* SAFETY MEASURES: ================== Please consider setting this package "on hold" by typing echo "frr hold" | dpkg --set-selections and verifying this using dpkg --get-selections | grep 'hold$' Setting a package "on hold" means that it will not automatically be upgraded. Instead apt-get only displays a warning saying that a new version would be available forcing you to explicitly type "apt-get install frr" to upgrade it. * What is frr? ================= http://www.frrouting.org/ FRR is a routing software suite, providing implementations of OSPFv2, OSPFv3, RIP v1 and v2, RIPng, ISIS, PIM, BGP and LDP for Unix platforms, particularly FreeBSD and Linux and also NetBSD, to mention a few. FRR is a fork of Quagga which itself is a fork of Zebra. Zebra was developed by Kunihiro Ishiguro. * Why has SNMP support been disabled? ===================================== FRR used to link against the NetSNMP libraries to provide SNMP support. Those libraries sadly link against the OpenSSL libraries to provide crypto support for SNMPv3 among others. OpenSSL now is not compatible with the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (GPL) licence that FRR is distributed under. For more explanation read: http://www.gnome.org/~markmc/openssl-and-the-gpl.html http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#GPLIncompatibleLibs Updating the licence to explecitly allow linking against OpenSSL would requite the affirmation of all people that ever contributed a significant part to Zebra / Quagga or FRR and thus are the collective "copyright holder". That's too much work. Using a shrinked down version of NetSNMP without OpenSSL or convincing the NetSNMP people to change to GnuTLS are maybe good solutions but not reachable during the last days before the Sarge release :-( *BUT* It is allowed by the used licence mix that you fetch the sources and build FRR yourself with SNMP with # export WANT_SNMP=1 # apt-get -b source frr Just distributing it in binary form, linked against OpenSSL, is forbidden. * Daemon selection: =================== The Debian package uses /etc/frr/daemons to tell the initscript which daemons to start. It's in the format = with no spaces (it's simply source-d into the initscript). Default is not to start anything, since it can hose your system's routing table if not set up properly. Priorities were suggested by Dancer . They're used to start the FRR daemons in more than one step (for example start one or two at network initialization and the rest later). The number of FRR daemons being small, priorities must be between 1 and 9, inclusive (or the initscript has to be changed). /etc/init.d/frr then can be started as /etc/init.d/frr > where priority 0 is the same as 'stop', priority 10 or 'start' means 'start all' * Error message "privs_init: initial cap_set_proc failed": ========================================================== This error message means that "capability support" has to be built into the kernel. * Error message "netlink-listen: overrun: No buffer space available": ===================================================================== If this message occurs the receive buffer should be increased by adding the following to /etc/sysctl.conf and "--nl-bufsize" to /etc/frr/daemons. > net.core.rmem_default = 262144 > net.core.rmem_max = 262144 See message #4525 from 2005-05-09 in the quagga-users mailing list. * vtysh immediately exists: =========================== Check /etc/pam.d/frr, it probably denies access to your user. The passwords configured in /etc/frr/frr.conf are only for telnet access.