX protocol will not be started.
This is a hexadecimal number and is entered without any leading sequence
such as 0x. It is related to the ipxcp-accept-network option.
- ipx-node <n>:<m>
- Set the IPX node numbers. The two node numbers are
separated from each other with a colon character. The first number
<n> is the local node number. The second number <m> is the
peer's node number. Each node number is a hexadecimal number, to the
maximum of ten significant digits. The node numbers on the ipx-network
must be unique. There is no valid default. If this option is not specified
then the node number is obtained from the peer. This option is a related
to the ipxcp-accept-local and ipxcp-accept-remote
options.
- ipx-router-name <string>
- Set the name of the router. This is a string and is sent to
the peer as information data.
- ipx-routing <n>
- Set the routing protocol to be received by this option. Use
a comma-serperated list if you want to specify more than one protocol. The
' none' option (0) may be specified as the only instance of
ipx-routing. The values may be 0 for NONE, 2 for
RIP/SAP, and 4 for NLSP.
- ipxcp-accept-local
- Accept the peer's NAK for the node number specified in the
ipx-node option. If a node number was specified, and non-zero, the default
is to insist that the value be used. If you include this option then you
will permit the peer to override the entry of the node number.
- ipxcp-accept-network
- Accept the peer's NAK for the network number specified in
the ipx-network option. If a network number was specified, and non-zero,
the default is to insist that the value be used. If you include this
option then you will permit the peer to override the entry of the node
number.
- ipxcp-accept-remote
- Use the peer's network number specified in the configure
request frame. If a node number was specified for the peer and this option
was not specified, the peer will be forced to use the value which you have
specified.
- ipxcp-max-configure <n>
- Set the maximum number of IPXCP configure request frames
which the system will send to <n>. The default is 10.
- ipxcp-max-failure <n>
- Set the maximum number of IPXCP NAK frames which the local
system will send before it rejects the options. The default value is
3.
- ipxcp-max-terminate <n>
- Set the maximum nuber of IPXCP terminate request frames
before the local system considers that the peer is not listening to them.
The default value is 3.
- kdebug n
- Enable debugging code in the kernel-level PPP driver. The
argument n is a number which is the sum of the following values: 1
to enable general debug messages, 2 to request that the contents of
received packets be printed, and 4 to request that the contents of
transmitted packets be printed.
- lcp-echo-failure <n>
- If this option is given, ipppd will presume the peer
to be dead if n LCP echo-requests are sent without receiving a
valid LCP echo-reply. If this happens, ipppd will terminate the
connection. Use of this option requires a non-zero value for the
lcp-echo-interval parameter. This option can be used to enable
ipppd to terminate after the physical connection has been broken
(e.g., the line hung up) in situations where no hardware modem control
lines are available.
- lcp-echo-interval <n>
- If this option is given, ipppd will send an LCP
echo-request frame to the peer every n seconds. With Linux, the
echo-request is sent when no packets have been received from the peer for
n seconds. Normally the peer should respond to the echo-request by
sending an echo-reply. This option can be used with the
lcp-echo-failure option to detect that the peer is no longer
connected.
- lcp-max-configure <n>
- Set the maximum number of LCP configure-request
transmissions to <n> (default 10).
- lcp-max-failure <n>
- Set the maximum number of LCP configure-NAKs returned
before starting to send configure-Rejects instead to <n> (default
10).
- lcp-max-terminate <n>
- Set the maximum number of LCP terminate-request
transmissions to <n> (default 3).
- lcp-restart <n>
- Set the LCP restart interval (retransmission timeout) to
<n> seconds (default 3).
- lock
- Specifies that ipppd should create a UUCP-style lock
file for the serial device to ensure exclusive access to the device.
- login
- Use the system password database for authenticating the
peer using PAP, and record the user in the system wtmp file.
- -mn
- Disable magic number negotiation. With this option,
ipppd cannot detect a looped-back line.
- +mp
- enables MPPP negotiation
- mru <n>
- Set the MRU [Maximum Receive Unit] value to <n> for
negotiation. ipppd will ask the peer to send packets of no more
than <n> bytes. The minimum MRU value is 128. The default MRU value
is 1500. A value of 296 is recommended for slow links (40 bytes for TCP/IP
header + 256 bytes of data).
- -mru
- Disable MRU [Maximum Receive Unit] negotiation. With this
option, ipppd will use the default MRU value of 1500 bytes.
- ms-dns <n>
- This option sets the IP address or addresses for the Domain
Name Server. It is used by Microsoft Windows clients. The primary DNS
address is specified by the first instance of the ms-dns option. The
secondary is specified by the second instance.
- ms-get-dns
- Implements the client side of RFC1877. If ipppd is
acting as a client to a server that implements RFC1877 such as one
intended to be used with Microsoft Windows clients, this option allows
ipppd to obtain one or two DNS (Domain Name Server) addresses from
the server. It does not do anything with these addresses except put them
in the environment (MS_DNS1 MS_DNS2) that is passed to scripts. For
compatibility with the async pppd, DNS1 DNS2 environment variables are
also set. A sample resolv.conf is created in /etc/ppp/resolv.conf. The
/etc/ppp/ip-up script should use this information to perform whatever
adjustment is necessary. Note: RFC1877 is a horrible protocol layering
violation, the correct approach would be to use DHCP after the IPCP
phase.
- ms-get-wins
- As ms-get-dns but for WINS (Windows Internet Name Services)
server addresses. Environment variables are MS_WINS1 and MS_WINS2.
- mtu <n>
- Set the MTU [Maximum Transmit Unit] value to
<n>. Unless the peer requests a smaller value via MRU
negotiation, ipppd will request that the kernel networking code
send data packets of no more than n bytes through the PPP network
interface.
- name <n>
- Set the name of the local system for authentication
purposes to <n>.
- netmask <n>
- Set the interface netmask to <n>, a 32 bit netmask in
"decimal dot" notation (e.g. 255.255.255.0). If this option is
given, the value specified is ORed with the default netmask. The default
netmask is chosen based on the negotiated remote IP address; it is the
appropriate network mask for the class of the remote IP address, ORed with
the netmasks for any non point-to-point network interfaces in the system
which are on the same network.
- noipdefault
- Disables the default behaviour when no local IP address is
specified, which is to determine (if possible) the local IP address from
the hostname. With this option, the peer will have to supply the local IP
address during IPCP negotiation (unless it specified explicitly on the
command line or in an options file).
- passive
- Enables the "passive" option in the LCP. With
this option, ipppd will attempt to initiate a connection; if no
reply is received from the peer, ipppd will then just wait
passively for a valid LCP packet from the peer (instead of exiting, as it
does without this option).
- -p
- Same as the passive option.
- +pap
- Require the peer to authenticate itself using PAP.
- -pap
- Don't agree to authenticate using PAP.
- papcrypt
- Indicates that all secrets in the /etc/ppp/pap-secrets file
which are used for checking the identity of the peer are encrypted, and
thus ipppd should not accept a password which (before encryption)
is identical to the secret from the /etc/ppp/pap-secrets file.
- pap-max-authreq <n>
- Set the maximum number of PAP authenticate-request
transmissions to <n> (default 10).
- pap-restart <n>
- Set the PAP restart interval (retransmission timeout) to
<n> seconds (default 3).
- pap-timeout <n>
- Set the maximum time that ipppd will wait for the
peer to authenticate itself with PAP to <n> seconds (0 means no
limit).
- pass-filter filter-expression
- Specifies a packet filter to applied to data packets being
sent or received to determine which packets should be allowed to pass.
Packets which are rejected by the filter are silently discarded. This
option can be used to prevent specific network daemons (such as routed)
using up link bandwidth, or to provide a basic firewall capability. The
filter-expression syntax is as described for tcpdump(1), except
that qualifiers which are inappropriate for a PPP link, such as
ether and arp, are not permitted. Generally the filter
expression should be enclosed in single-quotes to prevent whitespace in
the expression from being interpreted by the shell. Note that it is
possible to apply different constraints to incoming and outgoing packets
using the inbound and outbound qualifiers. This option is
currently only available if both the kernel and ipppd were compiled with
IPPP_FILTER defined.
- -pc
- Disable protocol field compression negotiation (use
default, i.e. protocol field compression disabled).
- pidfile <filename>
- Use <filename> instead of
/var/run/ipppd.pid
- pred1comp
- Attempt to request that the peer send the local system
frames which have been compressed by the Predictor-1 compression. The
compression protocols must be loaded or this option will be ignored.
- -pred1comp
- Do not accept Predictor-1 comprssion, even if the peer
wants to send this type of compression and support has been defined in the
kernel.
- proxyarp
- Add an entry to this system's ARP [Address Resolution
Protocol] table with the IP address of the peer and the Ethernet address
of this system.
- -proxyarp
- Disable the proxyarp option. The system
administrator who wishes to prevent users from creating proxy ARP entries
with ipppd can do so by placing this option in the
/etc/ppp/ioptions file.
- remotename <n>
- Set the assumed name of the remote system for
authentication purposes to <n>.
- set_userip
- You may define valid IPs in /etc/ppp/useriptab
- silent
- With this option, ipppd will not transmit LCP
packets to initiate a connection until a valid LCP packet is received from
the peer (as for the `passive' option with ancient versions of
ipppd).
- +ua <p>
- Agree to authenticate using PAP [Password Authentication
Protocol] if requested by the peer, and use the data in file <p> for
the user and password to send to the peer. The file contains the remote
user name, followed by a newline, followed by the remote password,
followed by a newline. This option is obsolescent.
- usefirstip
- Gets the remote address from the first entry in the auth
file (if there is an IP address entry). This address should be a full IP
address not an address from a masked area. Ipppd calls 'gethostbyname()'
and negotiates the result. IP from auth file will overwrite the remote
address gotten from the interface. 'usefirstip' is UNTESTED!
- usehostname
- Enforce the use of the hostname as the name of the local
system for authentication purposes (overrides the name
option).
- usepeerdns
- Same as ms-get-dns for compatibility with async
pppd.
- user <u>
- Set the user name to use for authenticating this machine
with the peer using PAP to <u>.
- useifip
- will get (if not set to 0.0.0.0) the IP address for the
negotiation from the attached network-interface. (also: ipppd will
try to negotiate 'pointopoint' IP as remote IP) interface address ->
local IP pointopoint address -> remote IP
- -vj
- Disable negotiation of Van Jacobson style TCP/IP header
compression (use default, i.e. no compression).
- -vjccomp
- Disable the connection-ID compression option in Van
Jacobson style TCP/IP header compression. With this option, ipppd
will not omit the connection-ID byte from Van Jacobson compressed TCP/IP
headers, nor ask the peer to do so.
- vj-max-slots n
- Sets the number of connection slots to be used by the Van
Jacobson TCP/IP header compression and decompression code to n,
which must be between 2 and 16 (inclusive).
OPTIONS FILES¶
Options can be taken from files as well as the command line.
ipppd reads
options from the file /etc/ppp/ioptions before looking at the command line. An
options file is parsed into a series of words, delimited by whitespace.
Whitespace can be included in a word by enclosing the word in quotes (").
A backslash (\) quotes the following character. A hash (#) starts a comment,
which continues until the end of the line.
AUTHENTICATION¶
ipppd provides system administrators with sufficient access control that
PPP access to a server machine can be provided to legitimate users without
fear of compromising the security of the server or the network it's on. In
part this is provided by the /etc/ppp/ioptions file, where the administrator
can place options to require authentication whenever
ipppd is run, and
in part by the PAP and CHAP secrets files, where the administrator can
restrict the set of IP addresses which individual users may use.
The default behaviour of
ipppd is to agree to authenticate if requested,
and to not require authentication from the peer. However,
ipppd will
not agree to authenticate itself with a particular protocol if it has no
secrets which could be used to do so.
Authentication is based on secrets, which are selected from secrets files
(/etc/ppp/pap-secrets for PAP, /etc/ppp/chap-secrets for CHAP). Both secrets
files have the same format, and both can store secrets for several
combinations of server (authenticating peer) and client (peer being
authenticated). Note that
ipppd can be both a server and client, and
that different protocols can be used in the two directions if desired.
A secrets file is parsed into words as for a options file. A secret is specified
by a line containing at least 3 words, in the order client name, server name,
secret. Any following words on the same line are taken to be a list of
acceptable IP addresses for that client. If there are only 3 words on the
line, it is assumed that any IP address is OK; to disallow all IP addresses,
use "-". If the secret starts with an `@', what follows is assumed
to be the name of a file from which to read the secret. A "*" as the
client or server name matches any name. When selecting a secret,
ipppd
takes the best match, i.e. the match with the fewest wildcards.
Thus a secrets file contains both secrets for use in authenticating other hosts,
plus secrets which we use for authenticating ourselves to others. Which secret
to use is chosen based on the names of the host (the `local name') and its
peer (the `remote name'). The local name is set as follows:
- if the usehostname option is given,
- then the local name is the hostname of this machine (with
the domain appended, if given)
- else if the name option is given,
- then use the argument of the first name option
seen
- else if the local IP address is specified with a
hostname,
- then use that name
- else use the hostname of this machine (with the domain
appended, if given)
When authenticating ourselves using PAP, there is also a `username' which is the
local name by default, but can be set with the
user option or the
+ua option.
The remote name is set as follows:
- if the remotename option is given,
- then use the argument of the last remotename option
seen
- else if the remote IP address is specified with a
hostname,
- then use that host name
- else the remote name is the null string "".
Secrets are selected from the PAP secrets file as follows:
- *
- For authenticating the peer, look for a secret with client
== username specified in the PAP authenticate-request, and server == local
name.
- *
- For authenticating ourselves to the peer, look for a secret
with client == our username, server == remote name.
When authenticating the peer with PAP, a secret of "" matches any
password supplied by the peer. If the password doesn't match the secret, the
password is encrypted using crypt() and checked against the secret again; thus
secrets for authenticating the peer can be stored in encrypted form. If the
papcrypt option is given, the first (unencrypted) comparison is
omitted, for better security.
If the
login option was specified, the username and password are also
checked against the system password database. Thus, the system administrator
can set up the pap-secrets file to allow PPP access only to certain users, and
to restrict the set of IP addresses that each user can use. Typically, when
using the
login option, the secret in /etc/ppp/pap-secrets would be
"", to avoid the need to have the same secret in two places.
Secrets are selected from the CHAP secrets file as follows:
- *
- For authenticating the peer, look for a secret with client
== name specified in the CHAP-Response message, and server == local
name.
- *
- For authenticating ourselves to the peer, look for a secret
with client == local name, and server == name specified in the
CHAP-Challenge message.
Authentication must be satisfactorily completed before IPCP (or any other
Network Control Protocol) can be started. If authentication fails,
ipppd will terminated the link (by closing LCP). If IPCP negotiates an
unacceptable IP address for the remote host, IPCP will be closed. IP packets
can only be sent or received when IPCP is open.
In some cases it is desirable to allow some hosts which can't authenticate
themselves to connect and use one of a restricted set of IP addresses, even
when the local host generally requires authentication. If the peer refuses to
authenticate itself when requested,
ipppd takes that as equivalent to
authenticating with PAP using the empty string for the username and password.
Thus, by adding a line to the pap-secrets file which specifies the empty
string for the client and password, it is possible to allow restricted access
to hosts which refuse to authenticate themselves.
ROUTING¶
When IPCP negotiation is completed successfully,
ipppd will inform the
kernel of the local and remote IP addresses for the ppp interface. This is
sufficient to create a host route to the remote end of the link, which will
enable the peers to exchange IP packets. Communication with other machines
generally requires further modification to routing tables and/or ARP (Address
Resolution Protocol) tables. In some cases this will be done automatically
through the actions of the
routed or
gated daemons, but in most
cases some further intervention is required.
Sometimes it is desirable to add a default route through the remote host, as in
the case of a machine whose only connection to the Internet is through the ppp
interface. The
defaultroute option causes
ipppd to create such a
default route when IPCP comes up, and delete it when the link is terminated.
In some cases it is desirable to use proxy ARP, for example on a server machine
connected to a LAN, in order to allow other hosts to communicate with the
remote host. The
proxyarp option causes
ipppd to look for a
network interface on the same subnet as the remote host (an interface
supporting broadcast and ARP, which is up and not a point-to-point or loopback
interface). If found,
ipppd creates a permanent, published ARP entry
with the IP address of the remote host and the hardware address of the network
interface found.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
Messages are sent to the syslog daemon using facility LOG_DAEMON. (This can be
overridden by recompiling
ipppd with the macro LOG_PPP defined as the
desired facility.) In order to see the error and debug messages, you will need
to edit your /etc/syslog.conf file to direct the messages to the desired
output device or file.
The
debug option causes the contents of all control packets sent or
received to be logged, that is, all LCP, PAP, CHAP or IPCP packets. This can
be useful if the PPP negotiation does not succeed. If debugging is enabled at
compile time, the
debug option also causes other debugging messages to
be logged.
Debugging can also be enabled or disabled by sending a SIGUSR1 to the
ipppd process. This signal acts as a toggle.
FILES¶
- /var/run/ipppd.pid
- Process-ID for ipppd process on ppp interface unit
n.
- /etc/ppp/ip-up
- A program or script which is executed when the link is
available for sending and receiving IP packets (that is, IPCP has come
up). It is executed with the parameters
- interface-name tty-device speed local-IP-address
remote-IP-address
- and with its standard input, output and error streams
redirected to /dev/null.
- This program or script is executed with the same real and
effective user-ID as ipppd, that is, at least the effective user-ID
and possibly the real user-ID will be root. This is so that it can
be used to manipulate routes, run privileged daemons (e.g.
sendmail), etc. Be careful that the contents of the /etc/ppp/ip-up
and /etc/ppp/ip-down scripts do not compromise your system's
security.
- /etc/ppp/ip-down
- A program or script which is executed when the link is no
longer available for sending and receiving IP packets. This script can be
used for undoing the effects of the /etc/ppp/ip-up script. It is invoked
with the same parameters as the ip-up script, and the same security
considerations apply, since it is executed with the same effective and
real user-IDs as ipppd.
- /etc/ppp/ipx-up
- A program or script which is executed when the link is
available for sending and receiving IPX packets (that is, IPXCP has come
up). It is executed with the parameters
- interface-name tty-device speed network-number
local-IPX-node-address remote-IPX-node-address
local-IPX-routing-protocol remote-IPX-routing-protocol
local-IPX-router-name remote-IPX-router-name ipparam ipppd-pid
- and with its standard input, output and error streams
redirected to /dev/null.
- The local-IPX-routing-protocol and
remote-IPX-routing-protocol field may be one of the following:
- NONE to indicate that there is no routing protocol
RIP to indicate that RIP/SAP should be used
NLSP to indicate that Novell NLSP should be used
RIP NLSP to indicate that both RIP/SAP and NLSP should be used
- This program or script is executed with the same real and
effective user-ID as ipppd, that is, at least the effective user-ID
and possibly the real user-ID will be root. This is so that it can
be used to manipulate routes, run privileged daemons (e.g. ripd),
etc. Be careful that the contents of the /etc/ppp/ipx-up and
/etc/ppp/ipx-down scripts do not compromise your system's security.
- /etc/ppp/ipx-down
- A program or script which is executed when the link is no
longer available for sending and receiving IPX packets. This script can be
used for undoing the effects of the /etc/ppp/ipx-up script. It is invoked
with the same parameters as the ipx-up script, and the same security
considerations apply, since it is executed with the same effective and
real user-IDs as ipppd.
- /etc/ppp/auth-up
- This program or script is executed after successful
authentication with the following parameters: interface name,
authentication user name, username of ipppd,
devicename, speed, remote number
- /etc/ppp/auth-down
- This program or script is executed after a disconnection
with the following parameters: interface name, authentication
user name, username of ipppd, devicename, speed,
remote number
- /etc/ppp/auth-fail
- This program or script is executed after a authentication
failure with the following parameters: interface name,
authentication user name, username of ipppd,
devicename, speed, remote number, failure
reason
Valid reasons are:
1 = Timeout during pap auth
2 = pap protocol rejected
3 = pap secrets invalid
9 = Timeout during chap auth
10 = chap protocol rejected
11 = chap secrets invalid
- /etc/ppp/pap-secrets
- Usernames, passwords and IP addresses for PAP
authentication.
- /etc/ppp/chap-secrets
- Names, secrets and IP addresses for CHAP
authentication.
- /etc/ppp/ioptions
- System default options for ipppd, read before user
default options or command-line options.
SEE ALSO¶
- ttyI(4), isdnctrl(8), ipppstats(8),
- RFC1144
- Jacobson, V. Compressing TCP/IP headers for low-speed
serial links. 1990 February.
- RFC1321
- Rivest, R. The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm. 1992
April.
- RFC1332
- McGregor, G. PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol
(IPCP). 1992 May.
- RFC1334
- Lloyd, B.; Simpson, W.A. PPP authentication
protocols. 1992 October.
- RFC1548
- Simpson, W.A. The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP).
1993 December.
- RFC1549
- Simpson, W.A. PPP in HDLC Framing. 1993
December
NOTES¶
The following signals have the specified effect when sent to the
ipppd
process.
- SIGINT, SIGTERM
- These signals cause ipppd to terminate the link (by
closing LCP), restore the serial device settings, and exit.
- SIGHUP
- This signal causes ipppd to terminate the link,
restore the serial device settings, and close the serial device. If the
persist option has been specified, ipppd will try to reopen
the serial device and start another connection. Otherwise ipppd
will exit.
- SIGUSR2
- This signal causes ipppd to renegotiate compression.
This can be useful to re-enable compression after it has been disabled as
a result of a fatal decompression error. With the BSD Compress scheme,
fatal decompression errors generally indicate a bug in one or other
implementation.
AUTHORS¶
Originally written by Drew Perkins, Brad Clements, Karl Fox, Greg Christy, Brad
Parker, Paul Mackerras <paulus@cs.anu.edu.au> for (original) pppd.
Changes for ipppd by Klaus Franken <kfr@suse.de> and Michael Hipp
<Michael.Hipp@student.uni-tuebingen.de>.
Removal of pppd specific options and polish by Frank Elsner
<Elsner@zrz.TU-Berlin.DE>.