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Revision: 1.20
Committed: Sun Aug 10 10:35:26 2008 UTC (15 years, 9 months ago) by pcg
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.19: +61 -45 lines
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# Content
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134 .IX Title "GVPE.CONF 5"
135 .TH GVPE.CONF 5 "2008-08-07" "2.2" "GNU Virtual Private Ethernet"
136 .\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes
137 .\" way too many mistakes in technical documents.
138 .if n .ad l
139 .nh
140 .SH "NAME"
141 gvpe.conf \- configuration file for the GNU VPE daemon
142 .SH "SYNOPSIS"
143 .IX Header "SYNOPSIS"
144 .Vb 3
145 \& udp\-port = 407
146 \& mtu = 1492
147 \& ifname = vpn0
148 \&
149 \& node = branch1
150 \& hostname = 1.2.3.4
151 \&
152 \& node = branch2
153 \& hostname = www.example.net
154 \& udp\-port = 500 # this host uses a different udp\-port
155 \&
156 \& node = branch3
157 \& connect = ondemand
158 .Ve
159 .SH "DESCRIPTION"
160 .IX Header "DESCRIPTION"
161 The gvpe config file consists of a series of lines that contain \f(CW\*(C`variable
162 = value\*(C'\fR pairs. Empty lines are ignored. Comments start with a \f(CW\*(C`#\*(C'\fR and
163 extend to the end of the line. They can be used on their own lines, or
164 after any directives. Whitespace is allowed around the \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR sign or after
165 values, but not within the variable names or values themselves.
166 .PP
167 The only exception to the above is the \*(L"on\*(R" directive that can prefix any
168 \&\f(CW\*(C`name = value\*(C'\fR setting and will only \*(L"execute\*(R" it on the named node, or
169 (if the nodename starts with \*(L"!\*(R") on all nodes except the named one.
170 .PP
171 .Vb 3
172 \& name = value
173 \& on branch1 loglevel = noise
174 \& on !branch2 connect = ondemand
175 .Ve
176 .PP
177 All settings are executed \*(L"in order\*(R", that is, later settings of the same
178 variable overwrite earlier ones.
179 .SH "ANATOMY OF A CONFIG FILE"
180 .IX Header "ANATOMY OF A CONFIG FILE"
181 Usually, a config file starts with global settings (like the udp port to
182 listen on), followed by node-specific sections that begin with a \f(CW\*(C`node =
183 nickname\*(C'\fR line.
184 .PP
185 Every node that is part of the network must have a section that starts
186 with \f(CW\*(C`node = nickname\*(C'\fR. The number and order of the nodes is important
187 and must be the same on all hosts. It is not uncommon for node sections to
188 be completely empty \- if the default values are right.
189 .PP
190 Node-specific settings can be used at any time. If used before the first
191 node section they will set the default values for all following nodes.
192 .SH "CONFIG VARIABLES"
193 .IX Header "CONFIG VARIABLES"
194 .Sh "\s-1GLOBAL\s0 \s-1SETTINGS\s0"
195 .IX Subsection "GLOBAL SETTINGS"
196 Global settings will affect the behaviour of the running gvpe daemon, that
197 is, they are in some sense node-specific (config files can set different
198 values on different nodes using \f(CW\*(C`on\*(C'\fR), but will affect the behaviour of
199 the gvpe daemon and all connections it creates.
200 .IP "dns-forw-host = hostname/ip" 4
201 .IX Item "dns-forw-host = hostname/ip"
202 The dns server to forward dns requests to for the \s-1DNS\s0 tunnel protocol
203 (default: \f(CW127.0.0.1\fR, changing it is highly recommended).
204 .IP "dns-forw-port = port-number" 4
205 .IX Item "dns-forw-port = port-number"
206 The port where the \f(CW\*(C`dns\-forw\-host\*(C'\fR is to be contacted (default: \f(CW53\fR,
207 which is fine in most cases).
208 .IP "dns-max-outstanding = integer-number-of-requests" 4
209 .IX Item "dns-max-outstanding = integer-number-of-requests"
210 The maximum number of outstanding \s-1DNS\s0 transport requests
211 (default: \f(CW100\fR). \s-1GVPE\s0 will never issue more requests then the given
212 limit without receiving replies. In heavily overloaded situations it might
213 help to set this to a low number (e.g. \f(CW3\fR or even \f(CW1\fR) to limit the
214 number of parallel requests.
215 .Sp
216 The default should be working ok for most links.
217 .IP "dns-overlap-factor = float" 4
218 .IX Item "dns-overlap-factor = float"
219 The \s-1DNS\s0 transport uses the minimum request latency (\fBmin_latency\fR) seen
220 during a connection as it's timing base. This factor (default: \f(CW0.5\fR,
221 must be > 0) is multiplied by \fBmin_latency\fR to get the maximum sending
222 rate (= minimum send interval), i.e. a factor of \f(CW1\fR means that a new
223 request might be generated every \fBmin_latency\fR seconds, which means on
224 average there should only ever be one outstanding request. A factor of
225 \&\f(CW0.5\fR means that \s-1GVPE\s0 will send requests twice as often as the minimum
226 latency measured.
227 .Sp
228 For congested or picky dns forwarders you could use a value nearer to or
229 exceeding \f(CW1\fR.
230 .Sp
231 The default should be working ok for most links.
232 .IP "dns-send-interval = send-interval-in-seconds" 4
233 .IX Item "dns-send-interval = send-interval-in-seconds"
234 The minimum send interval (= maximum rate) that the \s-1DNS\s0 transport will
235 use to send new \s-1DNS\s0 requests. \s-1GVPE\s0 will not exceed this rate even when
236 the latency is very low. The default is \f(CW0.01\fR, which means \s-1GVPE\s0 will
237 not send more than 100 \s-1DNS\s0 requests per connection per second. For
238 high-bandwidth links you could go lower, e.g. to \f(CW0.001\fR or so. For
239 congested or rate-limited links, you might want to go higher, say \f(CW0.1\fR,
240 \&\f(CW0.2\fR or even higher.
241 .Sp
242 The default should be working ok for most links.
243 .IP "dns-timeout-factor = float" 4
244 .IX Item "dns-timeout-factor = float"
245 Factor to multiply the \f(CW\*(C`min_latency\*(C'\fR (see \f(CW\*(C`dns\-overlap\-factor\*(C'\fR) by to
246 get request timeouts. The default of \f(CW8\fR means that the \s-1DNS\s0 transport
247 will resend the request when no reply has been received for longer than
248 eight times the minimum (= expected) latency, assuming the request or
249 reply has been lost.
250 .Sp
251 For congested links a higher value might be necessary (e.g. \f(CW30\fR). If
252 the link is very stable lower values (e.g. \f(CW2\fR) might work
253 nicely. Values near or below \f(CW1\fR makes no sense whatsoever.
254 .Sp
255 The default should be working ok for most links but will result in low
256 throughput if packet loss is high.
257 .IP "if-up = relative-or-absolute-path" 4
258 .IX Item "if-up = relative-or-absolute-path"
259 Sets the path of a script that should be called immediately after the
260 network interface is initialized (but not neccessarily up). The following
261 environment variables are passed to it (the values are just examples).
262 .Sp
263 Variables that have the same value on all nodes:
264 .RS 4
265 .IP "CONFBASE=/etc/gvpe" 4
266 .IX Item "CONFBASE=/etc/gvpe"
267 The configuration base directory.
268 .IP "IFNAME=vpn0" 4
269 .IX Item "IFNAME=vpn0"
270 The network interface to initialize.
271 .IP "IFTYPE=native # or tincd" 4
272 .IX Item "IFTYPE=native # or tincd"
273 .PD 0
274 .IP "IFSUBTYPE=linux # or freebsd, darwin etc.." 4
275 .IX Item "IFSUBTYPE=linux # or freebsd, darwin etc.."
276 .PD
277 The interface type (\f(CW\*(C`native\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`tincd\*(C'\fR) and the subtype (usually the
278 \&\s-1OS\s0 name in lowercase) that this \s-1GVPE\s0 was configured for. Can be used to
279 select the correct syntax to use for network-related commands.
280 .IP "MTU=1436" 4
281 .IX Item "MTU=1436"
282 The \s-1MTU\s0 to set the interface to. You can use lower values (if done
283 consistently on all hosts), but this is usually ineffective.
284 .IP "NODES=5" 4
285 .IX Item "NODES=5"
286 The number of nodes in this \s-1GVPE\s0 network.
287 .RE
288 .RS 4
289 .Sp
290 Variables that are node-specific and with values pertaining to the node
291 running this \s-1GVPE:\s0
292 .IP "IFUPDATA=string" 4
293 .IX Item "IFUPDATA=string"
294 The value of the configuration directive \f(CW\*(C`if\-up\-data\*(C'\fR.
295 .IP "MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:01" 4
296 .IX Item "MAC=fe:fd:80:00:00:01"
297 The \s-1MAC\s0 address the network interface has to use.
298 .Sp
299 Might be used to initialize interfaces on platforms where \s-1GVPE\s0 does not
300 do this automatically. Please see the \f(CW\*(C`gvpe.osdep(5)\*(C'\fR manpage for
301 platform-specific information.
302 .IP "NODENAME=branch1" 4
303 .IX Item "NODENAME=branch1"
304 The nickname of the node.
305 .IP "NODEID=1" 4
306 .IX Item "NODEID=1"
307 The numerical node \s-1ID\s0 of the node running this instance of \s-1GVPE\s0. The first
308 node mentioned in the config file gets \s-1ID\s0 1, the second \s-1ID\s0 2 and so on.
309 .RE
310 .RS 4
311 .Sp
312 In addition, all node-specific variables (except \f(CW\*(C`NODEID\*(C'\fR) will be
313 available with a postfix of \f(CW\*(C`_nodeid\*(C'\fR, which contains the value for that
314 node, e.g. the \f(CW\*(C`MAC_1\*(C'\fR variable contains the \s-1MAC\s0 address of node #1, while
315 the \f(CW\*(C`NODENAME_22\*(C'\fR variable contains the name of node #22.
316 .Sp
317 Here is a simple if-up script:
318 .Sp
319 .Vb 5
320 \& #!/bin/sh
321 \& ip link set $IFNAME up
322 \& [ $NODENAME = branch1 ] && ip addr add 10.0.0.1 dev $IFNAME
323 \& [ $NODENAME = branch2 ] && ip addr add 10.1.0.1 dev $IFNAME
324 \& ip route add 10.0.0.0/8 dev $IFNAME
325 .Ve
326 .Sp
327 More complicated examples (using routing to reduce arp traffic) can be
328 found in the etc/ subdirectory of the distribution.
329 .RE
330 .IP "ifname = devname" 4
331 .IX Item "ifname = devname"
332 Sets the tun interface name to the given name. The default is OS-specific
333 and most probably something like \f(CW\*(C`tun0\*(C'\fR.
334 .IP "ifpersist = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
335 .IX Item "ifpersist = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
336 Should the tun/tap device be made persistent, that is, should the device
337 stay up even when gvpe exits? Some versions of the tunnel device have
338 problems sending packets when gvpe is restarted in persistent mode, so
339 if the connections can be established but you cannot send packets from
340 the local node, try to set this to \f(CW\*(C`off\*(C'\fR and do an ifconfig down on the
341 device.
342 .IP "ip-proto = numerical-ip-protocol" 4
343 .IX Item "ip-proto = numerical-ip-protocol"
344 Sets the protocol number to be used for the rawip protocol. This is a
345 global option because all hosts must use the same protocol, and since
346 there are no port numbers, you cannot easily run more than one gvpe
347 instance using the same protocol, nor can you share the protocol with
348 other programs.
349 .Sp
350 The default is 47 (\s-1GRE\s0), which has a good chance of tunneling through
351 firewalls (but note that the rawip protocol is not \s-1GRE\s0 compatible). Other
352 common choices are 50 (\s-1IPSEC\s0, \s-1ESP\s0), 51 (\s-1IPSEC\s0, \s-1AH\s0), 4 (\s-1IPIP\s0 tunnels) or 98
353 (\s-1ENCAP\s0, rfc1241)
354 .IP "http-proxy-host = hostname/ip" 4
355 .IX Item "http-proxy-host = hostname/ip"
356 The \f(CW\*(C`http\-proxy\-*\*(C'\fR family of options are only available if gvpe was
357 compiled with the \f(CW\*(C`\-\-enable\-http\-proxy\*(C'\fR option and enable tunneling of
358 tcp connections through a http proxy server.
359 .Sp
360 \&\f(CW\*(C`http\-proxy\-host\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`http\-proxy\-port\*(C'\fR should specify the hostname and
361 port number of the proxy server. See \f(CW\*(C`http\-proxy\-loginpw\*(C'\fR if your proxy
362 requires authentication.
363 .Sp
364 Please note that gvpe will still try to resolve all hostnames in the
365 configuration file, so if you are behind a proxy without access to a dns
366 server better use numerical \s-1IP\s0 addresses.
367 .Sp
368 To make best use of this option disable all protocols except tcp in your
369 config file and make sure your routers (or all other hosts) are listening
370 on a port that the proxy allows (443, https, is a common choice).
371 .Sp
372 If you have a router, connecting to it will suffice. Otherwise tcp must be
373 enabled on all hosts.
374 .Sp
375 Example:
376 .Sp
377 .Vb 3
378 \& http\-proxy\-host = proxy.example.com
379 \& http\-proxy\-port = 3128 # 8080 is another common choice
380 \& http\-proxy\-auth = schmorp:grumbeere
381 .Ve
382 .IP "http-proxy-port = proxy-tcp-port" 4
383 .IX Item "http-proxy-port = proxy-tcp-port"
384 The port where your proxy server listens.
385 .IP "http-proxy-auth = login:password" 4
386 .IX Item "http-proxy-auth = login:password"
387 The optional login and password used to authenticate to the proxy server,
388 seperated by a literal colon (\f(CW\*(C`:\*(C'\fR). Only basic authentication is
389 currently supported.
390 .IP "keepalive = seconds" 4
391 .IX Item "keepalive = seconds"
392 Sets the keepalive probe interval in seconds (default: \f(CW60\fR). After this
393 many seconds of inactivity the daemon will start to send keepalive probe
394 every 5 seconds until it receives a reply from the other end. If no reply
395 is received within 30 seconds, the peer is considered unreachable and the
396 connection is closed.
397 .IP "loglevel = noise|trace|debug|info|notice|warn|error|critical" 4
398 .IX Item "loglevel = noise|trace|debug|info|notice|warn|error|critical"
399 Set the logging level. Connection established messages are logged at level
400 \&\f(CW\*(C`info\*(C'\fR, notable errors are logged with \f(CW\*(C`error\*(C'\fR. Default is \f(CW\*(C`info\*(C'\fR.
401 .IP "mtu = bytes" 4
402 .IX Item "mtu = bytes"
403 Sets the maximum \s-1MTU\s0 that should be used on outgoing packets (basically
404 the \s-1MTU\s0 of the outgoing interface) The daemon will automatically calculate
405 maximum overhead (e.g. udp header size, encryption blocksize...) and pass
406 this information to the \f(CW\*(C`if\-up\*(C'\fR script.
407 .Sp
408 Recommended values are 1500 (ethernet), 1492 (pppoe), 1472 (pptp).
409 .Sp
410 This value must be the minimum of the mtu values of all hosts.
411 .IP "node = nickname" 4
412 .IX Item "node = nickname"
413 Not really a config setting but introduces a node section. The nickname is
414 used to select the right configuration section and must be passed as an
415 argument to the gvpe daemon.
416 .IP "node-up = relative-or-absolute-path" 4
417 .IX Item "node-up = relative-or-absolute-path"
418 Sets a command (default: none) that should be called whenever a connection
419 is established (even on rekeying operations). Note that node\-up/down
420 scripts will be run asynchronously, but execution is serialised, so there
421 will only ever be one such script running.
422 .Sp
423 In addition to all the variables passed to \f(CW\*(C`if\-up\*(C'\fR scripts, the following
424 environment variables will be set:
425 .RS 4
426 .IP "DESTNODE=branch2" 4
427 .IX Item "DESTNODE=branch2"
428 The name of the remote node.
429 .IP "DESTID=2" 4
430 .IX Item "DESTID=2"
431 The node id of the remote node.
432 .IP "DESTIP=188.13.66.8" 4
433 .IX Item "DESTIP=188.13.66.8"
434 The numerical \s-1IP\s0 address of the remote host (gvpe accepts connections from
435 everywhere, as long as the other host can authenticate itself).
436 .IP "DESTPORT=655 # deprecated" 4
437 .IX Item "DESTPORT=655 # deprecated"
438 The \s-1UDP\s0 port used by the other side.
439 .IP "STATE=UP" 4
440 .IX Item "STATE=UP"
441 Node-up scripts get called with STATE=UP, node-down scripts get called
442 with STATE=DOWN.
443 .RE
444 .RS 4
445 .Sp
446 Here is a nontrivial example that uses nsupdate to update the name => ip
447 mapping in some dns zone:
448 .Sp
449 .Vb 6
450 \& #!/bin/sh
451 \& {
452 \& echo update delete $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. a
453 \& echo update add $DESTNODE.lowttl.example.net. 1 in a $DESTIP
454 \& echo
455 \& } | nsupdate \-d \-k $CONFBASE:key.example.net.
456 .Ve
457 .RE
458 .IP "node-down = relative-or-absolute-path" 4
459 .IX Item "node-down = relative-or-absolute-path"
460 Same as \f(CW\*(C`node\-up\*(C'\fR, but gets called whenever a connection is lost.
461 .IP "pid-file = path" 4
462 .IX Item "pid-file = path"
463 The path to the pid file to check and create
464 (default: \f(CW\*(C`LOCALSTATEDIR/run/gvpe.pid\*(C'\fR).
465 .IP "private-key = relative-path-to-key" 4
466 .IX Item "private-key = relative-path-to-key"
467 Sets the path (relative to the config directory) to the private key
468 (default: \f(CW\*(C`hostkey\*(C'\fR). This is a printf format string so every \f(CW\*(C`%\*(C'\fR must
469 be doubled. A single \f(CW%s\fR is replaced by the hostname, so you could
470 use paths like \f(CW\*(C`hostkeys/%s\*(C'\fR to fetch the files at the location where
471 \&\f(CW\*(C`gvpectrl\*(C'\fR puts them.
472 .Sp
473 Since only the private key file of the current node is used and the
474 private key file should be kept secret per-host to avoid spoofings, it is
475 not recommended to use this feature.
476 .IP "rekey = seconds" 4
477 .IX Item "rekey = seconds"
478 Sets the rekeying interval in seconds (default: \f(CW3600\fR). Connections are
479 reestablished every \f(CW\*(C`rekey\*(C'\fR seconds.
480 .Sh "\s-1NODE\s0 \s-1SPECIFIC\s0 \s-1SETTINGS\s0"
481 .IX Subsection "NODE SPECIFIC SETTINGS"
482 The following settings are node-specific, that is, every node can have
483 different settings, even within the same gvpe instance. Settings that are
484 set before the first node section set the defaults, settings that are
485 set within a node section only apply to the given node.
486 .IP "allow-direct = nodename" 4
487 .IX Item "allow-direct = nodename"
488 Allow direct connections to this node. See \f(CW\*(C`deny\-direct\*(C'\fR for more info.
489 .IP "compress = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
490 .IX Item "compress = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
491 Wether to compress data packets sent to this host (default: \f(CW\*(C`yes\*(C'\fR).
492 Compression is really cheap even on slow computers and has no size
493 overhead at all, so enabling this is a good idea.
494 .IP "connect = ondemand | never | always | disabled" 4
495 .IX Item "connect = ondemand | never | always | disabled"
496 Sets the connect mode (default: \f(CW\*(C`always\*(C'\fR). It can be \f(CW\*(C`always\*(C'\fR (always
497 try to establish and keep a connection to the given host), \f(CW\*(C`never\*(C'\fR
498 (never initiate a connection to the given host, but accept connections),
499 \&\f(CW\*(C`ondemand\*(C'\fR (try to establish a connection when there are outstanding
500 packets in the queue and take it down after the keepalive interval) or
501 \&\f(CW\*(C`disabled\*(C'\fR (node is bad, don't talk to it).
502 .IP "deny-direct = nodename | *" 4
503 .IX Item "deny-direct = nodename | *"
504 Deny direct connections to the specified node (or all nodes when \f(CW\*(C`*\*(C'\fR
505 is given). Only one node can be specified, but you can use multiple
506 \&\f(CW\*(C`allow\-direct\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`deny\-direct\*(C'\fR statements. This only makes sense in
507 networks with routers, as routers are required for indirect connections.
508 .Sp
509 Sometimes, a node cannot reach some other nodes for reasons of network
510 connectivity. For example, a node behind a firewall that only allows
511 conenctions to/from a single other node in the network. In this case one
512 should specify \f(CW\*(C`deny\-direct = *\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`allow\-direct = othernodename\*(C'\fR (the other
513 node \fImust\fR be a router for this to work).
514 .Sp
515 The algorithm to check wether a connection may be direct is as follows:
516 .Sp
517 1. Other node mentioned in a \f(CW\*(C`allow\-direct\*(C'\fR? If yes, allow the connection.
518 .Sp
519 2. Other node mentioned in a \f(CW\*(C`deny\-direct\*(C'\fR? If yes, deny direct connections.
520 .Sp
521 3. Allow the connection.
522 .Sp
523 That is, \f(CW\*(C`allow\-direct\*(C'\fR takes precedence over \f(CW\*(C`deny\-direct\*(C'\fR.
524 .Sp
525 The check is done in both directions, i.e. both nodes must allow a direct
526 connection before one is attempted, so you only need to specify connect
527 limitations on one node.
528 .IP "dns-domain = domain-suffix" 4
529 .IX Item "dns-domain = domain-suffix"
530 The \s-1DNS\s0 domain suffix that points to the \s-1DNS\s0 tunnel server for this node.
531 .Sp
532 The domain must point to a \s-1NS\s0 record that points to the \fIdns-hostname\fR,
533 i.e.
534 .Sp
535 .Vb 2
536 \& dns\-domainname = tunnel.example.net
537 \& dns\-hostname = tunnel\-server.example.net
538 .Ve
539 .Sp
540 Corresponds to the following \s-1DNS\s0 entries in the \f(CW\*(C`example.net\*(C'\fR domain:
541 .Sp
542 .Vb 2
543 \& tunnel.example.net. NS tunnel\-server.example.net.
544 \& tunnel\-server.example.net. A 13.13.13.13
545 .Ve
546 .IP "dns-hostname = hostname/ip" 4
547 .IX Item "dns-hostname = hostname/ip"
548 The address to bind the \s-1DNS\s0 tunnel socket to, similar to the \f(CW\*(C`hostname\*(C'\fR,
549 but for the \s-1DNS\s0 tunnel protocol only. Default: \f(CW0.0.0.0\fR, but that might
550 change.
551 .IP "dns-port = port-number" 4
552 .IX Item "dns-port = port-number"
553 The port to bind the \s-1DNS\s0 tunnel socket to. Must be \f(CW53\fR on \s-1DNS\s0 tunnel servers.
554 .IP "enable-dns = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
555 .IX Item "enable-dns = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
556 See \fIgvpe.protocol\fR\|(7) for a description of the \s-1DNS\s0 transport
557 protocol. Avoid this protocol if you can.
558 .Sp
559 Enable the \s-1DNS\s0 tunneling protocol on this node, either as server or as
560 client. Support for this transport protocol is only available when gvpe
561 was compiled using the \f(CW\*(C`\-\-enable\-dns\*(C'\fR option.
562 .IP "enable-icmp = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
563 .IX Item "enable-icmp = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
564 See \fIgvpe.protocol\fR\|(7) for a description of the \s-1ICMP\s0 transport protocol.
565 .Sp
566 Enable the \s-1ICMP\s0 transport using icmp packets of type \f(CW\*(C`icmp\-type\*(C'\fR on this
567 node.
568 .IP "enable-rawip = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
569 .IX Item "enable-rawip = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
570 See \fIgvpe.protocol\fR\|(7) for a description of the \s-1RAW\s0 \s-1IP\s0 transport protocol.
571 .Sp
572 Enable the \s-1RAW\s0 IPv4 transport using the \f(CW\*(C`ip\-proto\*(C'\fR protocol
573 (default: \f(CW\*(C`no\*(C'\fR).
574 .IP "enable-tcp = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
575 .IX Item "enable-tcp = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
576 See \fIgvpe.protocol\fR\|(7) for a description of the \s-1TCP\s0 transport protocol.
577 .Sp
578 Enable the TCPv4 transport using the \f(CW\*(C`tcp\-port\*(C'\fR port
579 (default: \f(CW\*(C`no\*(C'\fR). Support for this transport protocol is only available
580 when gvpe was compiled using the \f(CW\*(C`\-\-enable\-tcp\*(C'\fR option.
581 .IP "enable-udp = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
582 .IX Item "enable-udp = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
583 See \fIgvpe.protocol\fR\|(7) for a description of the \s-1UDP\s0 transport protocol.
584 .Sp
585 Enable the UDPv4 transport using the \f(CW\*(C`udp\-port\*(C'\fR port (default: \f(CW\*(C`no\*(C'\fR,
586 unless no other protocol is enabled for a node, in which case this
587 protocol is enabled automatically).
588 .Sp
589 \&\s-1NOTE:\s0 Please specify \f(CW\*(C`enable\-udp = yes\*(C'\fR if you want t use it even though
590 it might get switched on automatically, as some future version might
591 default to another default protocol.
592 .IP "hostname = hostname | ip [can not be defaulted]" 4
593 .IX Item "hostname = hostname | ip [can not be defaulted]"
594 Forces the address of this node to be set to the given dns hostname or ip
595 address. It will be resolved before each connect request, so dyndns should
596 work fine. If this setting is not specified and a router is available,
597 then the router will be queried for the address of this node. Otherwise,
598 the connection attempt will fail.
599 .IP "icmp-type = integer" 4
600 .IX Item "icmp-type = integer"
601 Sets the type value to be used for outgoing (and incoming) packets sent
602 via the \s-1ICMP\s0 transport.
603 .Sp
604 The default is \f(CW0\fR (which is \f(CW\*(C`echo\-reply\*(C'\fR, also known as
605 \&\*(L"ping-replies\*(R"). Other useful values include \f(CW8\fR (\f(CW\*(C`echo\-request\*(C'\fR, a.k.a.
606 \&\*(L"ping\*(R") and \f(CW11\fR (\f(CW\*(C`time\-exceeded\*(C'\fR), but any 8\-bit value can be used.
607 .IP "if-up-data = value" 4
608 .IX Item "if-up-data = value"
609 The value specified using this directive will be passed to the \f(CW\*(C`if\-up\*(C'\fR
610 script in the environment variable \f(CW\*(C`IFUPDATA\*(C'\fR.
611 .IP "inherit-tos = yes|true|on | no|false|off" 4
612 .IX Item "inherit-tos = yes|true|on | no|false|off"
613 Wether to inherit the \s-1TOS\s0 settings of packets sent to the tunnel when
614 sending packets to this node (default: \f(CW\*(C`yes\*(C'\fR). If set to \f(CW\*(C`yes\*(C'\fR then
615 outgoing tunnel packets will have the same \s-1TOS\s0 setting as the packets sent
616 to the tunnel device, which is usually what you want.
617 .IP "max-retry = positive-number" 4
618 .IX Item "max-retry = positive-number"
619 The maximum interval in seconds (default: \f(CW3600\fR, one hour) between
620 retries to establish a connection to this node. When a connection cannot
621 be established, gvpe uses exponential backoff capped at this value. It's
622 sometimes useful to set this to a much lower value (e.g. \f(CW120\fR) on
623 connections to routers that usually are stable but sometimes are down, to
624 assure quick reconnections even after longer downtimes.
625 .IP "max-ttl = seconds" 4
626 .IX Item "max-ttl = seconds"
627 Expire packets that couldn't be sent after this many seconds
628 (default: \f(CW60\fR). Gvpe will normally queue packets for a node without an
629 active connection, in the hope of establishing a connection soon. This
630 value specifies the maximum lifetime a packet will stay in the queue, if a
631 packet gets older, it will be thrown away.
632 .IP "max-queue = positive-number" 4
633 .IX Item "max-queue = positive-number"
634 The maximum number of packets that will be queued (default: \f(CW512\fR)
635 for this node. If more packets are sent then earlier packets will be
636 expired. See \f(CW\*(C`max\-ttl\*(C'\fR, above.
637 .IP "router-priority = 0 | 1 | positive\-number>=2" 4
638 .IX Item "router-priority = 0 | 1 | positive-number>=2"
639 Sets the router priority of the given host (default: \f(CW0\fR, disabled). If
640 some host tries to connect to another host without a hostname, it asks
641 the router host for it's \s-1IP\s0 address. The router host is the one with the
642 highest priority larger than \f(CW1\fR that is currently reachable.
643 .Sp
644 Make sure all hosts always connect (\f(CW\*(C`connect = always\*(C'\fR) to the router
645 hosts, otherwise connecting to them might be impossible.
646 .Sp
647 The special value \f(CW1\fR allows other hosts to route through the router
648 host, but they will never route through it by default. The value \f(CW0\fR
649 disables routing. The idea behind this is that some hosts can, if
650 required, bump the \f(CW\*(C`router\-priority\*(C'\fR setting to higher than \f(CW1\fR in their
651 local config to route through specific hosts. If \f(CW\*(C`router\-priority\*(C'\fR is
652 \&\f(CW0\fR, then routing will be refused, so \f(CW1\fR serves as a \*(L"enable, but do
653 not use by default\*(R" switch.
654 .IP "tcp-port = port-number" 4
655 .IX Item "tcp-port = port-number"
656 Similar to \f(CW\*(C`udp\-port\*(C'\fR (default: \f(CW655\fR), but sets the \s-1TCP\s0 port number.
657 .IP "udp-port = port-number" 4
658 .IX Item "udp-port = port-number"
659 Sets the port number used by the \s-1UDP\s0 protocol (default: \f(CW655\fR, not
660 officially assigned by \s-1IANA\s0!).
661 .SH "CONFIG DIRECTORY LAYOUT"
662 .IX Header "CONFIG DIRECTORY LAYOUT"
663 The default (or recommended) directory layout for the config directory is:
664 .IP "" 4
665 .IX Xref "gvpe.conf"
666 The config file.
667 .IP "" 4
668 .IX Xref "if-up"
669 The if-up script
670 .IP "," 4
671 .IX Xref "node-up node-down"
672 If used the node up or node-down scripts.
673 .IP "" 4
674 .IX Xref "hostkey"
675 The private key (taken from \f(CW\*(C`hostkeys/nodename\*(C'\fR) of the current host.
676 .IP "" 4
677 .IX Xref "pubkey nodename"
678 The public keys of the other nodes, one file per node.
679 .SH "SEE ALSO"
680 .IX Header "SEE ALSO"
681 \&\fIgvpe\fR\|(5), \fIgvpe\fR\|(8), \fIgvpectrl\fR\|(8).
682 .SH "AUTHOR"
683 .IX Header "AUTHOR"
684 Marc Lehmann <gvpe@schmorp.de>