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1\documentstyle[12pt,twoside]{article}
2\def\TITLE{IP Command Reference}
3\input preamble
4\begin{center}
5\Large\bf IP Command Reference.
6\end{center}
7
8
9\begin{center}
10{ \large Alexey~N.~Kuznetsov } \\
11\em Institute for Nuclear Research, Moscow \\
12\verb|kuznet@ms2.inr.ac.ru| \\
13\rm April 14, 1999
14\end{center}
15
16\vspace{5mm}
17
18\tableofcontents
19
20\newpage
21
22\section{About this document}
23
24This document presents a comprehensive description of the \verb|ip| utility
25from the \verb|iproute2| package. It is not a tutorial or user's guide.
26It is a {\em dictionary\/}, not explaining terms,
27but translating them into other terms, which may also be unknown to the reader.
28However, the document is self-contained and the reader, provided they have a
29basic networking background, will find enough information
30and examples to understand and configure Linux-2.2 IP and IPv6
31networking.
32
33This document is split into sections explaining \verb|ip| commands
34and options, decrypting \verb|ip| output and containing a few examples.
35More voluminous examples and some topics, which require more elaborate
36discussion, are in the appendix.
37
38The paragraphs beginning with NB contain side notes, warnings about
39bugs and design drawbacks. They may be skipped at the first reading.
40
41\section{{\tt ip} --- command syntax}
42
43The generic form of an \verb|ip| command is:
44\begin{verbatim}
45ip [ OPTIONS ] OBJECT [ COMMAND [ ARGUMENTS ]]
46\end{verbatim}
47where \verb|OPTIONS| is a set of optional modifiers affecting the
48general behaviour of the \verb|ip| utility or changing its output. All options
49begin with the character \verb|'-'| and may be used in either long or abbreviated
50forms. Currently, the following options are available:
51
52\begin{itemize}
53\item \verb|-V|, \verb|-Version|
54
55--- print the version of the \verb|ip| utility and exit.
56
57
58\item \verb|-s|, \verb|-stats|, \verb|-statistics|
59
60--- output more information. If the option
61appears twice or more, the amount of information increases.
62As a rule, the information is statistics or some time values.
63
64
65\item \verb|-f|, \verb|-family| followed by a protocol family
66identifier: \verb|inet|, \verb|inet6| or \verb|link|.
67
68--- enforce the protocol family to use. If the option is not present,
69the protocol family is guessed from other arguments. If the rest of the command
70line does not give enough information to guess the family, \verb|ip| falls back to the default
71one, usually \verb|inet| or \verb|any|. \verb|link| is a special family
72identifier meaning that no networking protocol is involved.
73
74\item \verb|-4|
75
76--- shortcut for \verb|-family inet|.
77
78\item \verb|-6|
79
80--- shortcut for \verb|-family inet6|.
81
82\item \verb|-0|
83
84--- shortcut for \verb|-family link|.
85
86
87\item \verb|-o|, \verb|-oneline|
88
89--- output each record on a single line, replacing line feeds
90with the \verb|'\'| character. This is convenient when you want to
91count records with \verb|wc| or to \verb|grep| the output. The trivial
92script \verb|rtpr| converts the output back into readable form.
93
94\item \verb|-r|, \verb|-resolve|
95
96--- use the system's name resolver to print DNS names instead of
97host addresses.
98
99\begin{NB}
100 Do not use this option when reporting bugs or asking for advice.
101\end{NB}
102\begin{NB}
103 \verb|ip| never uses DNS to resolve names to addresses.
104\end{NB}
105
106\end{itemize}
107
108\verb|OBJECT| is the object to manage or to get information about.
109The object types currently understood by \verb|ip| are:
110
111\begin{itemize}
112\item \verb|link| --- network device
113\item \verb|address| --- protocol (IP or IPv6) address on a device
114\item \verb|neighbour| --- ARP or NDISC cache entry
115\item \verb|route| --- routing table entry
116\item \verb|rule| --- rule in routing policy database
117\item \verb|maddress| --- multicast address
118\item \verb|mroute| --- multicast routing cache entry
119\item \verb|tunnel| --- tunnel over IP
120\end{itemize}
121
122Again, the names of all objects may be written in full or
123abbreviated form, f.e.\ \verb|address| is abbreviated as \verb|addr|
124or just \verb|a|.
125
126\verb|COMMAND| specifies the action to perform on the object.
127The set of possible actions depends on the object type.
128As a rule, it is possible to \verb|add|, \verb|delete| and
129\verb|show| (or \verb|list|) objects, but some objects
130do not allow all of these operations or have some additional commands.
131The \verb|help| command is available for all objects. It prints
132out a list of available commands and argument syntax conventions.
133
134If no command is given, some default command is assumed.
135Usually it is \verb|list| or, if the objects of this class
136cannot be listed, \verb|help|.
137
138\verb|ARGUMENTS| is a list of arguments to the command.
139The arguments depend on the command and object. There are two types of arguments:
140{\em flags\/}, consisting of a single keyword, and {\em parameters\/},
141consisting of a keyword followed by a value. For convenience,
142each command has some {\em default parameter\/}
143which may be omitted. F.e.\ parameter \verb|dev| is the default
144for the {\tt ip link} command, so {\tt ip link ls eth0} is equivalent
145to {\tt ip link ls dev eth0}.
146In the command descriptions below such parameters
147are distinguished with the marker: ``(default)''.
148
149Almost all keywords may be abbreviated with several first (or even single)
150letters. The shortcuts are convenient when \verb|ip| is used interactively,
151but they are not recommended in scripts or when reporting bugs
152or asking for advice. ``Officially'' allowed abbreviations are listed
153in the document body.
154
155
156
157\section{{\tt ip} --- error messages}
158
159\verb|ip| may fail for one of the following reasons:
160
161\begin{itemize}
162\item
163A syntax error on the command line: an unknown keyword, incorrectly formatted
164IP address {\em et al\/}. In this case \verb|ip| prints an error message
165and exits. As a rule, the error message will contain information
166about the reason for the failure. Sometimes it also prints a help page.
167
168\item
169The arguments did not pass verification for self-consistency.
170
171\item
172\verb|ip| failed to compile a kernel request from the arguments
173because the user didn't give enough information.
174
175\item
176The kernel returned an error to some syscall. In this case \verb|ip|
177prints the error message, as it is output with \verb|perror(3)|,
178prefixed with a comment and a syscall identifier.
179
180\item
181The kernel returned an error to some RTNETLINK request.
182In this case \verb|ip| prints the error message, as it is output
183with \verb|perror(3)| prefixed with ``RTNETLINK answers:''.
184
185\end{itemize}
186
187All the operations are atomic, i.e.\
188if the \verb|ip| utility fails, it does not change anything
189in the system. One harmful exception is \verb|ip link| command
190(Sec.\ref{IP-LINK}, p.\pageref{IP-LINK}),
191which may change only some of the device parameters given
192on command line.
193
194It is difficult to list all the error messages (especially
195syntax errors). However, as a rule, their meaning is clear
196from the context of the command.
197
198The most common mistakes are:
199
200\begin{enumerate}
201\item Netlink is not configured in the kernel. The message is:
202\begin{verbatim}
203Cannot open netlink socket: Invalid value
204\end{verbatim}
205
206\item RTNETLINK is not configured in the kernel. In this case
207one of the following messages may be printed, depending on the command:
208\begin{verbatim}
209Cannot talk to rtnetlink: Connection refused
210Cannot send dump request: Connection refused
211\end{verbatim}
212
213\item The \verb|CONFIG_IP_MULTIPLE_TABLES| option was not selected
214when configuring the kernel. In this case any attempt to use the
215\verb|ip| \verb|rule| command will fail, f.e.
216\begin{verbatim}
217kuznet@kaiser $ ip rule list
218RTNETLINK error: Invalid argument
219dump terminated
220\end{verbatim}
221
222\end{enumerate}
223
224
225\section{{\tt ip link} --- network device configuration}
226\label{IP-LINK}
227
228\paragraph{Object:} A \verb|link| is a network device and the corresponding
229commands display and change the state of devices.
230
231\paragraph{Commands:} \verb|set| and \verb|show| (or \verb|list|).
232
233\subsection{{\tt ip link set} --- change device attributes}
234
235\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|set|, \verb|s|.
236
237\paragraph{Arguments:}
238
239\begin{itemize}
240\item \verb|dev NAME| (default)
241
242--- \verb|NAME| specifies the network device on which to operate.
243
244\item \verb|up| and \verb|down|
245
246--- change the state of the device to \verb|UP| or \verb|DOWN|.
247
248\item \verb|arp on| or \verb|arp off|
249
250--- change the \verb|NOARP| flag on the device.
251
252\begin{NB}
253This operation is {\em not allowed\/} if the device is in state \verb|UP|.
254Though neither the \verb|ip| utility nor the kernel check for this condition.
255You can get unpredictable results changing this flag while the
256device is running.
257\end{NB}
258
259\item \verb|multicast on| or \verb|multicast off|
260
261--- change the \verb|MULTICAST| flag on the device.
262
263\item \verb|dynamic on| or \verb|dynamic off|
264
265--- change the \verb|DYNAMIC| flag on the device.
266
267\item \verb|name NAME|
268
269--- change the name of the device. This operation is not
270recommended if the device is running or has some addresses
271already configured.
272
273\item \verb|txqueuelen NUMBER| or \verb|txqlen NUMBER|
274
275--- change the transmit queue length of the device.
276
277\item \verb|mtu NUMBER|
278
279--- change the MTU of the device.
280
281\item \verb|address LLADDRESS|
282
283--- change the station address of the interface.
284
285\item \verb|broadcast LLADDRESS|, \verb|brd LLADDRESS| or \verb|peer LLADDRESS|
286
287--- change the link layer broadcast address or the peer address when
288the interface is \verb|POINTOPOINT|.
289
290\vskip 1mm
291\begin{NB}
292For most devices (f.e.\ for Ethernet) changing the link layer
293broadcast address will break networking.
294Do not use it, if you do not understand what this operation really does.
295\end{NB}
296
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297\item \verb|netns PID|
298
299--- move the device to the network namespace associated with the process PID.
300
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301\end{itemize}
302
303\vskip 1mm
304\begin{NB}
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305The \verb|PROMISC| and \verb|ALLMULTI| flags are considered
306obsolete and should not be changed administratively, though
307the {\tt ip} utility will allow that.
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308\end{NB}
309
310\paragraph{Warning:} If multiple parameter changes are requested,
311\verb|ip| aborts immediately after any of the changes have failed.
312This is the only case when \verb|ip| can move the system to
313an unpredictable state. The solution is to avoid changing
314several parameters with one {\tt ip link set} call.
315
316\paragraph{Examples:}
317\begin{itemize}
318\item \verb|ip link set dummy address 00:00:00:00:00:01|
319
320--- change the station address of the interface \verb|dummy|.
321
322\item \verb|ip link set dummy up|
323
324--- start the interface \verb|dummy|.
325
326\end{itemize}
327
328
329\subsection{{\tt ip link show} --- display device attributes}
330\label{IP-LINK-SHOW}
331
332\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|lst|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|,
333\verb|l|.
334
335\paragraph{Arguments:}
336\begin{itemize}
337\item \verb|dev NAME| (default)
338
339--- \verb|NAME| specifies the network device to show.
340If this argument is omitted all devices are listed.
341
342\item \verb|up|
343
344--- only display running interfaces.
345
346\end{itemize}
347
348
349\paragraph{Output format:}
350
351\begin{verbatim}
352kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip link ls eth0
3533: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc cbq qlen 100
354 link/ether 00:a0:cc:66:18:78 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
355kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip link ls sit0
3565: sit0@NONE: <NOARP,UP> mtu 1480 qdisc noqueue
357 link/sit 0.0.0.0 brd 0.0.0.0
358kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip link ls dummy
3592: dummy: <BROADCAST,NOARP> mtu 1500 qdisc noop
360 link/ether 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
361kuznet@alisa:~ $
362\end{verbatim}
363
364
365The number before each colon is an {\em interface index\/} or {\em ifindex\/}.
366This number uniquely identifies the interface. This is followed by the {\em interface name\/}
367(\verb|eth0|, \verb|sit0| etc.). The interface name is also
368unique at every given moment. However, the interface may disappear from the
369list (f.e.\ when the corresponding driver module is unloaded) and another
370one with the same name may be created later. Besides that,
371the administrator may change the name of any device with
372\verb|ip| \verb|link| \verb|set| \verb|name|
373to make it more intelligible.
374
375The interface name may have another name or \verb|NONE| appended
376after the \verb|@| sign. This means that this device is bound to some other
377device,
378i.e.\ packets send through it are encapsulated and sent via the ``master''
379device. If the name is \verb|NONE|, the master is unknown.
380
381Then we see the interface {\em mtu\/} (``maximal transfer unit''). This determines
382the maximal size of data which can be sent as a single packet over this interface.
383
384{\em qdisc\/} (``queuing discipline'') shows the queuing algorithm used
385on the interface. Particularly, \verb|noqueue| means that this interface
386does not queue anything and \verb|noop| means that the interface is in blackhole
387mode i.e.\ all packets sent to it are immediately discarded.
388{\em qlen\/} is the default transmit queue length of the device measured
389in packets.
390
391The interface flags are summarized in the angle brackets.
392
393\begin{itemize}
394\item \verb|UP| --- the device is turned on. It is ready to accept
395packets for transmission and it may inject into the kernel packets received
396from other nodes on the network.
397
398\item \verb|LOOPBACK| --- the interface does not communicate with other
399hosts. All packets sent through it will be returned
400and nothing but bounced packets can be received.
401
402\item \verb|BROADCAST| --- the device has the facility to send packets
403to all hosts sharing the same link. A typical example is an Ethernet link.
404
405\item \verb|POINTOPOINT| --- the link has only two ends with one node
406attached to each end. All packets sent to this link will reach the peer
407and all packets received by us came from this single peer.
408
409If neither \verb|LOOPBACK| nor \verb|BROADCAST| nor \verb|POINTOPOINT|
410are set, the interface is assumed to be NMBA (Non-Broadcast Multi-Access).
411This is the most generic type of device and the most complicated one, because
412the host attached to a NBMA link has no means to send to anyone
413without additionally configured information.
414
415\item \verb|MULTICAST| --- is an advisory flag indicating that the interface
416is aware of multicasting i.e.\ sending packets to some subset of neighbouring
417nodes. Broadcasting is a particular case of multicasting, where the multicast
418group consists of all nodes on the link. It is important to emphasize
419that software {\em must not\/} interpret the absence of this flag as the inability
420to use multicasting on this interface. Any \verb|POINTOPOINT| and
421\verb|BROADCAST| link is multicasting by definition, because we have
422direct access to all the neighbours and, hence, to any part of them.
423Certainly, the use of high bandwidth multicast transfers is not recommended
424on broadcast-only links because of high expense, but it is not strictly
425prohibited.
426
427\item \verb|PROMISC| --- the device listens to and feeds to the kernel all
428traffic on the link even if it is not destined for us, not broadcasted
429and not destined for a multicast group of which we are member. Usually
430this mode exists only on broadcast links and is used by bridges and for network
431monitoring.
432
433\item \verb|ALLMULTI| --- the device receives all multicast packets
434wandering on the link. This mode is used by multicast routers.
435
436\item \verb|NOARP| --- this flag is different from the other ones. It has
437no invariant value and its interpretation depends on the network protocols
438involved. As a rule, it indicates that the device needs no address
439resolution and that the software or hardware knows how to deliver packets
440without any help from the protocol stacks.
441
442\item \verb|DYNAMIC| --- is an advisory flag indicating that the interface is
443dynamically created and destroyed.
444
445\item \verb|SLAVE| --- this interface is bonded to some other interfaces
446to share link capacities.
447
448\end{itemize}
449
450\vskip 1mm
451\begin{NB}
452There are other flags but they are either obsolete (\verb|NOTRAILERS|)
453or not implemented (\verb|DEBUG|) or specific to some devices
454(\verb|MASTER|, \verb|AUTOMEDIA| and \verb|PORTSEL|). We do not discuss
455them here.
456\end{NB}
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457
458
459The second line contains information on the link layer addresses
460associated with the device. The first word (\verb|ether|, \verb|sit|)
461defines the interface hardware type. This type determines the format and semantics
462of the addresses and is logically part of the address.
463The default format of the station address and the broadcast address
464(or the peer address for pointopoint links) is a
465sequence of hexadecimal bytes separated by colons, but some link
466types may have their natural address format, f.e.\ addresses
467of tunnels over IP are printed as dotted-quad IP addresses.
468
469\vskip 1mm
470\begin{NB}
471 NBMA links have no well-defined broadcast or peer address,
472 however this field may contain useful information, f.e.\
473 about the address of broadcast relay or about the address of the ARP server.
474\end{NB}
475\begin{NB}
476Multicast addresses are not shown by this command, see
477\verb|ip maddr ls| in~Sec.\ref{IP-MADDR} (p.\pageref{IP-MADDR} of this
478document).
479\end{NB}
480
481
482\paragraph{Statistics:} With the \verb|-statistics| option, \verb|ip| also
483prints interface statistics:
484
485\begin{verbatim}
486kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip -s link ls eth0
4873: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc cbq qlen 100
488 link/ether 00:a0:cc:66:18:78 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
489 RX: bytes packets errors dropped overrun mcast
490 2449949362 2786187 0 0 0 0
491 TX: bytes packets errors dropped carrier collsns
492 178558497 1783945 332 0 332 35172
493kuznet@alisa:~ $
494\end{verbatim}
495\verb|RX:| and \verb|TX:| lines summarize receiver and transmitter
496statistics. They contain:
497\begin{itemize}
498\item \verb|bytes| --- the total number of bytes received or transmitted
499on the interface. This number wraps when the maximal length of the data type
500natural for the architecture is exceeded, so continuous monitoring requires
501a user level daemon snapping it periodically.
502\item \verb|packets| --- the total number of packets received or transmitted
503on the interface.
504\item \verb|errors| --- the total number of receiver or transmitter errors.
505\item \verb|dropped| --- the total number of packets dropped due to lack
506of resources.
507\item \verb|overrun| --- the total number of receiver overruns resulting
508in dropped packets. As a rule, if the interface is overrun, it means
509serious problems in the kernel or that your machine is too slow
510for this interface.
511\item \verb|mcast| --- the total number of received multicast packets. This option
512is only supported by a few devices.
513\item \verb|carrier| --- total number of link media failures f.e.\ because
514of lost carrier.
515\item \verb|collsns| --- the total number of collision events
516on Ethernet-like media. This number may have a different sense on other
517link types.
518\item \verb|compressed| --- the total number of compressed packets. This is
519available only for links using VJ header compression.
520\end{itemize}
521
522
523If the \verb|-s| option is entered twice or more,
524\verb|ip| prints more detailed statistics on receiver
525and transmitter errors.
526
527\begin{verbatim}
528kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip -s -s link ls eth0
5293: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc cbq qlen 100
530 link/ether 00:a0:cc:66:18:78 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
531 RX: bytes packets errors dropped overrun mcast
532 2449949362 2786187 0 0 0 0
533 RX errors: length crc frame fifo missed
534 0 0 0 0 0
535 TX: bytes packets errors dropped carrier collsns
536 178558497 1783945 332 0 332 35172
537 TX errors: aborted fifo window heartbeat
538 0 0 0 332
539kuznet@alisa:~ $
540\end{verbatim}
541These error names are pure Ethernetisms. Other devices
542may have non zero values in these fields but they may be
543interpreted differently.
544
545
546\section{{\tt ip address} --- protocol address management}
547
548\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|address|, \verb|addr|, \verb|a|.
549
550\paragraph{Object:} The \verb|address| is a protocol (IP or IPv6) address attached
551to a network device. Each device must have at least one address
552to use the corresponding protocol. It is possible to have several
553different addresses attached to one device. These addresses are not
554discriminated, so that the term {\em alias\/} is not quite appropriate
555for them and we do not use it in this document.
556
557The \verb|ip addr| command displays addresses and their properties,
558adds new addresses and deletes old ones.
559
560\paragraph{Commands:} \verb|add|, \verb|delete|, \verb|flush| and \verb|show|
561(or \verb|list|).
562
563
564\subsection{{\tt ip address add} --- add a new protocol address}
565\label{IP-ADDR-ADD}
566
567\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|add|, \verb|a|.
568
569\paragraph{Arguments:}
570
571\begin{itemize}
572\item \verb|dev NAME|
573
574\noindent--- the name of the device to add the address to.
575
576\item \verb|local ADDRESS| (default)
577
578--- the address of the interface. The format of the address depends
579on the protocol. It is a dotted quad for IP and a sequence of hexadecimal halfwords
580separated by colons for IPv6. The \verb|ADDRESS| may be followed by
581a slash and a decimal number which encodes the network prefix length.
582
583
584\item \verb|peer ADDRESS|
585
586--- the address of the remote endpoint for pointopoint interfaces.
587Again, the \verb|ADDRESS| may be followed by a slash and a decimal number,
588encoding the network prefix length. If a peer address is specified,
589the local address {\em cannot\/} have a prefix length. The network prefix is associated
590with the peer rather than with the local address.
591
592
593\item \verb|broadcast ADDRESS|
594
595--- the broadcast address on the interface.
596
597It is possible to use the special symbols \verb|'+'| and \verb|'-'|
598instead of the broadcast address. In this case, the broadcast address
599is derived by setting/resetting the host bits of the interface prefix.
600
601\vskip 1mm
602\begin{NB}
603Unlike \verb|ifconfig|, the \verb|ip| utility {\em does not\/} set any broadcast
604address unless explicitly requested.
605\end{NB}
606
607
608\item \verb|label NAME|
609
610--- Each address may be tagged with a label string.
611In order to preserve compatibility with Linux-2.0 net aliases,
612this string must coincide with the name of the device or must be prefixed
613with the device name followed by colon.
614
615
616\item \verb|scope SCOPE_VALUE|
617
618--- the scope of the area where this address is valid.
619The available scopes are listed in file \verb|/etc/iproute2/rt_scopes|.
620Predefined scope values are:
621
622 \begin{itemize}
623 \item \verb|global| --- the address is globally valid.
624 \item \verb|site| --- (IPv6 only) the address is site local,
625 i.e.\ it is valid inside this site.
626 \item \verb|link| --- the address is link local, i.e.\
627 it is valid only on this device.
628 \item \verb|host| --- the address is valid only inside this host.
629 \end{itemize}
630
631Appendix~\ref{ADDR-SEL} (p.\pageref{ADDR-SEL} of this document)
632contains more details on address scopes.
633
634\end{itemize}
635
636\paragraph{Examples:}
637\begin{itemize}
638\item \verb|ip addr add 127.0.0.1/8 dev lo brd + scope host|
639
640--- add the usual loopback address to the loopback device.
641
642\item \verb|ip addr add 10.0.0.1/24 brd + dev eth0 label eth0:Alias|
643
644--- add the address 10.0.0.1 with prefix length 24 (i.e.\ netmask
645\verb|255.255.255.0|), standard broadcast and label \verb|eth0:Alias|
646to the interface \verb|eth0|.
647\end{itemize}
648
649
650\subsection{{\tt ip address delete} --- delete a protocol address}
651
652\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|delete|, \verb|del|, \verb|d|.
653
654\paragraph{Arguments:} coincide with the arguments of \verb|ip addr add|.
655The device name is a required argument. The rest are optional.
656If no arguments are given, the first address is deleted.
657
658\paragraph{Examples:}
659\begin{itemize}
660\item \verb|ip addr del 127.0.0.1/8 dev lo|
661
662--- deletes the loopback address from the loopback device.
663It would be best not to repeat this experiment.
664
665\item Disable IP on the interface \verb|eth0|:
666\begin{verbatim}
667 while ip -f inet addr del dev eth0; do
668 : nothing
669 done
670\end{verbatim}
671Another method to disable IP on an interface using {\tt ip addr flush}
672may be found in sec.\ref{IP-ADDR-FLUSH}, p.\pageref{IP-ADDR-FLUSH}.
673
674\end{itemize}
675
676
677\subsection{{\tt ip address show} --- display protocol addresses}
678
679\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|lst|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|,
680\verb|l|.
681
682\paragraph{Arguments:}
683
684\begin{itemize}
685\item \verb|dev NAME| (default)
686
687--- the name of the device.
688
689\item \verb|scope SCOPE_VAL|
690
691--- only list addresses with this scope.
692
693\item \verb|to PREFIX|
694
695--- only list addresses matching this prefix.
696
697\item \verb|label PATTERN|
698
699--- only list addresses with labels matching the \verb|PATTERN|.
700\verb|PATTERN| is a usual shell style pattern.
701
702
703\item \verb|dynamic| and \verb|permanent|
704
705--- (IPv6 only) only list addresses installed due to stateless
706address configuration or only list permanent (not dynamic) addresses.
707
708\item \verb|tentative|
709
710--- (IPv6 only) only list addresses which did not pass duplicate
711address detection.
712
713\item \verb|deprecated|
714
715--- (IPv6 only) only list deprecated addresses.
716
717
718\item \verb|primary| and \verb|secondary|
719
720--- only list primary (or secondary) addresses.
721
722\end{itemize}
723
724
725\paragraph{Output format:}
726
727\begin{verbatim}
728kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip addr ls eth0
7293: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc cbq qlen 100
730 link/ether 00:a0:cc:66:18:78 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
731 inet 193.233.7.90/24 brd 193.233.7.255 scope global eth0
732 inet6 3ffe:2400:0:1:2a0:ccff:fe66:1878/64 scope global dynamic
733 valid_lft forever preferred_lft 604746sec
734 inet6 fe80::2a0:ccff:fe66:1878/10 scope link
735kuznet@alisa:~ $
736\end{verbatim}
737
738The first two lines coincide with the output of \verb|ip link ls|.
739It is natural to interpret link layer addresses
740as addresses of the protocol family \verb|AF_PACKET|.
741
742Then the list of IP and IPv6 addresses follows, accompanied by
743additional address attributes: scope value (see Sec.\ref{IP-ADDR-ADD},
744p.\pageref{IP-ADDR-ADD} above), flags and the address label.
745
746Address flags are set by the kernel and cannot be changed
747administratively. Currently, the following flags are defined:
748
749\begin{enumerate}
750\item \verb|secondary|
751
752--- the address is not used when selecting the default source address
753of outgoing packets (Cf.\ Appendix~\ref{ADDR-SEL}, p.\pageref{ADDR-SEL}.).
754An IP address becomes secondary if another address with the same
755prefix bits already exists. The first address is primary.
756It is the leader of the group of all secondary addresses. When the leader
757is deleted, all secondaries are purged too.
3a9e4821
AH
758There is a tweak in \verb|/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/<dev>/promote_secondaries|
759which activate secondaries promotion when a primary is deleted.
760To permanently enable this feature on all devices add
761\verb|net.ipv4.conf.all.promote_secondaries=1| to \verb|/etc/sysctl.conf|.
762This tweak is available in linux 2.6.15 and later.
aba5acdf
SH
763
764
765\item \verb|dynamic|
766
767--- the address was created due to stateless autoconfiguration~\cite{RFC-ADDRCONF}.
768In this case the output also contains information on times, when
769the address is still valid. After \verb|preferred_lft| expires the address is
770moved to the deprecated state. After \verb|valid_lft| expires the address
771is finally invalidated.
772
773\item \verb|deprecated|
774
775--- the address is deprecated, i.e.\ it is still valid, but cannot
776be used by newly created connections.
777
778\item \verb|tentative|
779
780--- the address is not used because duplicate address detection~\cite{RFC-ADDRCONF}
781is still not complete or failed.
782
783\end{enumerate}
784
785
786\subsection{{\tt ip address flush} --- flush protocol addresses}
787\label{IP-ADDR-FLUSH}
788
789\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|flush|, \verb|f|.
790
791\paragraph{Description:}This command flushes the protocol addresses
792selected by some criteria.
793
794\paragraph{Arguments:} This command has the same arguments as \verb|show|.
795The difference is that it does not run when no arguments are given.
796
797\paragraph{Warning:} This command (and other \verb|flush| commands
798described below) is pretty dangerous. If you make a mistake, it will
799not forgive it, but will cruelly purge all the addresses.
800
801\paragraph{Statistics:} With the \verb|-statistics| option, the command
802becomes verbose. It prints out the number of deleted addresses and the number
803of rounds made to flush the address list. If this option is given
804twice, \verb|ip addr flush| also dumps all the deleted addresses
805in the format described in the previous subsection.
806
807\paragraph{Example:} Delete all the addresses from the private network
80810.0.0.0/8:
809\begin{verbatim}
810netadm@amber:~ # ip -s -s a f to 10/8
8112: dummy inet 10.7.7.7/16 brd 10.7.255.255 scope global dummy
8123: eth0 inet 10.10.7.7/16 brd 10.10.255.255 scope global eth0
8134: eth1 inet 10.8.7.7/16 brd 10.8.255.255 scope global eth1
814
815*** Round 1, deleting 3 addresses ***
816*** Flush is complete after 1 round ***
817netadm@amber:~ #
818\end{verbatim}
819Another instructive example is disabling IP on all the Ethernets:
820\begin{verbatim}
821netadm@amber:~ # ip -4 addr flush label "eth*"
822\end{verbatim}
823And the last example shows how to flush all the IPv6 addresses
824acquired by the host from stateless address autoconfiguration
825after you enabled forwarding or disabled autoconfiguration.
826\begin{verbatim}
827netadm@amber:~ # ip -6 addr flush dynamic
828\end{verbatim}
829
830
831
832\section{{\tt ip neighbour} --- neighbour/arp tables management}
833
834\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|neighbour|, \verb|neighbor|, \verb|neigh|,
835\verb|n|.
836
837\paragraph{Object:} \verb|neighbour| objects establish bindings between protocol
838addresses and link layer addresses for hosts sharing the same link.
839Neighbour entries are organized into tables. The IPv4 neighbour table
840is known by another name --- the ARP table.
841
842The corresponding commands display neighbour bindings
843and their properties, add new neighbour entries and delete old ones.
844
845\paragraph{Commands:} \verb|add|, \verb|change|, \verb|replace|,
846\verb|delete|, \verb|flush| and \verb|show| (or \verb|list|).
847
848\paragraph{See also:} Appendix~\ref{PROXY-NEIGH}, p.\pageref{PROXY-NEIGH}
849describes how to manage proxy ARP/NDISC with the \verb|ip| utility.
850
851
852\subsection{{\tt ip neighbour add} --- add a new neighbour entry\\
853 {\tt ip neighbour change} --- change an existing entry\\
854 {\tt ip neighbour replace} --- add a new entry or change an existing one}
855
856\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|add|, \verb|a|; \verb|change|, \verb|chg|;
857\verb|replace|, \verb|repl|.
858
859\paragraph{Description:} These commands create new neighbour records
860or update existing ones.
861
862\paragraph{Arguments:}
863
864\begin{itemize}
865\item \verb|to ADDRESS| (default)
866
867--- the protocol address of the neighbour. It is either an IPv4 or IPv6 address.
868
869\item \verb|dev NAME|
870
871--- the interface to which this neighbour is attached.
872
873
874\item \verb|lladdr LLADDRESS|
875
876--- the link layer address of the neighbour. \verb|LLADDRESS| can also be
877\verb|null|.
878
879\item \verb|nud NUD_STATE|
880
881--- the state of the neighbour entry. \verb|nud| is an abbreviation for ``Neighbour
882Unreachability Detection''. The state can take one of the following values:
883
884\begin{enumerate}
885\item \verb|permanent| --- the neighbour entry is valid forever and can be only be removed
886administratively.
887\item \verb|noarp| --- the neighbour entry is valid. No attempts to validate
888this entry will be made but it can be removed when its lifetime expires.
889\item \verb|reachable| --- the neighbour entry is valid until the reachability
890timeout expires.
891\item \verb|stale| --- the neighbour entry is valid but suspicious.
892This option to \verb|ip neigh| does not change the neighbour state if
893it was valid and the address is not changed by this command.
894\end{enumerate}
895
896\end{itemize}
897
898\paragraph{Examples:}
899\begin{itemize}
900\item \verb|ip neigh add 10.0.0.3 lladdr 0:0:0:0:0:1 dev eth0 nud perm|
901
902--- add a permanent ARP entry for the neighbour 10.0.0.3 on the device \verb|eth0|.
903
904\item \verb|ip neigh chg 10.0.0.3 dev eth0 nud reachable|
905
906--- change its state to \verb|reachable|.
907\end{itemize}
908
909
910\subsection{{\tt ip neighbour delete} --- delete a neighbour entry}
911
912\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|delete|, \verb|del|, \verb|d|.
913
914\paragraph{Description:} This command invalidates a neighbour entry.
915
916\paragraph{Arguments:} The arguments are the same as with \verb|ip neigh add|,
917except that \verb|lladdr| and \verb|nud| are ignored.
918
919
920\paragraph{Example:}
921\begin{itemize}
922\item \verb|ip neigh del 10.0.0.3 dev eth0|
923
924--- invalidate an ARP entry for the neighbour 10.0.0.3 on the device \verb|eth0|.
925
926\end{itemize}
927
928\begin{NB}
929 The deleted neighbour entry will not disappear from the tables
930 immediately. If it is in use it cannot be deleted until the last
931 client releases it. Otherwise it will be destroyed during
932 the next garbage collection.
933\end{NB}
934
935
936\paragraph{Warning:} Attempts to delete or manually change
937a \verb|noarp| entry created by the kernel may result in unpredictable behaviour.
938Particularly, the kernel may try to resolve this address even
939on a \verb|NOARP| interface or if the address is multicast or broadcast.
940
941
942\subsection{{\tt ip neighbour show} --- list neighbour entries}
943
944\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|.
945
946\paragraph{Description:}This commands displays neighbour tables.
947
948\paragraph{Arguments:}
949
950\begin{itemize}
951
952\item \verb|to ADDRESS| (default)
953
954--- the prefix selecting the neighbours to list.
955
956\item \verb|dev NAME|
957
958--- only list the neighbours attached to this device.
959
960\item \verb|unused|
961
962--- only list neighbours which are not currently in use.
963
964\item \verb|nud NUD_STATE|
965
966--- only list neighbour entries in this state. \verb|NUD_STATE| takes
967values listed below or the special value \verb|all| which means all states.
968This option may occur more than once. If this option is absent, \verb|ip|
969lists all entries except for \verb|none| and \verb|noarp|.
970
971\end{itemize}
972
973
974\paragraph{Output format:}
975
976\begin{verbatim}
977kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip neigh ls
978:: dev lo lladdr 00:00:00:00:00:00 nud noarp
979fe80::200:cff:fe76:3f85 dev eth0 lladdr 00:00:0c:76:3f:85 router \
980 nud stale
9810.0.0.0 dev lo lladdr 00:00:00:00:00:00 nud noarp
982193.233.7.254 dev eth0 lladdr 00:00:0c:76:3f:85 nud reachable
983193.233.7.85 dev eth0 lladdr 00:e0:1e:63:39:00 nud stale
984kuznet@alisa:~ $
985\end{verbatim}
986
987The first word of each line is the protocol address of the neighbour.
988Then the device name follows. The rest of the line describes the contents of
989the neighbour entry identified by the pair (device, address).
990
991\verb|lladdr| is the link layer address of the neighbour.
992
993\verb|nud| is the state of the ``neighbour unreachability detection'' machine
994for this entry. The detailed description of the neighbour
995state machine can be found in~\cite{RFC-NDISC}. Here is the full list
996of the states with short descriptions:
997
998\begin{enumerate}
999\item\verb|none| --- the state of the neighbour is void.
1000\item\verb|incomplete| --- the neighbour is in the process of resolution.
1001\item\verb|reachable| --- the neighbour is valid and apparently reachable.
1002\item\verb|stale| --- the neighbour is valid, but is probably already
1003unreachable, so the kernel will try to check it at the first transmission.
1004\item\verb|delay| --- a packet has been sent to the stale neighbour and the kernel is waiting
1005for confirmation.
1006\item\verb|probe| --- the delay timer expired but no confirmation was received.
1007The kernel has started to probe the neighbour with ARP/NDISC messages.
1008\item\verb|failed| --- resolution has failed.
1009\item\verb|noarp| --- the neighbour is valid. No attempts to check the entry
1010will be made.
1011\item\verb|permanent| --- it is a \verb|noarp| entry, but only the administrator
1012may remove the entry from the neighbour table.
1013\end{enumerate}
1014
1015The link layer address is valid in all states except for \verb|none|,
1016\verb|failed| and \verb|incomplete|.
1017
1018IPv6 neighbours can be marked with the additional flag \verb|router|
1019which means that the neighbour introduced itself as an IPv6 router~\cite{RFC-NDISC}.
1020
1021\paragraph{Statistics:} The \verb|-statistics| option displays some usage
1022statistics, f.e.\
1023
1024\begin{verbatim}
1025kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip -s n ls 193.233.7.254
1026193.233.7.254 dev eth0 lladdr 00:00:0c:76:3f:85 ref 5 used 12/13/20 \
1027 nud reachable
1028kuznet@alisa:~ $
1029\end{verbatim}
1030
1031Here \verb|ref| is the number of users of this entry
1032and \verb|used| is a triplet of time intervals in seconds
1033separated by slashes. In this case they show that:
1034
1035\begin{enumerate}
1036\item the entry was used 12 seconds ago.
1037\item the entry was confirmed 13 seconds ago.
1038\item the entry was updated 20 seconds ago.
1039\end{enumerate}
1040
1041\subsection{{\tt ip neighbour flush} --- flush neighbour entries}
1042
1043\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|flush|, \verb|f|.
1044
1045\paragraph{Description:}This command flushes neighbour tables, selecting
1046entries to flush by some criteria.
1047
1048\paragraph{Arguments:} This command has the same arguments as \verb|show|.
1049The differences are that it does not run when no arguments are given,
1050and that the default neighbour states to be flushed do not include
1051\verb|permanent| and \verb|noarp|.
1052
1053
1054\paragraph{Statistics:} With the \verb|-statistics| option, the command
1055becomes verbose. It prints out the number of deleted neighbours and the number
1056of rounds made to flush the neighbour table. If the option is given
1057twice, \verb|ip neigh flush| also dumps all the deleted neighbours
1058in the format described in the previous subsection.
1059
1060\paragraph{Example:}
1061\begin{verbatim}
1062netadm@alisa:~ # ip -s -s n f 193.233.7.254
1063193.233.7.254 dev eth0 lladdr 00:00:0c:76:3f:85 ref 5 used 12/13/20 \
1064 nud reachable
1065
1066*** Round 1, deleting 1 entries ***
1067*** Flush is complete after 1 round ***
1068netadm@alisa:~ #
1069\end{verbatim}
1070
1071
1072\section{{\tt ip route} --- routing table management}
1073\label{IP-ROUTE}
1074
1075\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|route|, \verb|ro|, \verb|r|.
1076
1077\paragraph{Object:} \verb|route| entries in the kernel routing tables keep
1078information about paths to other networked nodes.
1079
1080Each route entry has a {\em key\/} consisting of a {\em prefix\/}
1081(i.e.\ a pair containing a network address and the length of its mask) and,
1082optionally, the TOS value. An IP packet matches the route if the highest
1083bits of its destination address are equal to the route prefix at least
1084up to the prefix length and if the TOS of the route is zero or equal to
1085the TOS of the packet.
1086
1087If several routes match the packet, the following pruning rules
1088are used to select the best one (see~\cite{RFC1812}):
1089\begin{enumerate}
1090\item The longest matching prefix is selected. All shorter ones
1091are dropped.
1092
1093\item If the TOS of some route with the longest prefix is equal to the TOS
1094of the packet, the routes with different TOS are dropped.
1095
1096If no exact TOS match was found and routes with TOS=0 exist,
1097the rest of routes are pruned.
1098
1099Otherwise, the route lookup fails.
1100
1101\item If several routes remain after the previous steps, then
1102the routes with the best preference values are selected.
1103
1104\item If we still have several routes, then the {\em first\/} of them
1105is selected.
1106
1107\begin{NB}
1108 Note the ambiguity of the last step. Unfortunately, Linux
1109 historically allows such a bizarre situation. The sense of the
1110word ``first'' depends on the order of route additions and it is practically
1111impossible to maintain a bundle of such routes in this order.
1112\end{NB}
1113
1114For simplicity we will limit ourselves to the case where such a situation
1115is impossible and routes are uniquely identified by the triplet
1116\{prefix, tos, preference\}. Actually, it is impossible to create
1117non-unique routes with \verb|ip| commands described in this section.
1118
1119One useful exception to this rule is the default route on non-forwarding
1120hosts. It is ``officially'' allowed to have several fallback routes
1121when several routers are present on directly connected networks.
1122In this case, Linux-2.2 makes ``dead gateway detection''~\cite{RFC1122}
1123controlled by neighbour unreachability detection and by advice
1124from transport protocols to select a working router, so the order
1125of the routes is not essential. However, in this case,
1126fiddling with default routes manually is not recommended. Use the Router Discovery
1127protocol (see Appendix~\ref{EXAMPLE-SETUP}, p.\pageref{EXAMPLE-SETUP})
1128instead. Actually, Linux-2.2 IPv6 does not give user level applications
1129any access to default routes.
1130\end{enumerate}
1131
1132Certainly, the steps above are not performed exactly
1133in this sequence. Instead, the routing table in the kernel is kept
1134in some data structure to achieve the final result
1135with minimal cost. However, not depending on a particular
1136routing algorithm implemented in the kernel, we can summarize
1137the statements above as: a route is identified by the triplet
1138\{prefix, tos, preference\}. This {\em key\/} lets us locate
1139the route in the routing table.
1140
1141\paragraph{Route attributes:} Each route key refers to a routing
1142information record containing
1143the data required to deliver IP packets (f.e.\ output device and
1144next hop router) and some optional attributes (f.e. the path MTU or
1145the preferred source address when communicating with this destination).
1146These attributes are described in the following subsection.
1147
1148\paragraph{Route types:} \label{IP-ROUTE-TYPES}
1149It is important that the set
1150of required and optional attributes depend on the route {\em type\/}.
1151The most important route type
1152is \verb|unicast|. It describes real paths to other hosts.
1153As a rule, common routing tables contain only such routes. However,
1154there are other types of routes with different semantics. The
1155full list of types understood by Linux-2.2 is:
1156\begin{itemize}
1157\item \verb|unicast| --- the route entry describes real paths to the
1158destinations covered by the route prefix.
1159\item \verb|unreachable| --- these destinations are unreachable. Packets
1160are discarded and the ICMP message {\em host unreachable\/} is generated.
1161The local senders get an \verb|EHOSTUNREACH| error.
1162\item \verb|blackhole| --- these destinations are unreachable. Packets
1163are discarded silently. The local senders get an \verb|EINVAL| error.
1164\item \verb|prohibit| --- these destinations are unreachable. Packets
1165are discarded and the ICMP message {\em communication administratively
1166prohibited\/} is generated. The local senders get an \verb|EACCES| error.
1167\item \verb|local| --- the destinations are assigned to this
1168host. The packets are looped back and delivered locally.
1169\item \verb|broadcast| --- the destinations are broadcast addresses.
1170The packets are sent as link broadcasts.
1171\item \verb|throw| --- a special control route used together with policy
1172rules (see sec.\ref{IP-RULE}, p.\pageref{IP-RULE}). If such a route is selected, lookup
1173in this table is terminated pretending that no route was found.
1174Without policy routing it is equivalent to the absence of the route in the routing
1175table. The packets are dropped and the ICMP message {\em net unreachable\/}
1176is generated. The local senders get an \verb|ENETUNREACH| error.
1177\item \verb|nat| --- a special NAT route. Destinations covered by the prefix
1178are considered to be dummy (or external) addresses which require translation
1179to real (or internal) ones before forwarding. The addresses to translate to
1180are selected with the attribute \verb|via|. More about NAT is
1181in Appendix~\ref{ROUTE-NAT}, p.\pageref{ROUTE-NAT}.
1182\item \verb|anycast| --- ({\em not implemented\/}) the destinations are
1183{\em anycast\/} addresses assigned to this host. They are mainly equivalent
1184to \verb|local| with one difference: such addresses are invalid when used
1185as the source address of any packet.
1186\item \verb|multicast| --- a special type used for multicast routing.
1187It is not present in normal routing tables.
1188\end{itemize}
1189
1190\paragraph{Route tables:} Linux-2.2 can pack routes into several routing
1191tables identified by a number in the range from 1 to 255 or by
1192name from the file \verb|/etc/iproute2/rt_tables|. By default all normal
1193routes are inserted into the \verb|main| table (ID 254) and the kernel only uses
1194this table when calculating routes.
1195
1196Actually, one other table always exists, which is invisible but
1197even more important. It is the \verb|local| table (ID 255). This table
1198consists of routes for local and broadcast addresses. The kernel maintains
1199this table automatically and the administrator usually need not modify it
1200or even look at it.
1201
1202The multiple routing tables enter the game when {\em policy routing\/}
1203is used. See sec.\ref{IP-RULE}, p.\pageref{IP-RULE}.
1204In this case, the table identifier effectively becomes
1205one more parameter, which should be added to the triplet
1206\{prefix, tos, preference\} to uniquely identify the route.
1207
1208
1209\subsection{{\tt ip route add} --- add a new route\\
1210 {\tt ip route change} --- change a route\\
1211 {\tt ip route replace} --- change a route or add a new one}
1212\label{IP-ROUTE-ADD}
1213
1214\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|add|, \verb|a|; \verb|change|, \verb|chg|;
1215 \verb|replace|, \verb|repl|.
1216
1217
1218\paragraph{Arguments:}
1219\begin{itemize}
1220\item \verb|to PREFIX| or \verb|to TYPE PREFIX| (default)
1221
1222--- the destination prefix of the route. If \verb|TYPE| is omitted,
1223\verb|ip| assumes type \verb|unicast|. Other values of \verb|TYPE|
1224are listed above. \verb|PREFIX| is an IP or IPv6 address optionally followed
1225by a slash and the prefix length. If the length of the prefix is missing,
1226\verb|ip| assumes a full-length host route. There is also a special
1227\verb|PREFIX| --- \verb|default| --- which is equivalent to IP \verb|0/0| or
1228to IPv6 \verb|::/0|.
1229
1230\item \verb|tos TOS| or \verb|dsfield TOS|
1231
1232--- the Type Of Service (TOS) key. This key has no associated mask and
1233the longest match is understood as: First, compare the TOS
1234of the route and of the packet. If they are not equal, then the packet
1235may still match a route with a zero TOS. \verb|TOS| is either an 8 bit hexadecimal
1236number or an identifier from {\tt /etc/iproute2/rt\_dsfield}.
1237
1238
1239\item \verb|metric NUMBER| or \verb|preference NUMBER|
1240
1241--- the preference value of the route. \verb|NUMBER| is an arbitrary 32bit number.
1242
1243\item \verb|table TABLEID|
1244
1245--- the table to add this route to.
1246\verb|TABLEID| may be a number or a string from the file
1247\verb|/etc/iproute2/rt_tables|. If this parameter is omitted,
1248\verb|ip| assumes the \verb|main| table, with the exception of
1249\verb|local|, \verb|broadcast| and \verb|nat| routes, which are
1250put into the \verb|local| table by default.
1251
1252\item \verb|dev NAME|
1253
1254--- the output device name.
1255
1256\item \verb|via ADDRESS|
1257
1258--- the address of the nexthop router. Actually, the sense of this field depends
1259on the route type. For normal \verb|unicast| routes it is either the true nexthop
1260router or, if it is a direct route installed in BSD compatibility mode,
1261it can be a local address of the interface.
1262For NAT routes it is the first address of the block of translated IP destinations.
1263
1264\item \verb|src ADDRESS|
1265
1266--- the source address to prefer when sending to the destinations
1267covered by the route prefix.
1268
1269\item \verb|realm REALMID|
1270
1271--- the realm to which this route is assigned.
1272\verb|REALMID| may be a number or a string from the file
1273\verb|/etc/iproute2/rt_realms|. Sec.\ref{RT-REALMS} (p.\pageref{RT-REALMS})
1274contains more information on realms.
1275
1276\item \verb|mtu MTU| or \verb|mtu lock MTU|
1277
1278--- the MTU along the path to the destination. If the modifier \verb|lock| is
1279not used, the MTU may be updated by the kernel due to Path MTU Discovery.
1280If the modifier \verb|lock| is used, no path MTU discovery will be tried,
1281all packets will be sent without the DF bit in IPv4 case
1282or fragmented to MTU for IPv6.
1283
1284\item \verb|window NUMBER|
1285
1286--- the maximal window for TCP to advertise to these destinations,
1287measured in bytes. It limits maximal data bursts that our TCP
1288peers are allowed to send to us.
1289
1290\item \verb|rtt NUMBER|
1291
1292--- the initial RTT (``Round Trip Time'') estimate.
1293
1294
1295\item \verb|rttvar NUMBER|
1296
1297--- \threeonly the initial RTT variance estimate.
1298
1299
1300\item \verb|ssthresh NUMBER|
1301
1302--- \threeonly an estimate for the initial slow start threshold.
1303
1304
1305\item \verb|cwnd NUMBER|
1306
1307--- \threeonly the clamp for congestion window. It is ignored if the \verb|lock|
1308 flag is not used.
1309
1310
1311\item \verb|advmss NUMBER|
1312
1313--- \threeonly the MSS (``Maximal Segment Size'') to advertise to these
1314 destinations when establishing TCP connections. If it is not given,
1315 Linux uses a default value calculated from the first hop device MTU.
1316
1317\begin{NB}
1318 If the path to these destination is asymmetric, this guess may be wrong.
1319\end{NB}
1320
1321\item \verb|reordering NUMBER|
1322
1323--- \threeonly Maximal reordering on the path to this destination.
1324 If it is not given, Linux uses the value selected with \verb|sysctl|
1325 variable \verb|net/ipv4/tcp_reordering|.
1326
1327
1328
1329\item \verb|nexthop NEXTHOP|
1330
1331--- the nexthop of a multipath route. \verb|NEXTHOP| is a complex value
1332with its own syntax similar to the top level argument lists:
1333\begin{itemize}
1334\item \verb|via ADDRESS| is the nexthop router.
1335\item \verb|dev NAME| is the output device.
1336\item \verb|weight NUMBER| is a weight for this element of a multipath
1337route reflecting its relative bandwidth or quality.
1338\end{itemize}
1339
1340\item \verb|scope SCOPE_VAL|
1341
1342--- the scope of the destinations covered by the route prefix.
1343\verb|SCOPE_VAL| may be a number or a string from the file
1344\verb|/etc/iproute2/rt_scopes|.
1345If this parameter is omitted,
1346\verb|ip| assumes scope \verb|global| for all gatewayed \verb|unicast|
1347routes, scope \verb|link| for direct \verb|unicast| and \verb|broadcast| routes
1348and scope \verb|host| for \verb|local| routes.
1349
1350\item \verb|protocol RTPROTO|
1351
1352--- the routing protocol identifier of this route.
1353\verb|RTPROTO| may be a number or a string from the file
1354\verb|/etc/iproute2/rt_protos|. If the routing protocol ID is
1355not given, \verb|ip| assumes protocol \verb|boot| (i.e.\
1356it assumes the route was added by someone who doesn't
1357understand what they are doing). Several protocol values have a fixed interpretation.
1358Namely:
1359\begin{itemize}
1360\item \verb|redirect| --- the route was installed due to an ICMP redirect.
1361\item \verb|kernel| --- the route was installed by the kernel during
1362autoconfiguration.
1363\item \verb|boot| --- the route was installed during the bootup sequence.
1364If a routing daemon starts, it will purge all of them.
1365\item \verb|static| --- the route was installed by the administrator
1366to override dynamic routing. Routing daemon will respect them
1367and, probably, even advertise them to its peers.
1368\item \verb|ra| --- the route was installed by Router Discovery protocol.
1369\end{itemize}
1370The rest of the values are not reserved and the administrator is free
1371to assign (or not to assign) protocol tags. At least, routing
1372daemons should take care of setting some unique protocol values,
1373f.e.\ as they are assigned in \verb|rtnetlink.h| or in \verb|rt_protos|
1374database.
1375
1376
1377\item \verb|onlink|
1378
1379--- pretend that the nexthop is directly attached to this link,
1380even if it does not match any interface prefix. One application of this
1381option may be found in~\cite{IP-TUNNELS}.
1382
1383\item \verb|equalize|
1384
1385--- allow packet by packet randomization on multipath routes.
1386Without this modifier, the route will be frozen to one selected
1387nexthop, so that load splitting will only occur on per-flow base.
1388\verb|equalize| only works if the kernel is patched.
1389
1390
1391\end{itemize}
1392
1393
1394\begin{NB}
1395 Actually there are more commands: \verb|prepend| does the same
1396 thing as classic \verb|route add|, i.e.\ adds a route, even if another
1397 route to the same destination exists. Its opposite case is \verb|append|,
1398 which adds the route to the end of the list. Avoid these
1399 features.
1400\end{NB}
1401\begin{NB}
1402 More sad news, IPv6 only understands the \verb|append| command correctly.
1403 All the others are translated into \verb|append| commands. Certainly,
1404 this will change in the future.
1405\end{NB}
1406
1407\paragraph{Examples:}
1408\begin{itemize}
1409\item add a plain route to network 10.0.0/24 via gateway 193.233.7.65
1410\begin{verbatim}
1411 ip route add 10.0.0/24 via 193.233.7.65
1412\end{verbatim}
1413\item change it to a direct route via the \verb|dummy| device
1414\begin{verbatim}
1415 ip ro chg 10.0.0/24 dev dummy
1416\end{verbatim}
1417\item add a default multipath route splitting the load between \verb|ppp0|
1418and \verb|ppp1|
1419\begin{verbatim}
1420 ip route add default scope global nexthop dev ppp0 \
1421 nexthop dev ppp1
1422\end{verbatim}
1423Note the scope value. It is not necessary but it informs the kernel
1424that this route is gatewayed rather than direct. Actually, if you
1425know the addresses of remote endpoints it would be better to use the
1426\verb|via| parameter.
1427\item announce that the address 192.203.80.144 is not a real one, but
1428should be translated to 193.233.7.83 before forwarding
1429\begin{verbatim}
1430 ip route add nat 192.203.80.144 via 193.233.7.83
1431\end{verbatim}
1432Backward translation is setup with policy rules described
1433in the following section (sec.\ref{IP-RULE}, p.\pageref{IP-RULE}).
1434\end{itemize}
1435
1436\subsection{{\tt ip route delete} --- delete a route}
1437
1438\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|delete|, \verb|del|, \verb|d|.
1439
1440\paragraph{Arguments:} \verb|ip route del| has the same arguments as
1441\verb|ip route add|, but their semantics are a bit different.
1442
1443Key values (\verb|to|, \verb|tos|, \verb|preference| and \verb|table|)
1444select the route to delete. If optional attributes are present, \verb|ip|
1445verifies that they coincide with the attributes of the route to delete.
1446If no route with the given key and attributes was found, \verb|ip route del|
1447fails.
1448\begin{NB}
1449Linux-2.0 had the option to delete a route selected only by prefix address,
1450ignoring its length (i.e.\ netmask). This option no longer exists
1451because it was ambiguous. However, look at {\tt ip route flush}
1452(sec.\ref{IP-ROUTE-FLUSH}, p.\pageref{IP-ROUTE-FLUSH}) which
1453provides similar and even richer functionality.
1454\end{NB}
1455
1456\paragraph{Example:}
1457\begin{itemize}
1458\item delete the multipath route created by the command in previous subsection
1459\begin{verbatim}
1460 ip route del default scope global nexthop dev ppp0 \
1461 nexthop dev ppp1
1462\end{verbatim}
1463\end{itemize}
1464
1465
1466
1467\subsection{{\tt ip route show} --- list routes}
1468
1469\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|, \verb|l|.
1470
1471\paragraph{Description:} the command displays the contents of the routing tables
1472or the route(s) selected by some criteria.
1473
1474
1475\paragraph{Arguments:}
1476\begin{itemize}
1477\item \verb|to SELECTOR| (default)
1478
1479--- only select routes from the given range of destinations. \verb|SELECTOR|
1480consists of an optional modifier (\verb|root|, \verb|match| or \verb|exact|)
1481and a prefix. \verb|root PREFIX| selects routes with prefixes not shorter
1482than \verb|PREFIX|. F.e.\ \verb|root 0/0| selects the entire routing table.
1483\verb|match PREFIX| selects routes with prefixes not longer than
1484\verb|PREFIX|. F.e.\ \verb|match 10.0/16| selects \verb|10.0/16|,
1485\verb|10/8| and \verb|0/0|, but it does not select \verb|10.1/16| and
1486\verb|10.0.0/24|. And \verb|exact PREFIX| (or just \verb|PREFIX|)
1487selects routes with this exact prefix. If neither of these options
1488are present, \verb|ip| assumes \verb|root 0/0| i.e.\ it lists the entire table.
1489
1490
1491\item \verb|tos TOS| or \verb|dsfield TOS|
1492
1493 --- only select routes with the given TOS.
1494
1495
1496\item \verb|table TABLEID|
1497
1498 --- show the routes from this table(s). The default setting is to show
1499\verb|table| \verb|main|. \verb|TABLEID| may either be the ID of a real table
1500or one of the special values:
1501 \begin{itemize}
1502 \item \verb|all| --- list all of the tables.
1503 \item \verb|cache| --- dump the routing cache.
1504 \end{itemize}
1505\begin{NB}
1506 IPv6 has a single table. However, splitting it into \verb|main|, \verb|local|
1507 and \verb|cache| is emulated by the \verb|ip| utility.
1508\end{NB}
1509
1510\item \verb|cloned| or \verb|cached|
1511
1512--- list cloned routes i.e.\ routes which were dynamically forked from
1513other routes because some route attribute (f.e.\ MTU) was updated.
1514Actually, it is equivalent to \verb|table cache|.
1515
1516\item \verb|from SELECTOR|
1517
1518--- the same syntax as for \verb|to|, but it binds the source address range
1519rather than destinations. Note that the \verb|from| option only works with
1520cloned routes.
1521
1522\item \verb|protocol RTPROTO|
1523
1524--- only list routes of this protocol.
1525
1526
1527\item \verb|scope SCOPE_VAL|
1528
1529--- only list routes with this scope.
1530
1531\item \verb|type TYPE|
1532
1533--- only list routes of this type.
1534
1535\item \verb|dev NAME|
1536
1537--- only list routes going via this device.
1538
1539\item \verb|via PREFIX|
1540
1541--- only list routes going via the nexthop routers selected by \verb|PREFIX|.
1542
1543\item \verb|src PREFIX|
1544
1545--- only list routes with preferred source addresses selected
1546by \verb|PREFIX|.
1547
1548\item \verb|realm REALMID| or \verb|realms FROMREALM/TOREALM|
1549
1550--- only list routes with these realms.
1551
1552\end{itemize}
1553
1554\paragraph{Examples:} Let us count routes of protocol \verb|gated/bgp|
1555on a router:
1556\begin{verbatim}
1557kuznet@amber:~ $ ip ro ls proto gated/bgp | wc
1558 1413 9891 79010
1559kuznet@amber:~ $
1560\end{verbatim}
1561To count the size of the routing cache, we have to use the \verb|-o| option
1562because cached attributes can take more than one line of output:
1563\begin{verbatim}
1564kuznet@amber:~ $ ip -o ro ls cloned | wc
1565 159 2543 18707
1566kuznet@amber:~ $
1567\end{verbatim}
1568
1569
1570\paragraph{Output format:} The output of this command consists
1571of per route records separated by line feeds.
1572However, some records may consist
1573of more than one line: particularly, this is the case when the route
1574is cloned or you requested additional statistics. If the
1575\verb|-o| option was given, then line feeds separating lines inside
1576records are replaced with the backslash sign.
1577
1578The output has the same syntax as arguments given to {\tt ip route add},
1579so that it can be understood easily. F.e.\
1580\begin{verbatim}
1581kuznet@amber:~ $ ip ro ls 193.233.7/24
1582193.233.7.0/24 dev eth0 proto gated/conn scope link \
1583 src 193.233.7.65 realms inr.ac
1584kuznet@amber:~ $
1585\end{verbatim}
1586
1587If you list cloned entries, the output contains other attributes which
1588are evaluated during route calculation and updated during route
1589lifetime. An example of the output is:
1590\begin{verbatim}
1591kuznet@amber:~ $ ip ro ls 193.233.7.82 tab cache
1592193.233.7.82 from 193.233.7.82 dev eth0 src 193.233.7.65 \
1593 realms inr.ac/inr.ac
1594 cache <src-direct,redirect> mtu 1500 rtt 300 iif eth0
1595193.233.7.82 dev eth0 src 193.233.7.65 realms inr.ac
1596 cache mtu 1500 rtt 300
1597kuznet@amber:~ $
1598\end{verbatim}
1599\begin{NB}
1600 \label{NB-strange-route}
1601 The route looks a bit strange, doesn't it? Did you notice that
1602 it is a path from 193.233.7.82 back to 193.233.82? Well, you will
1603 see in the section on \verb|ip route get| (p.\pageref{NB-nature-of-strangeness})
1604 how it appeared.
1605\end{NB}
1606The second line, starting with the word \verb|cache|, shows
1607additional attributes which normal routes do not possess.
1608Cached flags are summarized in angle brackets:
1609\begin{itemize}
1610\item \verb|local| --- packets are delivered locally.
1611It stands for loopback unicast routes, for broadcast routes
1612and for multicast routes, if this host is a member of the corresponding
1613group.
1614
1615\item \verb|reject| --- the path is bad. Any attempt to use it results
1616in an error. See attribute \verb|error| below (p.\pageref{IP-ROUTE-GET-error}).
1617
1618\item \verb|mc| --- the destination is multicast.
1619
1620\item \verb|brd| --- the destination is broadcast.
1621
1622\item \verb|src-direct| --- the source is on a directly connected
1623interface.
1624
1625\item \verb|redirected| --- the route was created by an ICMP Redirect.
1626
1627\item \verb|redirect| --- packets going via this route will
1628trigger an ICMP redirect.
1629
1630\item \verb|fastroute| --- the route is eligible to be used for fastroute.
1631
1632\item \verb|equalize| --- make packet by packet randomization
1633along this path.
1634
1635\item \verb|dst-nat| --- the destination address requires translation.
1636
1637\item \verb|src-nat| --- the source address requires translation.
1638
1639\item \verb|masq| --- the source address requires masquerading.
1640This feature disappeared in linux-2.4.
1641
1642\item \verb|notify| --- ({\em not implemented}) change/deletion
1643of this route will trigger RTNETLINK notification.
1644\end{itemize}
1645
1646Then some optional attributes follow:
1647\begin{itemize}
1648\item \verb|error| --- on \verb|reject| routes it is error code
1649returned to local senders when they try to use this route.
1650These error codes are translated into ICMP error codes, sent to remote
1651senders, according to the rules described above in the subsection
1652devoted to route types (p.\pageref{IP-ROUTE-TYPES}).
1653\label{IP-ROUTE-GET-error}
1654
1655\item \verb|expires| --- this entry will expire after this timeout.
1656
1657\item \verb|iif| --- the packets for this path are expected to arrive
1658on this interface.
1659\end{itemize}
1660
1661\paragraph{Statistics:} With the \verb|-statistics| option, more
1662information about this route is shown:
1663\begin{itemize}
1664\item \verb|users| --- the number of users of this entry.
1665\item \verb|age| --- shows when this route was last used.
1666\item \verb|used| --- the number of lookups of this route since its creation.
1667\end{itemize}
1668
1669
1670\subsection{{\tt ip route flush} --- flush routing tables}
1671\label{IP-ROUTE-FLUSH}
1672
1673\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|flush|, \verb|f|.
1674
1675\paragraph{Description:} this command flushes routes selected
1676by some criteria.
1677
1678\paragraph{Arguments:} the arguments have the same syntax and semantics
1679as the arguments of \verb|ip route show|, but routing tables are not
1680listed but purged. The only difference is the default action: \verb|show|
1681dumps all the IP main routing table but \verb|flush| prints the helper page.
1682The reason for this difference does not require any explanation, does it?
1683
1684
1685\paragraph{Statistics:} With the \verb|-statistics| option, the command
1686becomes verbose. It prints out the number of deleted routes and the number
1687of rounds made to flush the routing table. If the option is given
1688twice, \verb|ip route flush| also dumps all the deleted routes
1689in the format described in the previous subsection.
1690
1691\paragraph{Examples:} The first example flushes all the
1692gatewayed routes from the main table (f.e.\ after a routing daemon crash).
1693\begin{verbatim}
1694netadm@amber:~ # ip -4 ro flush scope global type unicast
1695\end{verbatim}
1696This option deserves to be put into a scriptlet \verb|routef|.
1697\begin{NB}
1698This option was described in the \verb|route(8)| man page borrowed
1699from BSD, but was never implemented in Linux.
1700\end{NB}
1701
1702The second example flushes all IPv6 cloned routes:
1703\begin{verbatim}
1704netadm@amber:~ # ip -6 -s -s ro flush cache
17053ffe:2400::220:afff:fef4:c5d1 via 3ffe:2400::220:afff:fef4:c5d1 \
1706 dev eth0 metric 0
1707 cache used 2 age 12sec mtu 1500 rtt 300
17083ffe:2400::280:adff:feb7:8034 via 3ffe:2400::280:adff:feb7:8034 \
1709 dev eth0 metric 0
1710 cache used 2 age 15sec mtu 1500 rtt 300
17113ffe:2400::280:c8ff:fe59:5bcc via 3ffe:2400::280:c8ff:fe59:5bcc \
1712 dev eth0 metric 0
1713 cache users 1 used 1 age 23sec mtu 1500 rtt 300
17143ffe:2400:0:1:2a0:ccff:fe66:1878 via 3ffe:2400:0:1:2a0:ccff:fe66:1878 \
1715 dev eth1 metric 0
1716 cache used 2 age 20sec mtu 1500 rtt 300
17173ffe:2400:0:1:a00:20ff:fe71:fb30 via 3ffe:2400:0:1:a00:20ff:fe71:fb30 \
1718 dev eth1 metric 0
1719 cache used 2 age 33sec mtu 1500 rtt 300
1720ff02::1 via ff02::1 dev eth1 metric 0
1721 cache users 1 used 1 age 45sec mtu 1500 rtt 300
1722
1723*** Round 1, deleting 6 entries ***
1724*** Flush is complete after 1 round ***
1725netadm@amber:~ # ip -6 -s -s ro flush cache
1726Nothing to flush.
1727netadm@amber:~ #
1728\end{verbatim}
1729
1730The third example flushes BGP routing tables after a \verb|gated|
1731death.
1732\begin{verbatim}
1733netadm@amber:~ # ip ro ls proto gated/bgp | wc
1734 1408 9856 78730
1735netadm@amber:~ # ip -s ro f proto gated/bgp
1736
1737*** Round 1, deleting 1408 entries ***
1738*** Flush is complete after 1 round ***
1739netadm@amber:~ # ip ro f proto gated/bgp
1740Nothing to flush.
1741netadm@amber:~ # ip ro ls proto gated/bgp
1742netadm@amber:~ #
1743\end{verbatim}
1744
1745
1746\subsection{{\tt ip route get} --- get a single route}
1747\label{IP-ROUTE-GET}
1748
1749\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|get|, \verb|g|.
1750
1751\paragraph{Description:} this command gets a single route to a destination
1752and prints its contents exactly as the kernel sees it.
1753
1754\paragraph{Arguments:}
1755\begin{itemize}
1756\item \verb|to ADDRESS| (default)
1757
1758--- the destination address.
1759
1760\item \verb|from ADDRESS|
1761
1762--- the source address.
1763
1764\item \verb|tos TOS| or \verb|dsfield TOS|
1765
1766--- the Type Of Service.
1767
1768\item \verb|iif NAME|
1769
1770--- the device from which this packet is expected to arrive.
1771
1772\item \verb|oif NAME|
1773
1774--- force the output device on which this packet will be routed.
1775
1776\item \verb|connected|
1777
1778--- if no source address (option \verb|from|) was given, relookup
1779the route with the source set to the preferred address received from the first lookup.
1780If policy routing is used, it may be a different route.
1781
1782\end{itemize}
1783
1784Note that this operation is not equivalent to \verb|ip route show|.
1785\verb|show| shows existing routes. \verb|get| resolves them and
1786creates new clones if necessary. Essentially, \verb|get|
1787is equivalent to sending a packet along this path.
1788If the \verb|iif| argument is not given, the kernel creates a route
1789to output packets towards the requested destination.
1790This is equivalent to pinging the destination
1791with a subsequent {\tt ip route ls cache}, however, no packets are
1792actually sent. With the \verb|iif| argument, the kernel pretends
1793that a packet arrived from this interface and searches for
1794a path to forward the packet.
1795
1796\paragraph{Output format:} This command outputs routes in the same
1797format as \verb|ip route ls|.
1798
1799\paragraph{Examples:}
1800\begin{itemize}
1801\item Find a route to output packets to 193.233.7.82:
1802\begin{verbatim}
1803kuznet@amber:~ $ ip route get 193.233.7.82
1804193.233.7.82 dev eth0 src 193.233.7.65 realms inr.ac
1805 cache mtu 1500 rtt 300
1806kuznet@amber:~ $
1807\end{verbatim}
1808
1809\item Find a route to forward packets arriving on \verb|eth0|
1810from 193.233.7.82 and destined for 193.233.7.82:
1811\begin{verbatim}
1812kuznet@amber:~ $ ip r g 193.233.7.82 from 193.233.7.82 iif eth0
1813193.233.7.82 from 193.233.7.82 dev eth0 src 193.233.7.65 \
1814 realms inr.ac/inr.ac
1815 cache <src-direct,redirect> mtu 1500 rtt 300 iif eth0
1816kuznet@amber:~ $
1817\end{verbatim}
1818\begin{NB}
1819 \label{NB-nature-of-strangeness}
1820 This is the command that created the funny route from 193.233.7.82
1821 looped back to 193.233.7.82 (cf.\ NB on~p.\pageref{NB-strange-route}).
1822 Note the \verb|redirect| flag on it.
1823\end{NB}
1824
1825\item Find a multicast route for packets arriving on \verb|eth0|
1826from host 193.233.7.82 and destined for multicast group 224.2.127.254
1827(it is assumed that a multicast routing daemon is running.
1828In this case, it is \verb|pimd|)
1829\begin{verbatim}
1830kuznet@amber:~ $ ip r g 224.2.127.254 from 193.233.7.82 iif eth0
1831multicast 224.2.127.254 from 193.233.7.82 dev lo \
1832 src 193.233.7.65 realms inr.ac/cosmos
1833 cache <mc> iif eth0 Oifs: eth1 pimreg
1834kuznet@amber:~ $
1835\end{verbatim}
1836This route differs from the ones seen before. It contains a ``normal'' part
1837and a ``multicast'' part. The normal part is used to deliver (or not to
1838deliver) the packet to local IP listeners. In this case the router
1839is not a member
1840of this group, so that route has no \verb|local| flag and only
1841forwards packets. The output device for such entries is always loopback.
1842The multicast part consists of an additional \verb|Oifs:| list showing
1843the output interfaces.
1844\end{itemize}
1845
1846
1847It is time for a more complicated example. Let us add an invalid
1848gatewayed route for a destination which is really directly connected:
1849\begin{verbatim}
1850netadm@alisa:~ # ip route add 193.233.7.98 via 193.233.7.254
1851netadm@alisa:~ # ip route get 193.233.7.98
1852193.233.7.98 via 193.233.7.254 dev eth0 src 193.233.7.90
1853 cache mtu 1500 rtt 3072
1854netadm@alisa:~ #
1855\end{verbatim}
1856and probe it with ping:
1857\begin{verbatim}
1858netadm@alisa:~ # ping -n 193.233.7.98
1859PING 193.233.7.98 (193.233.7.98) from 193.233.7.90 : 56 data bytes
1860From 193.233.7.254: Redirect Host(New nexthop: 193.233.7.98)
186164 bytes from 193.233.7.98: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=3.5 ms
1862From 193.233.7.254: Redirect Host(New nexthop: 193.233.7.98)
186364 bytes from 193.233.7.98: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=2.2 ms
186464 bytes from 193.233.7.98: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=0.4 ms
186564 bytes from 193.233.7.98: icmp_seq=3 ttl=255 time=0.4 ms
186664 bytes from 193.233.7.98: icmp_seq=4 ttl=255 time=0.4 ms
1867^C
1868--- 193.233.7.98 ping statistics ---
18695 packets transmitted, 5 packets received, 0% packet loss
1870round-trip min/avg/max = 0.4/1.3/3.5 ms
1871netadm@alisa:~ #
1872\end{verbatim}
1873What happened? Router 193.233.7.254 understood that we have a much
1874better path to the destination and sent us an ICMP redirect message.
1875We may retry \verb|ip route get| to see what we have in the routing
1876tables now:
1877\begin{verbatim}
1878netadm@alisa:~ # ip route get 193.233.7.98
1879193.233.7.98 dev eth0 src 193.233.7.90
1880 cache <redirected> mtu 1500 rtt 3072
1881netadm@alisa:~ #
1882\end{verbatim}
1883
1884
1885
1886\section{{\tt ip rule} --- routing policy database management}
1887\label{IP-RULE}
1888
1889\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|rule|, \verb|ru|.
1890
1891\paragraph{Object:} \verb|rule|s in the routing policy database control
1892the route selection algorithm.
1893
1894Classic routing algorithms used in the Internet make routing decisions
1895based only on the destination address of packets (and in theory,
1896but not in practice, on the TOS field). The seminal review of classic
1897routing algorithms and their modifications can be found in~\cite{RFC1812}.
1898
1899In some circumstances we want to route packets differently depending not only
1900on destination addresses, but also on other packet fields: source address,
1901IP protocol, transport protocol ports or even packet payload.
1902This task is called ``policy routing''.
1903
1904\begin{NB}
1905 ``policy routing'' $\neq$ ``routing policy''.
1906
1907\noindent ``policy routing'' $=$ ``cunning routing''.
1908
1909\noindent ``routing policy'' $=$ ``routing tactics'' or ``routing plan''.
1910\end{NB}
1911
1912To solve this task, the conventional destination based routing table, ordered
1913according to the longest match rule, is replaced with a ``routing policy
1914database'' (or RPDB), which selects routes
1915by executing some set of rules. The rules may have lots of keys of different
1916natures and therefore they have no natural ordering, but one imposed
1917by the administrator. Linux-2.2 RPDB is a linear list of rules
1918ordered by numeric priority value.
1919RPDB explicitly allows matching a few packet fields:
1920
1921\begin{itemize}
1922\item packet source address.
1923\item packet destination address.
1924\item TOS.
1925\item incoming interface (which is packet metadata, rather than a packet field).
1926\end{itemize}
1927
1928Matching IP protocols and transport ports is also possible,
1929indirectly, via \verb|ipchains|, by exploiting their ability
1930to mark some classes of packets with \verb|fwmark|. Therefore,
1931\verb|fwmark| is also included in the set of keys checked by rules.
1932
1933Each policy routing rule consists of a {\em selector\/} and an {\em action\/}
1934predicate. The RPDB is scanned in the order of increasing priority. The selector
1935of each rule is applied to \{source address, destination address, incoming
1936interface, tos, fwmark\} and, if the selector matches the packet,
1937the action is performed. The action predicate may return with success.
1938In this case, it will either give a route or failure indication
1939and the RPDB lookup is terminated. Otherwise, the RPDB program
1940continues on the next rule.
1941
1942What is the action, semantically? The natural action is to select the
1943nexthop and the output device. This is what
1944Cisco IOS~\cite{IOS} does. Let us call it ``match \& set''.
1945The Linux-2.2 approach is more flexible. The action includes
1946lookups in destination-based routing tables and selecting
1947a route from these tables according to the classic longest match algorithm.
1948The ``match \& set'' approach is the simplest case of the Linux one. It is realized
1949when a second level routing table contains a single default route.
1950Recall that Linux-2.2 supports multiple tables
1951managed with the \verb|ip route| command, described in the previous section.
1952
1953At startup time the kernel configures the default RPDB consisting of three
1954rules:
1955
1956\begin{enumerate}
1957\item Priority: 0, Selector: match anything, Action: lookup routing
1958table \verb|local| (ID 255).
1959The \verb|local| table is a special routing table containing
1960high priority control routes for local and broadcast addresses.
1961
1962Rule 0 is special. It cannot be deleted or overridden.
1963
1964
1965\item Priority: 32766, Selector: match anything, Action: lookup routing
1966table \verb|main| (ID 254).
1967The \verb|main| table is the normal routing table containing all non-policy
1968routes. This rule may be deleted and/or overridden with other
1969ones by the administrator.
1970
1971\item Priority: 32767, Selector: match anything, Action: lookup routing
1972table \verb|default| (ID 253).
1973The \verb|default| table is empty. It is reserved for some
1974post-processing if no previous default rules selected the packet.
1975This rule may also be deleted.
1976
1977\end{enumerate}
1978
1979Do not confuse routing tables with rules: rules point to routing tables,
1980several rules may refer to one routing table and some routing tables
1981may have no rules pointing to them. If the administrator deletes all the rules
1982referring to a table, the table is not used, but it still exists
1983and will disappear only after all the routes contained in it are deleted.
1984
1985
1986\paragraph{Rule attributes:} Each RPDB entry has additional
1987attributes. F.e.\ each rule has a pointer to some routing
1988table. NAT and masquerading rules have an attribute to select new IP
1989address to translate/masquerade. Besides that, rules have some
1990optional attributes, which routes have, namely \verb|realms|.
1991These values do not override those contained in the routing tables. They
1992are only used if the route did not select any attributes.
1993
1994
1995\paragraph{Rule types:} The RPDB may contain rules of the following
1996types:
1997\begin{itemize}
1998\item \verb|unicast| --- the rule prescribes to return the route found
1999in the routing table referenced by the rule.
2000\item \verb|blackhole| --- the rule prescribes to silently drop the packet.
2001\item \verb|unreachable| --- the rule prescribes to generate a ``Network
2002is unreachable'' error.
2003\item \verb|prohibit| --- the rule prescribes to generate
2004``Communication is administratively prohibited'' error.
2005\item \verb|nat| --- the rule prescribes to translate the source address
2006of the IP packet into some other value. More about NAT is
2007in Appendix~\ref{ROUTE-NAT}, p.\pageref{ROUTE-NAT}.
2008\end{itemize}
2009
2010
2011\paragraph{Commands:} \verb|add|, \verb|delete| and \verb|show|
2012(or \verb|list|).
2013
2014\subsection{{\tt ip rule add} --- insert a new rule\\
2015 {\tt ip rule delete} --- delete a rule}
2016\label{IP-RULE-ADD}
2017
2018\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|add|, \verb|a|; \verb|delete|, \verb|del|,
2019 \verb|d|.
2020
2021\paragraph{Arguments:}
2022
2023\begin{itemize}
2024\item \verb|type TYPE| (default)
2025
2026--- the type of this rule. The list of valid types was given in the previous
2027subsection.
2028
2029\item \verb|from PREFIX|
2030
2031--- select the source prefix to match.
2032
2033\item \verb|to PREFIX|
2034
2035--- select the destination prefix to match.
2036
2037\item \verb|iif NAME|
2038
2039--- select the incoming device to match. If the interface is loopback,
2040the rule only matches packets originating from this host. This means that you
2041may create separate routing tables for forwarded and local packets and,
2042hence, completely segregate them.
2043
2044\item \verb|tos TOS| or \verb|dsfield TOS|
2045
2046--- select the TOS value to match.
2047
2048\item \verb|fwmark MARK|
2049
2050--- select the \verb|fwmark| value to match.
2051
2052\item \verb|priority PREFERENCE|
2053
2054--- the priority of this rule. Each rule should have an explicitly
2055set {\em unique\/} priority value.
2056\begin{NB}
2057 Really, for historical reasons \verb|ip rule add| does not require a
2058 priority value and allows them to be non-unique.
2059 If the user does not supplied a priority, it is selected by the kernel.
2060 If the user creates a rule with a priority value that
2061 already exists, the kernel does not reject the request. It adds
2062 the new rule before all old rules of the same priority.
2063
2064 It is mistake in design, no more. And it will be fixed one day,
2065 so do not rely on this feature. Use explicit priorities.
2066\end{NB}
2067
2068
2069\item \verb|table TABLEID|
2070
2071--- the routing table identifier to lookup if the rule selector matches.
2072
2073\item \verb|realms FROM/TO|
2074
2075--- Realms to select if the rule matched and the routing table lookup
2076succeeded. Realm \verb|TO| is only used if the route did not select
2077any realm.
2078
2079\item \verb|nat ADDRESS|
2080
2081--- The base of the IP address block to translate (for source addresses).
2082The \verb|ADDRESS| may be either the start of the block of NAT addresses
2083(selected by NAT routes) or in linux-2.2 a local host address (or even zero).
2084In the last case the router does not translate the packets,
2085but masquerades them to this address; this feature disappered in 2.4.
2086More about NAT is in Appendix~\ref{ROUTE-NAT},
2087p.\pageref{ROUTE-NAT}.
2088
2089\end{itemize}
2090
2091\paragraph{Warning:} Changes to the RPDB made with these commands
2092do not become active immediately. It is assumed that after
2093a script finishes a batch of updates, it flushes the routing cache
2094with \verb|ip route flush cache|.
2095
2096\paragraph{Examples:}
2097\begin{itemize}
2098\item Route packets with source addresses from 192.203.80/24
2099according to routing table \verb|inr.ruhep|:
2100\begin{verbatim}
2101ip ru add from 192.203.80.0/24 table inr.ruhep prio 220
2102\end{verbatim}
2103
2104\item Translate packet source address 193.233.7.83 into 192.203.80.144
2105and route it according to table \#1 (actually, it is \verb|inr.ruhep|):
2106\begin{verbatim}
2107ip ru add from 193.233.7.83 nat 192.203.80.144 table 1 prio 320
2108\end{verbatim}
2109
2110\item Delete the unused default rule:
2111\begin{verbatim}
2112ip ru del prio 32767
2113\end{verbatim}
2114
2115\end{itemize}
2116
2117
2118
2119\subsection{{\tt ip rule show} --- list rules}
2120\label{IP-RULE-SHOW}
2121
2122\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|, \verb|l|.
2123
2124
2125\paragraph{Arguments:} Good news, this is one command that has no arguments.
2126
2127\paragraph{Output format:}
2128
2129\begin{verbatim}
2130kuznet@amber:~ $ ip ru ls
21310: from all lookup local
2132200: from 192.203.80.0/24 to 193.233.7.0/24 lookup main
2133210: from 192.203.80.0/24 to 192.203.80.0/24 lookup main
2134220: from 192.203.80.0/24 lookup inr.ruhep realms inr.ruhep/radio-msu
2135300: from 193.233.7.83 to 193.233.7.0/24 lookup main
2136310: from 193.233.7.83 to 192.203.80.0/24 lookup main
2137320: from 193.233.7.83 lookup inr.ruhep map-to 192.203.80.144
213832766: from all lookup main
2139kuznet@amber:~ $
2140\end{verbatim}
2141
2142In the first column is the rule priority value followed
2143by a colon. Then the selectors follow. Each key is prefixed
2144with the same keyword that was used to create the rule.
2145
2146The keyword \verb|lookup| is followed by a routing table identifier,
2147as it is recorded in the file \verb|/etc/iproute2/rt_tables|.
2148
2149If the rule does NAT (f.e.\ rule \#320), it is shown by the keyword
2150\verb|map-to| followed by the start of the block of addresses to map.
2151
2152The sense of this example is pretty simple. The prefixes
2153192.203.80.0/24 and 193.233.7.0/24 form the internal network, but
2154they are routed differently when the packets leave it.
2155Besides that, the host 193.233.7.83 is translated into
2156another prefix to look like 192.203.80.144 when talking
2157to the outer world.
2158
2159
2160
2161\section{{\tt ip maddress} --- multicast addresses management}
2162\label{IP-MADDR}
2163
2164\paragraph{Object:} \verb|maddress| objects are multicast addresses.
2165
2166\paragraph{Commands:} \verb|add|, \verb|delete|, \verb|show| (or \verb|list|).
2167
2168\subsection{{\tt ip maddress show} --- list multicast addresses}
2169
2170\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|, \verb|l|.
2171
2172\paragraph{Arguments:}
2173
2174\begin{itemize}
2175
2176\item \verb|dev NAME| (default)
2177
2178--- the device name.
2179
2180\end{itemize}
2181
2182\paragraph{Output format:}
2183
2184\begin{verbatim}
2185kuznet@alisa:~ $ ip maddr ls dummy
21862: dummy
2187 link 33:33:00:00:00:01
2188 link 01:00:5e:00:00:01
2189 inet 224.0.0.1 users 2
2190 inet6 ff02::1
2191kuznet@alisa:~ $
2192\end{verbatim}
2193
2194The first line of the output shows the interface index and its name.
2195Then the multicast address list follows. Each line starts with the
2196protocol identifier. The word \verb|link| denotes a link layer
2197multicast addresses.
2198
2199If a multicast address has more than one user, the number
2200of users is shown after the \verb|users| keyword.
2201
2202One additional feature not present in the example above
2203is the \verb|static| flag, which indicates that the address was joined
2204with \verb|ip maddr add|. See the following subsection.
2205
2206
2207
2208\subsection{{\tt ip maddress add} --- add a multicast address\\
2209 {\tt ip maddress delete} --- delete a multicast address}
2210
2211\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|add|, \verb|a|; \verb|delete|, \verb|del|, \verb|d|.
2212
2213\paragraph{Description:} these commands attach/detach
2214a static link layer multicast address to listen on the interface.
2215Note that it is impossible to join protocol multicast groups
2216statically. This command only manages link layer addresses.
2217
2218
2219\paragraph{Arguments:}
2220
2221\begin{itemize}
2222\item \verb|address LLADDRESS| (default)
2223
2224--- the link layer multicast address.
2225
2226\item \verb|dev NAME|
2227
2228--- the device to join/leave this multicast address.
2229
2230\end{itemize}
2231
2232
2233\paragraph{Example:} Let us continue with the example from the previous subsection.
2234
2235\begin{verbatim}
2236netadm@alisa:~ # ip maddr add 33:33:00:00:00:01 dev dummy
2237netadm@alisa:~ # ip -0 maddr ls dummy
22382: dummy
2239 link 33:33:00:00:00:01 users 2 static
2240 link 01:00:5e:00:00:01
2241netadm@alisa:~ # ip maddr del 33:33:00:00:00:01 dev dummy
2242\end{verbatim}
2243
2244\begin{NB}
2245 Neither \verb|ip| nor the kernel check for multicast address validity.
2246 Particularly, this means that you can try to load a unicast address
2247 instead of a multicast address. Most drivers will ignore such addresses,
2248 but several (f.e.\ Tulip) will intern it to their on-board filter.
2249 The effects may be strange. Namely, the addresses become additional
2250 local link addresses and, if you loaded the address of another host
2251 to the router, wait for duplicated packets on the wire.
2252 It is not a bug, but rather a hole in the API and intra-kernel interfaces.
2253 This feature is really more useful for traffic monitoring, but using it
2254 with Linux-2.2 you {\em have to\/} be sure that the host is not
2255 a router and, especially, that it is not a transparent proxy or masquerading
2256 agent.
2257\end{NB}
2258
2259
2260
2261\section{{\tt ip mroute} --- multicast routing cache management}
2262\label{IP-MROUTE}
2263
2264\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|mroute|, \verb|mr|.
2265
2266\paragraph{Object:} \verb|mroute| objects are multicast routing cache
2267entries created by a user level mrouting daemon
2268(f.e.\ \verb|pimd| or \verb|mrouted|).
2269
2270Due to the limitations of the current interface to the multicast routing
2271engine, it is impossible to change \verb|mroute| objects administratively,
2272so we may only display them. This limitation will be removed
2273in the future.
2274
2275\paragraph{Commands:} \verb|show| (or \verb|list|).
2276
2277
2278\subsection{{\tt ip mroute show} --- list mroute cache entries}
2279
2280\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|, \verb|l|.
2281
2282\paragraph{Arguments:}
2283
2284\begin{itemize}
2285\item \verb|to PREFIX| (default)
2286
2287--- the prefix selecting the destination multicast addresses to list.
2288
2289
2290\item \verb|iif NAME|
2291
2292--- the interface on which multicast packets are received.
2293
2294
2295\item \verb|from PREFIX|
2296
2297--- the prefix selecting the IP source addresses of the multicast route.
2298
2299
2300\end{itemize}
2301
2302\paragraph{Output format:}
2303
2304\begin{verbatim}
2305kuznet@amber:~ $ ip mroute ls
2306(193.232.127.6, 224.0.1.39) Iif: unresolved
2307(193.232.244.34, 224.0.1.40) Iif: unresolved
2308(193.233.7.65, 224.66.66.66) Iif: eth0 Oifs: pimreg
2309kuznet@amber:~ $
2310\end{verbatim}
2311
2312Each line shows one (S,G) entry in the multicast routing cache,
2313where S is the source address and G is the multicast group. \verb|Iif| is
2314the interface on which multicast packets are expected to arrive.
2315If the word \verb|unresolved| is there instead of the interface name,
2316it means that the routing daemon still hasn't resolved this entry.
2317The keyword \verb|oifs| is followed by a list of output interfaces, separated
2318by spaces. If a multicast routing entry is created with non-trivial
2319TTL scope, administrative distances are appended to the device names
2320in the \verb|oifs| list.
2321
2322\paragraph{Statistics:} The \verb|-statistics| option also prints the
2323number of packets and bytes forwarded along this route and
2324the number of packets that arrived on the wrong interface, if this number is not zero.
2325
2326\begin{verbatim}
2327kuznet@amber:~ $ ip -s mr ls 224.66/16
2328(193.233.7.65, 224.66.66.66) Iif: eth0 Oifs: pimreg
2329 9383 packets, 300256 bytes
2330kuznet@amber:~ $
2331\end{verbatim}
2332
2333
2334\section{{\tt ip tunnel} --- tunnel configuration}
2335\label{IP-TUNNEL}
2336
2337\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|tunnel|, \verb|tunl|.
2338
2339\paragraph{Object:} \verb|tunnel| objects are tunnels, encapsulating
2340packets in IPv4 packets and then sending them over the IP infrastructure.
2341
2342\paragraph{Commands:} \verb|add|, \verb|delete|, \verb|change|, \verb|show|
2343(or \verb|list|).
2344
2345\paragraph{See also:} A more informal discussion of tunneling
2346over IP and the \verb|ip tunnel| command can be found in~\cite{IP-TUNNELS}.
2347
2348\subsection{{\tt ip tunnel add} --- add a new tunnel\\
2349 {\tt ip tunnel change} --- change an existing tunnel\\
2350 {\tt ip tunnel delete} --- destroy a tunnel}
2351
2352\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|add|, \verb|a|; \verb|change|, \verb|chg|;
2353\verb|delete|, \verb|del|, \verb|d|.
2354
2355
2356\paragraph{Arguments:}
2357
2358\begin{itemize}
2359
2360\item \verb|name NAME| (default)
2361
2362--- select the tunnel device name.
2363
2364\item \verb|mode MODE|
2365
2366--- set the tunnel mode. Three modes are currently available:
2367 \verb|ipip|, \verb|sit| and \verb|gre|.
2368
2369\item \verb|remote ADDRESS|
2370
2371--- set the remote endpoint of the tunnel.
2372
2373\item \verb|local ADDRESS|
2374
2375--- set the fixed local address for tunneled packets.
2376It must be an address on another interface of this host.
2377
2378\item \verb|ttl N|
2379
2380--- set a fixed TTL \verb|N| on tunneled packets.
2381 \verb|N| is a number in the range 1--255. 0 is a special value
2382 meaning that packets inherit the TTL value.
2383 The default value is: \verb|inherit|.
2384
2385\item \verb|tos T| or \verb|dsfield T|
2386
2387--- set a fixed TOS \verb|T| on tunneled packets.
2388 The default value is: \verb|inherit|.
2389
2390
2391
2392\item \verb|dev NAME|
2393
2394--- bind the tunnel to the device \verb|NAME| so that
2395 tunneled packets will only be routed via this device and will
2396 not be able to escape to another device when the route to endpoint changes.
2397
2398\item \verb|nopmtudisc|
2399
2400--- disable Path MTU Discovery on this tunnel.
2401 It is enabled by default. Note that a fixed ttl is incompatible
2402 with this option: tunnelling with a fixed ttl always makes pmtu discovery.
2403
2404\item \verb|key K|, \verb|ikey K|, \verb|okey K|
2405
2406--- (only GRE tunnels) use keyed GRE with key \verb|K|. \verb|K| is
2407 either a number or an IP address-like dotted quad.
2408 The \verb|key| parameter sets the key to use in both directions.
2409 The \verb|ikey| and \verb|okey| parameters set different keys for input and output.
2410
2411
2412\item \verb|csum|, \verb|icsum|, \verb|ocsum|
2413
2414--- (only GRE tunnels) generate/require checksums for tunneled packets.
2415 The \verb|ocsum| flag calculates checksums for outgoing packets.
2416 The \verb|icsum| flag requires that all input packets have the correct
2417 checksum. The \verb|csum| flag is equivalent to the combination
2418 ``\verb|icsum| \verb|ocsum|''.
2419
2420\item \verb|seq|, \verb|iseq|, \verb|oseq|
2421
2422--- (only GRE tunnels) serialize packets.
2423 The \verb|oseq| flag enables sequencing of outgoing packets.
2424 The \verb|iseq| flag requires that all input packets are serialized.
2425 The \verb|seq| flag is equivalent to the combination ``\verb|iseq| \verb|oseq|''.
2426
2427\begin{NB}
2428 I think this option does not
2429 work. At least, I did not test it, did not debug it and
2430 do not even understand how it is supposed to work or for what
2431 purpose Cisco planned to use it. Do not use it.
2432\end{NB}
2433
2434
2435\end{itemize}
2436
2437\paragraph{Example:} Create a pointopoint IPv6 tunnel with maximal TTL of 32.
2438\begin{verbatim}
2439netadm@amber:~ # ip tunl add Cisco mode sit remote 192.31.7.104 \
2440 local 192.203.80.142 ttl 32
2441\end{verbatim}
2442
2443\subsection{{\tt ip tunnel show} --- list tunnels}
2444
2445\paragraph{Abbreviations:} \verb|show|, \verb|list|, \verb|sh|, \verb|ls|, \verb|l|.
2446
2447
2448\paragraph{Arguments:} None.
2449
2450\paragraph{Output format:}
2451\begin{verbatim}
2452kuznet@amber:~ $ ip tunl ls Cisco
2453Cisco: ipv6/ip remote 192.31.7.104 local 192.203.80.142 ttl 32
2454kuznet@amber:~ $
2455\end{verbatim}
2456The line starts with the tunnel device name followed by a colon.
2457Then the tunnel mode follows. The parameters of the tunnel are listed
2458with the same keywords that were used when creating the tunnel.
2459
2460\paragraph{Statistics:}
2461
2462\begin{verbatim}
2463kuznet@amber:~ $ ip -s tunl ls Cisco
2464Cisco: ipv6/ip remote 192.31.7.104 local 192.203.80.142 ttl 32
2465RX: Packets Bytes Errors CsumErrs OutOfSeq Mcasts
2466 12566 1707516 0 0 0 0
2467TX: Packets Bytes Errors DeadLoop NoRoute NoBufs
2468 13445 1879677 0 0 0 0
2469kuznet@amber:~ $
2470\end{verbatim}
2471Essentially, these numbers are the same as the numbers
2472printed with {\tt ip -s link show}
2473(sec.\ref{IP-LINK-SHOW}, p.\pageref{IP-LINK-SHOW}) but the tags are different
2474to reflect that they are tunnel specific.
2475\begin{itemize}
2476\item \verb|CsumErrs| --- the total number of packets dropped
2477because of checksum failures for a GRE tunnel with checksumming enabled.
2478\item \verb|OutOfSeq| --- the total number of packets dropped
2479because they arrived out of sequence for a GRE tunnel with
2480serialization enabled.
2481\item \verb|Mcasts| --- the total number of multicast packets
2482received on a broadcast GRE tunnel.
2483\item \verb|DeadLoop| --- the total number of packets which were not
2484transmitted because the tunnel is looped back to itself.
2485\item \verb|NoRoute| --- the total number of packets which were not
2486transmitted because there is no IP route to the remote endpoint.
2487\item \verb|NoBufs| --- the total number of packets which were not
2488transmitted because the kernel failed to allocate a buffer.
2489\end{itemize}
2490
2491
2492\section{{\tt ip monitor} and {\tt rtmon} --- state monitoring}
2493\label{IP-MONITOR}
2494
2495The \verb|ip| utility can monitor the state of devices, addresses
2496and routes continuously. This option has a slightly different format.
2497Namely,
2498the \verb|monitor| command is the first in the command line and then
2499the object list follows:
2500\begin{verbatim}
2501 ip monitor [ file FILE ] [ all | OBJECT-LIST ]
2502\end{verbatim}
2503\verb|OBJECT-LIST| is the list of object types that we want to monitor.
2504It may contain \verb|link|, \verb|address| and \verb|route|.
2505If no \verb|file| argument is given, \verb|ip| opens RTNETLINK,
2506listens on it and dumps state changes in the format described
2507in previous sections.
2508
2509If a file name is given, it does not listen on RTNETLINK,
2510but opens the file containing RTNETLINK messages saved in binary format
2511and dumps them. Such a history file can be generated with the
2512\verb|rtmon| utility. This utility has a command line syntax similar to
2513\verb|ip monitor|.
2514Ideally, \verb|rtmon| should be started before
2515the first network configuration command is issued. F.e.\ if
2516you insert:
2517\begin{verbatim}
2518 rtmon file /var/log/rtmon.log
2519\end{verbatim}
2520in a startup script, you will be able to view the full history
2521later.
2522
2523Certainly, it is possible to start \verb|rtmon| at any time.
2524It prepends the history with the state snapshot dumped at the moment
2525of starting.
2526
2527
2528\section{Route realms and policy propagation, {\tt rtacct}}
2529\label{RT-REALMS}
2530
2531On routers using OSPF ASE or, especially, the BGP protocol, routing
2532tables may be huge. If we want to classify or to account for the packets
2533per route, we will have to keep lots of information. Even worse, if we
2534want to distinguish the packets not only by their destination, but
2535also by their source, the task gets quadratic complexity and its solution
2536is physically impossible.
2537
2538One approach to propagating the policy from routing protocols
2539to the forwarding engine has been proposed in~\cite{IOS-BGP-PP}.
2540Essentially, Cisco Policy Propagation via BGP is based on the fact
2541that dedicated routers all have the RIB (Routing Information Base)
2542close to the forwarding engine, so policy routing rules can
2543check all the route attributes, including ASPATH information
2544and community strings.
2545
2546The Linux architecture, splitting the RIB (maintained by a user level
2547daemon) and the kernel based FIB (Forwarding Information Base),
2548does not allow such a simple approach.
2549
2550It is to our fortune because there is another solution
2551which allows even more flexible policy and richer semantics.
2552
2553Namely, routes can be clustered together in user space, based on their
2554attributes. F.e.\ a BGP router knows route ASPATH, its community;
2555an OSPF router knows the route tag or its area. The administrator, when adding
2556routes manually, also knows their nature. Providing that the number of such
2557aggregates (we call them {\em realms\/}) is low, the task of full
2558classification both by source and destination becomes quite manageable.
2559
2560So each route may be assigned to a realm. It is assumed that
2561this identification is made by a routing daemon, but static routes
2562can also be handled manually with \verb|ip route| (see sec.\ref{IP-ROUTE},
2563p.\pageref{IP-ROUTE}).
2564\begin{NB}
2565 There is a patch to \verb|gated|, allowing classification of routes
2566 to realms with all the set of policy rules implemented in \verb|gated|:
2567 by prefix, by ASPATH, by origin, by tag etc.
2568\end{NB}
2569
2570To facilitate the construction (f.e.\ in case the routing
2571daemon is not aware of realms), missing realms may be completed
2572with routing policy rules, see sec.~\ref{IP-RULE}, p.\pageref{IP-RULE}.
2573
2574For each packet the kernel calculates a tuple of realms: source realm
2575and destination realm, using the following algorithm:
2576
2577\begin{enumerate}
2578\item If the route has a realm, the destination realm of the packet is set to it.
2579\item If the rule has a source realm, the source realm of the packet is set to it.
2580If the destination realm was not inherited from the route and the rule has a destination realm,
2581it is also set.
2582\item If at least one of the realms is still unknown, the kernel finds
2583the reversed route to the source of the packet.
2584\item If the source realm is still unknown, get it from the reversed route.
2585\item If one of the realms is still unknown, swap the realms of reversed
2586routes and apply step 2 again.
2587\end{enumerate}
2588
2589After this procedure is completed we know what realm the packet
2590arrived from and the realm where it is going to propagate to.
2591If some of the realms are unknown, they are initialized to zero
2592(or realm \verb|unknown|).
2593
2594The main application of realms is the TC \verb|route| classifier~\cite{TC-CREF},
2595where they are used to help assign packets to traffic classes,
2596to account, police and schedule them according to this
2597classification.
2598
2599A much simpler but still very useful application is incoming packet
2600accounting by realms. The kernel gathers a packet statistics summary
2601which can be viewed with the \verb|rtacct| utility.
2602\begin{verbatim}
2603kuznet@amber:~ $ rtacct russia
2604Realm BytesTo PktsTo BytesFrom PktsFrom
2605russia 20576778 169176 47080168 153805
2606kuznet@amber:~ $
2607\end{verbatim}
2608This shows that this router received 153805 packets from
2609the realm \verb|russia| and forwarded 169176 packets to \verb|russia|.
2610The realm \verb|russia| consists of routes with ASPATHs not leaving
2611Russia.
2612
2613Note that locally originating packets are not accounted here,
2614\verb|rtacct| shows incoming packets only. Using the \verb|route|
2615classifier (see~\cite{TC-CREF}) you can get even more detailed
2616accounting information about outgoing packets, optionally
2617summarizing traffic not only by source or destination, but
2618by any pair of source and destination realms.
2619
2620
2621\begin{thebibliography}{99}
2622\addcontentsline{toc}{section}{References}
2623\bibitem{RFC-NDISC} T.~Narten, E.~Nordmark, W.~Simpson.
2624``Neighbor Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)'', RFC-2461.
2625
2626\bibitem{RFC-ADDRCONF} S.~Thomson, T.~Narten.
2627``IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration'', RFC-2462.
2628
2629\bibitem{RFC1812} F.~Baker.
2630``Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers'', RFC-1812.
2631
2632\bibitem{RFC1122} R.~T.~Braden.
2633``Requirements for Internet hosts --- communication layers'', RFC-1122.
2634
2635\bibitem{IOS} ``Cisco IOS Release 12.0 Network Protocols
2636Command Reference, Part 1'' and
2637``Cisco IOS Release 12.0 Quality of Service Solutions
2638Configuration Guide: Configuring Policy-Based Routing'',\\
2639http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120.
2640
2641\bibitem{IP-TUNNELS} A.~N.~Kuznetsov.
2642``Tunnels over IP in Linux-2.2'', \\
2643In: {\tt ftp://ftp.inr.ac.ru/ip-routing/iproute2-current.tar.gz}.
2644
2645\bibitem{TC-CREF} A.~N.~Kuznetsov. ``TC Command Reference'',\\
2646In: {\tt ftp://ftp.inr.ac.ru/ip-routing/iproute2-current.tar.gz}.
2647
2648\bibitem{IOS-BGP-PP} ``Cisco IOS Release 12.0 Quality of Service Solutions
2649Configuration Guide: Configuring QoS Policy Propagation via
2650Border Gateway Protocol'',\\
2651http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120.
2652
2653\bibitem{RFC-DHCP} R.~Droms.
2654``Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol.'', RFC-2131
2655
2656\end{thebibliography}
2657
2658
2659
2660
2661\appendix
2662\addcontentsline{toc}{section}{Appendix}
2663
2664\section{Source address selection}
2665\label{ADDR-SEL}
2666
2667When a host creates an IP packet, it must select some source
2668address. Correct source address selection is a critical procedure,
2669because it gives the receiver the information needed to deliver a
2670reply. If the source is selected incorrectly, in the best case,
2671the backward path may appear different to the forward one which
2672is harmful for performance. In the worst case, when the addresses
2673are administratively scoped, the reply may be lost entirely.
2674
2675Linux-2.2 selects source addresses using the following algorithm:
2676
2677\begin{itemize}
2678\item
2679The application may select a source address explicitly with \verb|bind(2)|
2680syscall or supplying it to \verb|sendmsg(2)| via the ancillary data object
2681\verb|IP_PKTINFO|. In this case the kernel only checks the validity
2682of the address and never tries to ``improve'' an incorrect user choice,
2683generating an error instead.
2684\begin{NB}
2685 Never say ``Never''. The sysctl option \verb|ip_dynaddr| breaks
2686 this axiom. It has been made deliberately with the purpose
2687 of automatically reselecting the address on hosts with dynamic dial-out interfaces.
2688 However, this hack {\em must not\/} be used on multihomed hosts
2689 and especially on routers: it would break them.
2690\end{NB}
2691
2692
2693\item Otherwise, IP routing tables can contain an explicit source
2694address hint for this destination. The hint is set with the \verb|src| parameter
2695to the \verb|ip route| command, sec.\ref{IP-ROUTE}, p.\pageref{IP-ROUTE}.
2696
2697
2698\item Otherwise, the kernel searches through the list of addresses
2699attached to the interface through which the packets will be routed.
2700The search strategies are different for IP and IPv6. Namely:
2701
2702\begin{itemize}
2703\item IPv6 searches for the first valid, not deprecated address
2704with the same scope as the destination.
2705
2706\item IP searches for the first valid address with a scope wider
2707than the scope of the destination but it prefers addresses
2708which fall to the same subnet as the nexthop of the route
2709to the destination. Unlike IPv6, the scopes of IPv4 destinations
2710are not encoded in their addresses but are supplied
2711in routing tables instead (the \verb|scope| parameter to the \verb|ip route| command,
2712sec.\ref{IP-ROUTE}, p.\pageref{IP-ROUTE}).
2713
2714\end{itemize}
2715
2716
2717\item Otherwise, if the scope of the destination is \verb|link| or \verb|host|,
2718the algorithm fails and returns a zero source address.
2719
2720\item Otherwise, all interfaces are scanned to search for an address
2721with an appropriate scope. The loopback device \verb|lo| is always the first
2722in the search list, so that if an address with global scope (not 127.0.0.1!)
2723is configured on loopback, it is always preferred.
2724
2725\end{itemize}
2726
2727
2728\section{Proxy ARP/NDISC}
2729\label{PROXY-NEIGH}
2730
2731Routers may answer ARP/NDISC solicitations on behalf of other hosts.
2732In Linux-2.2 proxy ARP on an interface may be enabled
2733by setting the kernel \verb|sysctl| variable
2734\verb|/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/<dev>/proxy_arp| to 1. After this, the router
2735starts to answer ARP requests on the interface \verb|<dev>|, provided
2736the route to the requested destination does {\em not\/} go back via the same
2737device.
2738
2739The variable \verb|/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/proxy_arp| enables proxy
2740ARP on all the IP devices.
2741
2742However, this approach fails in the case of IPv6 because the router
2743must join the solicited node multicast address to listen for the corresponding
2744NDISC queries. It means that proxy NDISC is possible only on a per destination
2745basis.
2746
2747Logically, proxy ARP/NDISC is not a kernel task. It can easily be implemented
2748in user space. However, similar functionality was present in BSD kernels
2749and in Linux-2.0, so we have to preserve it at least to the extent that
2750is standardized in BSD.
2751\begin{NB}
2752 Linux-2.0 ARP had a feature called {\em subnet\/} proxy ARP.
2753 It is replaced with the sysctl flag in Linux-2.2.
2754\end{NB}
2755
2756
2757The \verb|ip| utility provides a way to manage proxy ARP/NDISC
2758with the \verb|ip neigh| command, namely:
2759\begin{verbatim}
2760 ip neigh add proxy ADDRESS [ dev NAME ]
2761\end{verbatim}
2762adds a new proxy ARP/NDISC record and
2763\begin{verbatim}
2764 ip neigh del proxy ADDRESS [ dev NAME ]
2765\end{verbatim}
2766deletes it.
2767
2768If the name of the device is not given, the router will answer solicitations
2769for address \verb|ADDRESS| on all devices, otherwise it will only serve
2770the device \verb|NAME|. Even if the proxy entry is created with
2771\verb|ip neigh|, the router {\em will not\/} answer a query if the route
2772to the destination goes back via the interface from which the solicitation
2773was received.
2774
2775It is important to emphasize that proxy entries have {\em no\/}
2776parameters other than these (IP/IPv6 address and optional device).
2777Particularly, the entry does not store any link layer address.
2778It always advertises the station address of the interface
2779on which it sends advertisements (i.e. it's own station address).
2780
2781\section{Route NAT status}
2782\label{ROUTE-NAT}
2783
2784NAT (or ``Network Address Translation'') remaps some parts
2785of the IP address space into other ones. Linux-2.2 route NAT is supposed
2786to be used to facilitate policy routing by rewriting addresses
2787to other routing domains or to help while renumbering sites
2788to another prefix.
2789
2790\paragraph{What it is not:}
2791It is necessary to emphasize that {\em it is not supposed\/}
2792to be used to compress address space or to split load.
2793This is not missing functionality but a design principle.
2794Route NAT is {\em stateless\/}. It does not hold any state
2795about translated sessions. This means that it handles any number
2796of sessions flawlessly. But it also means that it is {\em static\/}.
2797It cannot detect the moment when the last TCP client stops
2798using an address. For the same reason, it will not help to split
2799load between several servers.
2800\begin{NB}
2801It is a pretty commonly held belief that it is useful to split load between
2802several servers with NAT. This is a mistake. All you get from this
2803is the requirement that the router keep the state of all the TCP connections
2804going via it. Well, if the router is so powerful, run apache on it. 8)
2805\end{NB}
2806
2807The second feature: it does not touch packet payload,
2808does not try to ``improve'' broken protocols by looking
2809through its data and mangling it. It mangles IP addresses,
2810only IP addresses and nothing but IP addresses.
2811This also, is not missing any functionality.
2812
2813To resume: if you need to compress address space or keep
2814active FTP clients happy, your choice is not route NAT but masquerading,
2815port forwarding, NAPT etc.
2816\begin{NB}
2817By the way, you may also want to look at
2818http://www.suse.com/\~mha/HyperNews/get/linux-ip-nat.html
2819\end{NB}
2820
2821
2822\paragraph{How it works.}
2823Some part of the address space is reserved for dummy addresses
2824which will look for all the world like some host addresses
2825inside your network. No other hosts may use these addresses,
2826however other routers may also be configured to translate them.
2827\begin{NB}
2828A great advantage of route NAT is that it may be used not
2829only in stub networks but in environments with arbitrarily complicated
2830structure. It does not firewall, it {\em forwards.}
2831\end{NB}
2832These addresses are selected by the \verb|ip route| command
2833(sec.\ref{IP-ROUTE-ADD}, p.\pageref{IP-ROUTE-ADD}). F.e.\
2834\begin{verbatim}
2835 ip route add nat 192.203.80.144 via 193.233.7.83
2836\end{verbatim}
2837states that the single address 192.203.80.144 is a dummy NAT address.
2838For all the world it looks like a host address inside our network.
2839For neighbouring hosts and routers it looks like the local address
2840of the translating router. The router answers ARP for it, advertises
2841this address as routed via it, {\em et al\/}. When the router
2842receives a packet destined for 192.203.80.144, it replaces
2843this address with 193.233.7.83 which is the address of some real
2844host and forwards the packet. If you need to remap
2845blocks of addresses, you may use a command like:
2846\begin{verbatim}
2847 ip route add nat 192.203.80.192/26 via 193.233.7.64
2848\end{verbatim}
2849This command will map a block of 63 addresses 192.203.80.192-255 to
2850193.233.7.64-127.
2851
2852When an internal host (193.233.7.83 in the example above)
2853sends something to the outer world and these packets are forwarded
2854by our router, it should translate the source address 193.233.7.83
2855into 192.203.80.144. This task is solved by setting a special
2856policy rule (sec.\ref{IP-RULE-ADD}, p.\pageref{IP-RULE-ADD}):
2857\begin{verbatim}
2858 ip rule add prio 320 from 193.233.7.83 nat 192.203.80.144
2859\end{verbatim}
2860This rule says that the source address 193.233.7.83
2861should be translated into 192.203.80.144 before forwarding.
2862It is important that the address after the \verb|nat| keyword
2863is some NAT address, declared by {\tt ip route add nat}.
2864If it is just a random address the router will not map to it.
2865\begin{NB}
2866The exception is when the address is a local address of this
2867router (or 0.0.0.0) and masquerading is configured in the linux-2.2
2868kernel. In this case the router will masquerade the packets as this address.
2869If 0.0.0.0 is selected, the result is equivalent to one
2870obtained with firewalling rules. Otherwise, you have the way
2871to order Linux to masquerade to this fixed address.
2872NAT mechanism used in linux-2.4 is more flexible than
2873masquerading, so that this feature has lost meaning and disabled.
2874\end{NB}
2875
2876If the network has non-trivial internal structure, it is
2877useful and even necessary to add rules disabling translation
2878when a packet does not leave this network. Let us return to the
2879example from sec.\ref{IP-RULE-SHOW} (p.\pageref{IP-RULE-SHOW}).
2880\begin{verbatim}
2881300: from 193.233.7.83 to 193.233.7.0/24 lookup main
2882310: from 193.233.7.83 to 192.203.80.0/24 lookup main
2883320: from 193.233.7.83 lookup inr.ruhep map-to 192.203.80.144
2884\end{verbatim}
2885This block of rules causes normal forwarding when
2886packets from 193.233.7.83 do not leave networks 193.233.7/24
2887and 192.203.80/24. Also, if the \verb|inr.ruhep| table does not
2888contain a route to the destination (which means that the routing
2889domain owning addresses from 192.203.80/24 is dead), no translation
2890will occur. Otherwise, the packets are translated.
2891
2892\paragraph{How to only translate selected ports:}
2893If you only want to translate selected ports (f.e.\ http)
2894and leave the rest intact, you may use \verb|ipchains|
2895to \verb|fwmark| a class of packets.
2896Suppose you did and all the packets from 193.233.7.83
2897destined for port 80 are marked with marker 0x1234 in input fwchain.
2898In this case you may replace rule \#320 with:
2899\begin{verbatim}
2900320: from 193.233.7.83 fwmark 1234 lookup main map-to 192.203.80.144
2901\end{verbatim}
2902and translation will only be enabled for outgoing http requests.
2903
2904\section{Example: minimal host setup}
2905\label{EXAMPLE-SETUP}
2906
2907The following script gives an example of a fault safe
2908setup of IP (and IPv6, if it is compiled into the kernel)
2909in the common case of a node attached to a single broadcast
2910network. A more advanced script, which may be used both on multihomed
2911hosts and on routers, is described in the following
2912section.
2913
2914The utilities used in the script may be found in the
2915directory ftp://ftp.inr.ac.ru/ip-routing/:
2916\begin{enumerate}
2917\item \verb|ip| --- package \verb|iproute2|.
2918\item \verb|arping| --- package \verb|iputils|.
2919\item \verb|rdisc| --- package \verb|iputils|.
2920\end{enumerate}
2921\begin{NB}
2922It also refers to a DHCP client, \verb|dhcpcd|. I should refrain from
2923recommending a good DHCP client to use. All that I can
2924say is that ISC \verb|dhcp-2.0b1pl6| patched with the patch that
2925can be found in the \verb|dhcp.bootp.rarp| subdirectory of
2926the same ftp site {\em does\/} work,
2927at least on Ethernet and Token Ring.
2928\end{NB}
2929
2930\begin{verbatim}
2931#! /bin/bash
2932\end{verbatim}
2933\begin{flushleft}
2934\# {\bf Usage: \verb|ifone ADDRESS[/PREFIX-LENGTH] [DEVICE]|}\\
2935\# {\bf Parameters:}\\
2936\# \$1 --- Static IP address, optionally followed by prefix length.\\
2937\# \$2 --- Device name. If it is missing, \verb|eth0| is asssumed.\\
2938\# F.e. \verb|ifone 193.233.7.90|
2939\end{flushleft}
2940\begin{verbatim}
2941dev=$2
2942: ${dev:=eth0}
2943ipaddr=
2944\end{verbatim}
2945\# Parse IP address, splitting prefix length.
2946\begin{verbatim}
2947if [ "$1" != "" ]; then
2948 ipaddr=${1%/*}
2949 if [ "$1" != "$ipaddr" ]; then
2950 pfxlen=${1#*/}
2951 fi
2952 : ${pfxlen:=24}
2953fi
2954pfx="${ipaddr}/${pfxlen}"
2955\end{verbatim}
2956
2957\begin{flushleft}
2958\# {\bf Step 0} --- enable loopback.\\
2959\#\\
2960\# This step is necessary on any networked box before attempt\\
2961\# to configure any other device.\\
2962\end{flushleft}
2963\begin{verbatim}
2964ip link set up dev lo
2965ip addr add 127.0.0.1/8 dev lo brd + scope host
2966\end{verbatim}
2967\begin{flushleft}
2968\# IPv6 autoconfigure themself on loopback.\\
2969\#\\
2970\# If user gave loopback as device, we add the address as alias and exit.
2971\end{flushleft}
2972\begin{verbatim}
2973if [ "$dev" = "lo" ]; then
2974 if [ "$ipaddr" != "" -a "$ipaddr" != "127.0.0.1" ]; then
2975 ip address add $ipaddr dev $dev
2976 exit $?
2977 fi
2978 exit 0
2979fi
2980\end{verbatim}
2981
2982\noindent\# {\bf Step 1} --- enable device \verb|$dev|
2983
2984\begin{verbatim}
2985if ! ip link set up dev $dev ; then
2986 echo "Cannot enable interface $dev. Aborting." 1>&2
2987 exit 1
2988fi
2989\end{verbatim}
2990\begin{flushleft}
2991\# The interface is \verb|UP|. IPv6 started stateless autoconfiguration itself,\\
2992\# and its configuration finishes here. However,\\
2993\# IP still needs some static preconfigured address.
2994\end{flushleft}
2995\begin{verbatim}
2996if [ "$ipaddr" = "" ]; then
2997 echo "No address for $dev is configured, trying DHCP..." 1>&2
2998 dhcpcd
2999 exit $?
3000fi
3001\end{verbatim}
3002
3003\begin{flushleft}
3004\# {\bf Step 2} --- IP Duplicate Address Detection~\cite{RFC-DHCP}.\\
3005\# Send two probes and wait for result for 3 seconds.\\
3006\# If the interface opens slower f.e.\ due to long media detection,\\
3007\# you want to increase the timeout.\\
3008\end{flushleft}
3009\begin{verbatim}
3010if ! arping -q -c 2 -w 3 -D -I $dev $ipaddr ; then
3011 echo "Address $ipaddr is busy, trying DHCP..." 1>&2
3012 dhcpcd
3013 exit $?
3014fi
3015\end{verbatim}
3016\begin{flushleft}
3017\# OK, the address is unique, we may add it on the interface.\\
3018\#\\
3019\# {\bf Step 3} --- Configure the address on the interface.
3020\end{flushleft}
3021
3022\begin{verbatim}
3023if ! ip address add $pfx brd + dev $dev; then
3024 echo "Failed to add $pfx on $dev, trying DHCP..." 1>&2
3025 dhcpcd
3026 exit $?
3027fi
3028\end{verbatim}
3029
3030\noindent\# {\bf Step 4} --- Announce our presence on the link.
3031\begin{verbatim}
3032arping -A -c 1 -I $dev $ipaddr
3033noarp=$?
3034( sleep 2;
3035 arping -U -c 1 -I $dev $ipaddr ) >& /dev/null </dev/null &
3036\end{verbatim}
3037
3038\begin{flushleft}
3039\# {\bf Step 5} (optional) --- Add some control routes.\\
3040\#\\
3041\# 1. Prohibit link local multicast addresses.\\
3042\# 2. Prohibit link local (alias, limited) broadcast.\\
3043\# 3. Add default multicast route.
3044\end{flushleft}
3045\begin{verbatim}
3046ip route add unreachable 224.0.0.0/24
3047ip route add unreachable 255.255.255.255
3048if [ `ip link ls $dev | grep -c MULTICAST` -ge 1 ]; then
3049 ip route add 224.0.0.0/4 dev $dev scope global
3050fi
3051\end{verbatim}
3052
3053\begin{flushleft}
3054\# {\bf Step 6} --- Add fallback default route with huge metric.\\
3055\# If a proxy ARP server is present on the interface, we will be\\
3056\# able to talk to all the Internet without further configuration.\\
3057\# It is not so cheap though and we still hope that this route\\
3058\# will be overridden by more correct one by rdisc.\\
3059\# Do not make this step if the device is not ARPable,\\
3060\# because dead nexthop detection does not work on them.
3061\end{flushleft}
3062\begin{verbatim}
3063if [ "$noarp" = "0" ]; then
3064 ip ro add default dev $dev metric 30000 scope global
3065fi
3066\end{verbatim}
3067
3068\begin{flushleft}
3069\# {\bf Step 7} --- Restart router discovery and exit.
3070\end{flushleft}
3071\begin{verbatim}
3072killall -HUP rdisc || rdisc -fs
3073exit 0
3074\end{verbatim}
3075
3076
3077\section{Example: {\protect\tt ifcfg} --- interface address management}
3078\label{EXAMPLE-IFCFG}
3079
3080This is a simplistic script replacing one option of \verb|ifconfig|,
3081namely, IP address management. It not only adds
3082addresses, but also carries out Duplicate Address Detection~\cite{RFC-DHCP},
3083sends unsolicited ARP to update the caches of other hosts sharing
3084the interface, adds some control routes and restarts Router Discovery
3085when it is necessary.
3086
3087I strongly recommend using it {\em instead\/} of \verb|ifconfig| both
3088on hosts and on routers.
3089
3090\begin{verbatim}
3091#! /bin/bash
3092\end{verbatim}
3093\begin{flushleft}
3094\# {\bf Usage: \verb?ifcfg DEVICE[:ALIAS] [add|del] ADDRESS[/LENGTH] [PEER]?}\\
3095\# {\bf Parameters:}\\
3096\# ---Device name. It may have alias suffix, separated by colon.\\
3097\# ---Command: add, delete or stop.\\
3098\# ---IP address, optionally followed by prefix length.\\
3099\# ---Optional peer address for pointopoint interfaces.\\
3100\# F.e. \verb|ifcfg eth0 193.233.7.90/24|
3101
3102\noindent\# This function determines, whether it is router or host.\\
3103\# It returns 0, if the host is apparently not router.
3104\end{flushleft}
3105\begin{verbatim}
3106CheckForwarding () {
3107 local sbase fwd
3108 sbase=/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf
3109 fwd=0
3110 if [ -d $sbase ]; then
3111 for dir in $sbase/*/forwarding; do
3112 fwd=$[$fwd + `cat $dir`]
3113 done
3114 else
3115 fwd=2
3116 fi
3117 return $fwd
3118}
3119\end{verbatim}
3120\begin{flushleft}
3121\# This function restarts Router Discovery.\\
3122\end{flushleft}
3123\begin{verbatim}
3124RestartRDISC () {
3125 killall -HUP rdisc || rdisc -fs
3126}
3127\end{verbatim}
3128\begin{flushleft}
3129\# Calculate ABC "natural" mask length\\
3130\# Arg: \$1 = dotquad address
3131\end{flushleft}
3132\begin{verbatim}
3133ABCMaskLen () {
3134 local class;
3135 class=${1%%.*}
3136 if [ $class -eq 0 -o $class -ge 224 ]; then return 0
3137 elif [ $class -ge 192 ]; then return 24
3138 elif [ $class -ge 128 ]; then return 16
3139 else return 8 ; fi
3140}
3141\end{verbatim}
3142
3143
3144\begin{flushleft}
3145\# {\bf MAIN()}\\
3146\#\\
3147\# Strip alias suffix separated by colon.
3148\end{flushleft}
3149\begin{verbatim}
3150label="label $1"
3151ldev=$1
3152dev=${1%:*}
3153if [ "$dev" = "" -o "$1" = "help" ]; then
3154 echo "Usage: ifcfg DEV [[add|del [ADDR[/LEN]] [PEER] | stop]" 1>&2
3155 echo " add - add new address" 1>&2
3156 echo " del - delete address" 1>&2
3157 echo " stop - completely disable IP" 1>&2
3158 exit 1
3159fi
3160shift
3161
3162CheckForwarding
3163fwd=$?
3164\end{verbatim}
3165\begin{flushleft}
3166\# Parse command. If it is ``stop'', flush and exit.
3167\end{flushleft}
3168\begin{verbatim}
3169deleting=0
3170case "$1" in
3171add) shift ;;
3172stop)
3173 if [ "$ldev" != "$dev" ]; then
3174 echo "Cannot stop alias $ldev" 1>&2
3175 exit 1;
3176 fi
3177 ip -4 addr flush dev $dev $label || exit 1
3178 if [ $fwd -eq 0 ]; then RestartRDISC; fi
3179 exit 0 ;;
3180del*)
3181 deleting=1; shift ;;
3182*)
3183esac
3184\end{verbatim}
3185\begin{flushleft}
3186\# Parse prefix, split prefix length, separated by slash.
3187\end{flushleft}
3188\begin{verbatim}
3189ipaddr=
3190pfxlen=
3191if [ "$1" != "" ]; then
3192 ipaddr=${1%/*}
3193 if [ "$1" != "$ipaddr" ]; then
3194 pfxlen=${1#*/}
3195 fi
3196 if [ "$ipaddr" = "" ]; then
3197 echo "$1 is bad IP address." 1>&2
3198 exit 1
3199 fi
3200fi
3201shift
3202\end{verbatim}
3203\begin{flushleft}
3204\# If peer address is present, prefix length is 32.\\
3205\# Otherwise, if prefix length was not given, guess it.
3206\end{flushleft}
3207\begin{verbatim}
3208peer=$1
3209if [ "$peer" != "" ]; then
3210 if [ "$pfxlen" != "" -a "$pfxlen" != "32" ]; then
3211 echo "Peer address with non-trivial netmask." 1>&2
3212 exit 1
3213 fi
3214 pfx="$ipaddr peer $peer"
3215else
3216 if [ "$pfxlen" = "" ]; then
3217 ABCMaskLen $ipaddr
3218 pfxlen=$?
3219 fi
3220 pfx="$ipaddr/$pfxlen"
3221fi
3222if [ "$ldev" = "$dev" -a "$ipaddr" != "" ]; then
3223 label=
3224fi
3225\end{verbatim}
3226\begin{flushleft}
3227\# If deletion was requested, delete the address and restart RDISC
3228\end{flushleft}
3229\begin{verbatim}
3230if [ $deleting -ne 0 ]; then
3231 ip addr del $pfx dev $dev $label || exit 1
3232 if [ $fwd -eq 0 ]; then RestartRDISC; fi
3233 exit 0
3234fi
3235\end{verbatim}
3236\begin{flushleft}
3237\# Start interface initialization.\\
3238\#\\
3239\# {\bf Step 0} --- enable device \verb|$dev|
3240\end{flushleft}
3241\begin{verbatim}
3242if ! ip link set up dev $dev ; then
3243 echo "Error: cannot enable interface $dev." 1>&2
3244 exit 1
3245fi
3246if [ "$ipaddr" = "" ]; then exit 0; fi
3247\end{verbatim}
3248\begin{flushleft}
3249\# {\bf Step 1} --- IP Duplicate Address Detection~\cite{RFC-DHCP}.\\
3250\# Send two probes and wait for result for 3 seconds.\\
3251\# If the interface opens slower f.e.\ due to long media detection,\\
3252\# you want to increase the timeout.\\
3253\end{flushleft}
3254\begin{verbatim}
3255if ! arping -q -c 2 -w 3 -D -I $dev $ipaddr ; then
3256 echo "Error: some host already uses address $ipaddr on $dev." 1>&2
3257 exit 1
3258fi
3259\end{verbatim}
3260\begin{flushleft}
3261\# OK, the address is unique. We may add it to the interface.\\
3262\#\\
3263\# {\bf Step 2} --- Configure the address on the interface.
3264\end{flushleft}
3265\begin{verbatim}
3266if ! ip address add $pfx brd + dev $dev $label; then
3267 echo "Error: failed to add $pfx on $dev." 1>&2
3268 exit 1
3269fi
3270\end{verbatim}
3271\noindent\# {\bf Step 3} --- Announce our presence on the link
3272\begin{verbatim}
3273arping -q -A -c 1 -I $dev $ipaddr
3274noarp=$?
3275( sleep 2 ;
3276 arping -q -U -c 1 -I $dev $ipaddr ) >& /dev/null </dev/null &
3277\end{verbatim}
3278\begin{flushleft}
3279\# {\bf Step 4} (optional) --- Add some control routes.\\
3280\#\\
3281\# 1. Prohibit link local multicast addresses.\\
3282\# 2. Prohibit link local (alias, limited) broadcast.\\
3283\# 3. Add default multicast route.
3284\end{flushleft}
3285\begin{verbatim}
3286ip route add unreachable 224.0.0.0/24 >& /dev/null
3287ip route add unreachable 255.255.255.255 >& /dev/null
3288if [ `ip link ls $dev | grep -c MULTICAST` -ge 1 ]; then
3289 ip route add 224.0.0.0/4 dev $dev scope global >& /dev/null
3290fi
3291\end{verbatim}
3292\begin{flushleft}
3293\# {\bf Step 5} --- Add fallback default route with huge metric.\\
3294\# If a proxy ARP server is present on the interface, we will be\\
3295\# able to talk to all the Internet without further configuration.\\
3296\# Do not make this step on router or if the device is not ARPable.\\
3297\# because dead nexthop detection does not work on them.
3298\end{flushleft}
3299\begin{verbatim}
3300if [ $fwd -eq 0 ]; then
3301 if [ $noarp -eq 0 ]; then
3302 ip ro append default dev $dev metric 30000 scope global
3303 elif [ "$peer" != "" ]; then
3304 if ping -q -c 2 -w 4 $peer ; then
3305 ip ro append default via $peer dev $dev metric 30001
3306 fi
3307 fi
3308 RestartRDISC
3309fi
3310
3311exit 0
3312\end{verbatim}
3313\begin{flushleft}
3314\# End of {\bf MAIN()}
3315\end{flushleft}
3316
3317
3318\end{document}