ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Download File
/cvs/gvpe/doc/gvpe.conf.5.pod
Revision: 1.31
Committed: Sat Jul 13 04:10:29 2013 UTC (10 years, 10 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-2_25
Changes since 1.30: +28 -11 lines
Log Message:
*** empty log message ***

File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 gvpe.conf - configuration file for the GNU VPE daemon
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 # global options for all nodes
8 udp-port = 407
9 mtu = 1492
10 ifname = vpn0
11
12 # first node is named branch1 and is at 1.2.3.4
13 node = branch1
14 hostname = 1.2.3.4
15
16 # second node uses dns to resolve the address
17 node = branch2
18 hostname = www.example.net
19 udp-port = 500 # this host uses a different udp-port
20
21 # third node has no fixed ip address
22 node = branch3
23 connect = ondemand
24
25 =head1 DESCRIPTION
26
27 The gvpe config file consists of a series of lines that contain C<variable
28 = value> pairs. Empty lines are ignored. Comments start with a C<#> and
29 extend to the end of the line. They can be used on their own lines, or
30 after any directives. Whitespace is allowed around the C<=> sign or after
31 values, but not within the variable names or values themselves.
32
33 All settings are applied "in order", that is, later settings of the same
34 variable overwrite earlier ones.
35
36 The only exceptions to the above are the "on" and "include" directives:
37
38 =over 4
39
40 =item on nodename ...
41
42 =item on !nodename ...
43
44 You can prefix any configuration directive with C<on> and a nodename. GVPE
45 will will only "execute" it on the named node, or (if the nodename starts
46 with C<!>) on all nodes except the named one.
47
48 Example: set the MTU to C<1450> everywhere, C<loglevel> to C<noise> on
49 C<branch1>, and C<connect> to C<ondemand> everywhere but on branch2.
50
51 mtu = 1450
52 on branch1 loglevel = noise
53 on !branch2 connect = ondemand
54
55 =item include relative-or-absolute-path
56
57 Reads the specified file (the path must not contain whitespace or C<=>
58 characters) and evaluate all config directives in it as if they were
59 spelled out in place of the C<include> directive.
60
61 The path is a printf format string, that is, you must escape any C<%>
62 by doubling it, and you can have a single C<%s> inside, which will be
63 replaced by the current nodename.
64
65 Relative paths are interpreted relative to the GVPE config directory.
66
67 Example: include the file F<local.conf> in the config directory on every
68 node.
69
70 include local.conf
71
72 Example: include a file F<conf/>nodenameF<.conf>
73
74 include conf/%s.conf
75
76 =back
77
78 =head1 ANATOMY OF A CONFIG FILE
79
80 Usually, a config file starts with a few global settings (like the UDP
81 port to listen on), followed by node-specific sections that begin with a
82 C<node = nickname> line.
83
84 Every node that is part of the network must have a section that starts
85 with C<node = nickname>. The number and order of the nodes is important
86 and must be the same on all nodes. It is not uncommon for node sections to
87 be completely empty - if the default values are right.
88
89 Node-specific settings can be used at any time. If used before the first
90 node section they will set the default values for all following nodes.
91
92 =head1 CONFIG VARIABLES
93
94 =head2 GLOBAL SETTINGS
95
96 Global settings will affect the behaviour of the running gvpe daemon, that
97 is, they are in some sense node-specific (config files can set different
98 values on different nodes using C<on>), but will affect the behaviour of
99 the gvpe daemon and all connections it creates.
100
101 =over 4
102
103 =item chroot = path or /
104
105 Tells GVPE to chroot(2) to the specified path after reading all necessary
106 files, binding to sockets and running the C<if-up> script, but before
107 running C<node-up> or any other scripts.
108
109 The special path F</> instructs GVPE to create (and remove) an empty
110 temporary directory to use as new root. This is most secure, but makes it
111 impossible to use any scripts other than the C<if-up> one.
112
113 =item chuid = numerical-uid
114
115 =item chgid = numerical-gid
116
117 These two options tell GVPE to change to the given user and/or group id
118 after reading all necessary files, binding to sockets and running the
119 C<if-up> script.
120
121 Other scripts, such as C<node-up>, are run with the new user id or group id.
122
123 =item chuser = username
124
125 Alternative to C<chuid> and C<chgid>: Sets both C<chuid> and C<chgid>
126 to the user and (primary) group ids of the specified user (for example,
127 C<nobody>).
128
129 =item dns-forw-host = hostname/ip
130
131 The DNS server to forward DNS requests to for the DNS tunnel protocol
132 (default: C<127.0.0.1>, changing it is highly recommended).
133
134 =item dns-forw-port = port-number
135
136 The port where the C<dns-forw-host> is to be contacted (default: C<53>,
137 which is fine in most cases).
138
139 =item dns-case-preserving = yes|true|on | no|false|off
140
141 Sets whether the DNS transport forwarding server preserves case (DNS
142 servers have to, but some access systems are even more broken than others)
143 (default: true).
144
145 Normally, when the forwarding server changes the case of domain names then
146 GVPE will automatically set this to false.
147
148 =item dns-max-outstanding = integer-number-of-requests
149
150 The maximum number of outstanding DNS transport requests
151 (default: C<100>). GVPE will never issue more requests then the given
152 limit without receiving replies. In heavily overloaded situations it might
153 help to set this to a low number (e.g. C<3> or even C<1>) to limit the
154 number of parallel requests.
155
156 The default should be working OK for most links.
157
158 =item dns-overlap-factor = float
159
160 The DNS transport uses the minimum request latency (B<min_latency>) seen
161 during a connection as it's timing base. This factor (default: C<0.5>,
162 must be > 0) is multiplied by B<min_latency> to get the maximum sending
163 rate (= minimum send interval), i.e. a factor of C<1> means that a new
164 request might be generated every B<min_latency> seconds, which means on
165 average there should only ever be one outstanding request. A factor of
166 C<0.5> means that GVPE will send requests twice as often as the minimum
167 latency measured.
168
169 For congested or picky DNS forwarders you could use a value nearer to or
170 exceeding C<1>.
171
172 The default should be working OK for most links.
173
174 =item dns-send-interval = send-interval-in-seconds
175
176 The minimum send interval (= maximum rate) that the DNS transport will
177 use to send new DNS requests. GVPE will not exceed this rate even when
178 the latency is very low. The default is C<0.01>, which means GVPE will
179 not send more than 100 DNS requests per connection per second. For
180 high-bandwidth links you could go lower, e.g. to C<0.001> or so. For
181 congested or rate-limited links, you might want to go higher, say C<0.1>,
182 C<0.2> or even higher.
183
184 The default should be working OK for most links.
185
186 =item dns-timeout-factor = float
187
188 Factor to multiply the C<min_latency> (see C<dns-overlap-factor>) by to
189 get request timeouts. The default of C<8> means that the DNS transport
190 will resend the request when no reply has been received for longer than
191 eight times the minimum (= expected) latency, assuming the request or
192 reply has been lost.
193
194 For congested links a higher value might be necessary (e.g. C<30>). If
195 the link is very stable lower values (e.g. C<2>) might work
196 nicely. Values near or below C<1> makes no sense whatsoever.
197
198 The default should be working OK for most links but will result in low
199 throughput if packet loss is high.
200
201 =item if-up = relative-or-absolute-path
202
203 Sets the path of a script that should be called immediately after the
204 network interface is initialized (but not necessarily up). The following
205 environment variables are passed to it (the values are just examples).
206
207 Variables that have the same value on all nodes:
208
209 =over 4
210
211 =item CONFBASE=/etc/gvpe
212
213 The configuration base directory.
214
215 =item IFNAME=vpn0
216
217 The network interface to initialize.
218
219 =item IFTYPE=native # or tincd
220
221 =item IFSUBTYPE=linux # or freebsd, darwin etc..
222
223 The interface type (C<native> or C<tincd>) and the subtype (usually the
224 OS name in lowercase) that this GVPE was configured for. Can be used to
225 select the correct syntax to use for network-related commands.
226
227 =item MTU=1436
228
229 The MTU to set the interface to. You can use lower values (if done
230 consistently on all nodes), but this is usually either inefficient or
231 simply ineffective.
232
233 =item NODES=5
234
235 The number of nodes in this GVPE network.
236
237 =back
238
239 Variables that are node-specific and with values pertaining to the node
240 running this GVPE:
241
242 =over 4
243
244 =item IFUPDATA=string
245
246 The value of the configuration directive C<if-up-data>.
247
248 =item MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:01
249
250 The MAC address the network interface has to use.
251
252 Might be used to initialize interfaces on platforms where GVPE does not
253 do this automatically. Please see the C<gvpe.osdep(5)> man page for
254 platform-specific information.
255
256 =item NODENAME=branch1
257
258 The nickname of the node.
259
260 =item NODEID=1
261
262 The numerical node ID of the node running this instance of GVPE. The first
263 node mentioned in the config file gets ID 1, the second ID 2 and so on.
264
265 =back
266
267 In addition, all node-specific variables (except C<NODEID>) will be
268 available with a postfix of C<_nodeid>, which contains the value for that
269 node, e.g. the C<MAC_1> variable contains the MAC address of node #1, while
270 the C<NODENAME_22> variable contains the name of node #22.
271
272 Here is a simple if-up script:
273
274 #!/bin/sh
275 ip link set $IFNAME up
276 [ $NODENAME = branch1 ] && ip addr add 10.0.0.1 dev $IFNAME
277 [ $NODENAME = branch2 ] && ip addr add 10.1.0.1 dev $IFNAME
278 ip route add 10.0.0.0/8 dev $IFNAME
279
280 More complicated examples (using routing to reduce ARP traffic) can be
281 found in the F<etc/> subdirectory of the distribution.
282
283 =item ifname = devname
284
285 Sets the tun interface name to the given name. The default is OS-specific
286 and most probably something like C<tun0>.
287
288 =item ifpersist = yes|true|on | no|false|off
289
290 Should the tun/tap device be made persistent, that is, should the device
291 stay up even when gvpe exits? Some versions of the tunnel device have
292 problems sending packets when gvpe is restarted in persistent mode, so
293 if the connections can be established but you cannot send packets from
294 the local node, try to set this to C<off> and do an ifconfig down on the
295 device.
296
297 =item ip-proto = numerical-ip-protocol
298
299 Sets the protocol number to be used for the rawip protocol. This is a
300 global option because all nodes must use the same protocol, and since
301 there are no port numbers, you cannot easily run more than one gvpe
302 instance using the same protocol, nor can you share the protocol with
303 other programs.
304
305 The default is 47 (GRE), which has a good chance of tunneling
306 through firewalls (but note that gvpe's rawip protocol is not GRE
307 compatible). Other common choices are 50 (IPSEC, ESP), 51 (IPSEC, AH), 4
308 (IPIP tunnels) or 98 (ENCAP, rfc1241).
309
310 Many versions of Linux seem to have a bug that causes them to reorder
311 packets for some ip protocols (GRE, ESP) but not for others (AH), so
312 choose wisely (that is, use 51, AH).
313
314 =item http-proxy-host = hostname/ip
315
316 The C<http-proxy-*> family of options are only available if gvpe was
317 compiled with the C<--enable-http-proxy> option and enable tunneling of
318 tcp connections through a http proxy server.
319
320 C<http-proxy-host> and C<http-proxy-port> should specify the hostname and
321 port number of the proxy server. See C<http-proxy-loginpw> if your proxy
322 requires authentication.
323
324 Please note that gvpe will still try to resolve all hostnames in the
325 configuration file, so if you are behind a proxy without access to a DNS
326 server better use numerical IP addresses.
327
328 To make best use of this option disable all protocols except TCP in your
329 config file and make sure your routers (or all other nodes) are listening
330 on a port that the proxy allows (443, https, is a common choice).
331
332 If you have a router, connecting to it will suffice. Otherwise TCP must be
333 enabled on all nodes.
334
335 Example:
336
337 http-proxy-host = proxy.example.com
338 http-proxy-port = 3128 # 8080 is another common choice
339 http-proxy-auth = schmorp:grumbeere
340
341 =item http-proxy-port = proxy-tcp-port
342
343 The port where your proxy server listens.
344
345 =item http-proxy-auth = login:password
346
347 The optional login and password used to authenticate to the proxy server,
348 separated by a literal colon (C<:>). Only basic authentication is
349 currently supported.
350
351 =item keepalive = seconds
352
353 Sets the keepalive probe interval in seconds (default: C<60>). After this
354 many seconds of inactivity the daemon will start to send keepalive probe
355 every 3 seconds until it receives a reply from the other end. If no reply
356 is received within 15 seconds, the peer is considered unreachable and the
357 connection is closed.
358
359 =item loglevel = noise|trace|debug|info|notice|warn|error|critical
360
361 Set the logging level. Connection established messages are logged at level
362 C<info>, notable errors are logged with C<error>. Default is C<info>.
363
364 =item mtu = bytes
365
366 Sets the maximum MTU that should be used on outgoing packets (basically
367 the MTU of the outgoing interface) The daemon will automatically calculate
368 maximum overhead (e.g. UDP header size, encryption blocksize...) and pass
369 this information to the C<if-up> script.
370
371 Recommended values are 1500 (ethernet), 1492 (pppoe), 1472 (pptp).
372
373 This value must be the minimum of the MTU values of all nodes.
374
375 =item nfmark = integer
376
377 This advanced option, when set to a nonzero value (default: C<0>), tries
378 to set the netfilter mark (or fwmark) value on all sockets gvpe uses to
379 send packets.
380
381 This can be used to make gvpe use a different set of routing rules. For
382 example, on GNU/Linux, the C<if-up> could set C<nfmark> to 1000 and then
383 put all routing rules into table C<99> and then use an ip rule to make
384 gvpe traffic avoid that routing table, in effect routing normal traffic
385 via gvpe and gvpe traffic via the normal system routing tables:
386
387 ip rule add not fwmark 1000 lookup 99
388
389 =item node = nickname
390
391 Not really a config setting but introduces a node section. The nickname is
392 used to select the right configuration section and must be passed as an
393 argument to the gvpe daemon.
394
395 =item node-up = relative-or-absolute-path
396
397 Sets a command (default: none) that should be called whenever a connection
398 is established (even on rekeying operations). Note that node-up/down
399 scripts will be run asynchronously, but execution is serialised, so there
400 will only ever be one such script running.
401
402 In addition to all the variables passed to C<if-up> scripts, the following
403 environment variables will be set (values are just examples):
404
405 =over 4
406
407 =item DESTNODE=branch2
408
409 The name of the remote node.
410
411 =item DESTID=2
412
413 The node id of the remote node.
414
415 =item DESTSI=rawip/88.99.77.55:0
416
417 The "socket info" of the target node, protocol dependent but usually in
418 the format protocol/ip:port.
419
420 =item DESTIP=188.13.66.8
421
422 The numerical IP address of the remote node (gvpe accepts connections from
423 everywhere, as long as the other node can authenticate itself).
424
425 =item DESTPORT=655 # deprecated
426
427 The protocol port used by the other side, if applicable.
428
429 =item STATE=up
430
431 Node-up scripts get called with STATE=up, node-change scripts get called
432 with STATE=change and node-down scripts get called with STATE=down.
433
434 =back
435
436 Here is a nontrivial example that uses nsupdate to update the name => ip
437 mapping in some DNS zone:
438
439 #!/bin/sh
440 {
441 echo update delete $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. a
442 echo update add $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. 1 in a $DESTIP
443 echo
444 } | nsupdate -d -k $CONFBASE:key.example.net.
445
446 =item node-change = relative-or-absolute-path
447
448 Same as C<node-change>, but gets called whenever something about a
449 connection changes (such as the source IP address).
450
451 =item node-down = relative-or-absolute-path
452
453 Same as C<node-up>, but gets called whenever a connection is lost.
454
455 =item pid-file = path
456
457 The path to the pid file to check and create
458 (default: C<LOCALSTATEDIR/run/gvpe.pid>).
459
460 =item private-key = relative-path-to-key
461
462 Sets the path (relative to the config directory) to the private key
463 (default: C<hostkey>). This is a printf format string so every C<%> must
464 be doubled. A single C<%s> is replaced by the hostname, so you could
465 use paths like C<hostkeys/%s> to fetch the files at the location where
466 C<gvpectrl> puts them.
467
468 Since only the private key file of the current node is used and the
469 private key file should be kept secret per-node to avoid spoofing, it is
470 not recommended to use this feature.
471
472 =item rekey = seconds
473
474 Sets the rekeying interval in seconds (default: C<3607>). Connections are
475 reestablished every C<rekey> seconds, making them use a new encryption
476 key.
477
478 =item seed-device = path
479
480 The random device used to initially and regularly seed the random
481 number generator (default: F</dev/urandom>). Randomness is of paramount
482 importance to the security of the algorithms used in gvpe.
483
484 On program start and every seed-interval, gvpe will read 64 octets.
485
486 Setting this path to the empty string will disable this functionality
487 completely (the underlying crypto library will likely look for entropy
488 sources on it's own though, so not all is lost).
489
490 =item seed-interval = seconds
491
492 The number of seconds between reseeds of the random number generator
493 (default: C<3613>). A value of C<0> disables this regular reseeding.
494
495 =back
496
497 =head2 NODE SPECIFIC SETTINGS
498
499 The following settings are node-specific, that is, every node can have
500 different settings, even within the same gvpe instance. Settings that are
501 set before the first node section set the defaults, settings that are
502 set within a node section only apply to the given node.
503
504 =over 4
505
506 =item allow-direct = nodename
507
508 Allow direct connections to this node. See C<deny-direct> for more info.
509
510 =item compress = yes|true|on | no|false|off
511
512 For the current node, this specified whether it will accept compressed
513 packets, and for all other nodes, this specifies whether to try to
514 compress data packets sent to this node (default: C<yes>). Compression is
515 really cheap even on slow computers, has no size overhead at all and will
516 only be used when the other side supports compression, so enabling this is
517 often a good idea.
518
519 =item connect = ondemand | never | always | disabled
520
521 Sets the connect mode (default: C<always>). It can be C<always> (always
522 try to establish and keep a connection to the given node), C<never>
523 (never initiate a connection to the given host, but accept connections),
524 C<ondemand> (try to establish a connection when there are outstanding
525 packets in the queue and take it down after the keepalive interval) or
526 C<disabled> (node is bad, don't talk to it).
527
528 Routers will automatically be forced to C<always> unless they are
529 C<disabled>, to ensure all nodes can talk to each other.
530
531 =item deny-direct = nodename | *
532
533 Deny direct connections to the specified node (or all nodes when C<*>
534 is given). Only one node can be specified, but you can use multiple
535 C<allow-direct> and C<deny-direct> statements. This only makes sense in
536 networks with routers, as routers are required for indirect connections.
537
538 Sometimes, a node cannot reach some other nodes for reasons of network
539 connectivity. For example, a node behind a firewall that only allows
540 connections to/from a single other node in the network. In this case one
541 should specify C<deny-direct = *> and C<allow-direct = othernodename> (the other
542 node I<must> be a router for this to work).
543
544 The algorithm to check whether a connection may be direct is as follows:
545
546 1. Other node mentioned in an C<allow-direct>? If yes, allow the connection.
547
548 2. Other node mentioned in a C<deny-direct>? If yes, deny direct connections.
549
550 3. Allow the connection.
551
552 That is, C<allow-direct> takes precedence over C<deny-direct>.
553
554 The check is done in both directions, i.e. both nodes must allow a direct
555 connection before one is attempted, so you only need to specify connect
556 limitations on one node.
557
558 =item dns-domain = domain-suffix
559
560 The DNS domain suffix that points to the DNS tunnel server for this node.
561
562 The domain must point to a NS record that points to the I<dns-hostname>,
563 i.e.
564
565 dns-domainname = tunnel.example.net
566 dns-hostname = tunnel-server.example.net
567
568 Corresponds to the following DNS entries in the C<example.net> domain:
569
570 tunnel.example.net. NS tunnel-server.example.net.
571 tunnel-server.example.net. A 13.13.13.13
572
573 =item dns-hostname = hostname/ip
574
575 The address to bind the DNS tunnel socket to, similar to the C<hostname>,
576 but for the DNS tunnel protocol only. Default: C<0.0.0.0>, but that might
577 change.
578
579 =item dns-port = port-number
580
581 The port to bind the DNS tunnel socket to. Must be C<53> on DNS tunnel servers.
582
583 =item enable-dns = yes|true|on | no|false|off
584
585 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the DNS transport
586 protocol. Avoid this protocol if you can.
587
588 Enable the DNS tunneling protocol on this node, either as server or as
589 client. Support for this transport protocol is only available when gvpe
590 was compiled using the C<--enable-dns> option.
591
592 =item enable-icmp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
593
594 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the ICMP transport protocol.
595
596 Enable the ICMP transport using ICMP packets of type C<icmp-type> on this
597 node.
598
599 =item enable-rawip = yes|true|on | no|false|off
600
601 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the RAW IP transport protocol.
602
603 Enable the RAW IPv4 transport using the C<ip-proto> protocol
604 (default: C<no>).
605
606 =item enable-tcp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
607
608 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the TCP transport protocol.
609
610 Enable the TCPv4 transport using the C<tcp-port> port
611 (default: C<no>). Support for this transport protocol is only available
612 when gvpe was compiled using the C<--enable-tcp> option.
613
614 =item enable-udp = yes|true|on | no|false|off
615
616 See gvpe.protocol(7) for a description of the UDP transport protocol.
617
618 Enable the UDPv4 transport using the C<udp-port> port (default: C<no>).
619
620 =item hostname = hostname | ip [can not be defaulted]
621
622 Forces the address of this node to be set to the given DNS hostname or IP
623 address. It will be resolved before each connect request, so dyndns should
624 work fine. If this setting is not specified and a router is available,
625 then the router will be queried for the address of this node. Otherwise,
626 the connection attempt will fail.
627
628 Note that DNS resolving is done synchronously, pausing the daemon. If that
629 is an issue you need to specify IP addresses.
630
631 =item icmp-type = integer
632
633 Sets the type value to be used for outgoing (and incoming) packets sent
634 via the ICMP transport.
635
636 The default is C<0> (which is C<echo-reply>, also known as
637 "ping-reply"). Other useful values include C<8> (C<echo-request>, a.k.a.
638 "ping") and C<11> (C<time-exceeded>), but any 8-bit value can be used.
639
640 =item if-up-data = value
641
642 The value specified using this directive will be passed to the C<if-up>
643 script in the environment variable C<IFUPDATA>.
644
645 =item inherit-tos = yes|true|on | no|false|off
646
647 Whether to inherit the TOS settings of packets sent to the tunnel when
648 sending packets to this node (default: C<yes>). If set to C<yes> then
649 outgoing tunnel packets will have the same TOS setting as the packets sent
650 to the tunnel device, which is usually what you want.
651
652 =item max-retry = positive-number
653
654 The maximum interval in seconds (default: C<3600>, one hour) between
655 retries to establish a connection to this node. When a connection cannot
656 be established, gvpe uses exponential back-off capped at this value. It's
657 sometimes useful to set this to a much lower value (e.g. C<120>) on
658 connections to routers that usually are stable but sometimes are down, to
659 assure quick reconnections even after longer downtimes.
660
661 =item max-ttl = seconds
662
663 Expire packets that couldn't be sent after this many seconds
664 (default: C<60>). Gvpe will normally queue packets for a node without an
665 active connection, in the hope of establishing a connection soon. This
666 value specifies the maximum lifetime a packet will stay in the queue, if a
667 packet gets older, it will be thrown away.
668
669 =item max-queue = positive-number>=1
670
671 The maximum number of packets that will be queued (default: C<512>)
672 for this node. If more packets are sent then earlier packets will be
673 expired. See C<max-ttl>, above.
674
675 =item router-priority = 0 | 1 | positive-number>=2
676
677 Sets the router priority of the given node (default: C<0>, disabled).
678
679 If some node tries to connect to another node but it doesn't have a
680 hostname, it asks a router node for it's IP address. The router node
681 chosen is the one with the highest priority larger than C<1> that is
682 currently reachable. This is called a I<mediated> connection, as the
683 connection itself will still be direct, but it uses another node to
684 mediate between the two nodes.
685
686 The value C<0> disables routing, that means if the node receives a packet
687 not for itself it will not forward it but instead drop it.
688
689 The special value C<1> allows other hosts to route through the router
690 host, but they will never route through it by default (i.e. the config
691 file of another node needs to specify a router priority higher than one
692 to choose such a node for routing).
693
694 The idea behind this is that some hosts can, if required, bump the
695 C<router-priority> setting to higher than C<1> in their local config to
696 route through specific hosts. If C<router-priority> is C<0>, then routing
697 will be refused, so C<1> serves as a "enable, but do not use by default"
698 switch.
699
700 Nodes with C<router-priority> set to C<2> or higher will always be forced
701 to C<connect> = C<always> (unless they are C<disabled>).
702
703 =item tcp-port = port-number
704
705 Similar to C<udp-port> (default: C<655>), but sets the TCP port number.
706
707 =item udp-port = port-number
708
709 Sets the port number used by the UDP protocol (default: C<655>, not
710 officially assigned by IANA!).
711
712 =back
713
714 =head1 CONFIG DIRECTORY LAYOUT
715
716 The default (or recommended) directory layout for the config directory is:
717
718 =over 4
719
720 =item gvpe.conf
721
722 The config file.
723
724 =item if-up
725
726 The if-up script
727
728 =item node-up, node-down
729
730 If used the node up or node-down scripts.
731
732 =item hostkey
733
734 The private key (taken from C<hostkeys/nodename>) of the current host.
735
736 =item pubkey/nodename
737
738 The public keys of the other nodes, one file per node.
739
740 =back
741
742 =head1 SEE ALSO
743
744 gvpe(5), gvpe(8), gvpectrl(8).
745
746 =head1 AUTHOR
747
748 Marc Lehmann <gvpe@schmorp.de>
749