X-Git-Url: http://git.ozlabs.org/?p=ppp.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=pppd%2Fpppd.8;h=339dde77d569a6859bf6e8b5b107004912235f29;hp=105c0a10f0903a40e2bdb62b03094b13ece07a4b;hb=19872c62b8c5c5f77a4db07e52852f6bd22d4f75;hpb=a4efaa63e68e25e712af030a138a272dfe0d2180 diff --git a/pppd/pppd.8 b/pppd/pppd.8 index 105c0a1..339dde7 100644 --- a/pppd/pppd.8 +++ b/pppd/pppd.8 @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ -.\" manual page [] for pppd 2.3 -.\" $Id: pppd.8,v 1.41 1999/07/21 00:24:32 paulus Exp $ +.\" manual page [] for pppd 2.4 +.\" $Id: pppd.8,v 1.65 2002/09/20 06:53:19 fcusack Exp $ .\" SH section heading .\" SS subsection heading .\" LP paragraph @@ -93,17 +93,6 @@ but will be unable to request the modem stop sending to the computer. This mode retains the ability to use DTR as a modem control line. .TP -.B cdtrcts -Use a non-standard hardware flow control (i.e. DTR/CTS) to control -the flow of data on the serial port. If neither the \fIcrtscts\fR, -the \fInocrtscts\fR, the \fIcdtrcts\fR nor the \fInocdtrcts\fR -option is given, the hardware flow control setting for the serial -port is left unchanged. -Some serial ports (such as Macintosh serial ports) lack a true -RTS output. Such serial ports use this mode to implement true -bi-directional flow control. The sacrifice is that this flow -control mode does not permit using DTR as a modem control line. -.TP .B defaultroute Add a default route to the system routing tables, using the peer as the gateway, when IPCP negotiation is successfully completed. @@ -148,13 +137,14 @@ Set the MRU [Maximum Receive Unit] value to \fIn\fR. Pppd will ask the peer to send packets of no more than \fIn\fR bytes. The minimum MRU value is 128. The default MRU value is 1500. A value of 296 is recommended for slow links (40 bytes for TCP/IP header + 256 -bytes of data). +bytes of data). (Note that for IPv6 MRU must be at least 1280) .TP .B mtu \fIn Set the MTU [Maximum Transmit Unit] value to \fIn\fR. Unless the peer requests a smaller value via MRU negotiation, pppd will request that the kernel networking code send data packets of no more -than \fIn\fR bytes through the PPP network interface. +than \fIn\fR bytes through the PPP network interface. (Note that for +IPv6 MTU must be at least 1280) .TP .B passive Enables the "passive" option in the LCP. With this option, pppd will @@ -177,6 +167,17 @@ will not accept a different value from the peer in the IPCP negotiation, unless the \fIipcp-accept-local\fR and/or \fIipcp-accept-remote\fR options are given, respectively. .TP +.B ipv6 \fI\fR,\fI +Set the local and/or remote 64-bit interface identifier. Either one may be +omitted. The identifier must be specified in standard ascii notation of +IPv6 addresses (e.g. ::dead:beef). If the +\fIipv6cp-use-ipaddr\fR +option is given, the local identifier is the local IPv4 address (see above). +On systems which supports a unique persistent id, such as EUI-48 derived +from the Ethernet MAC address, \fIipv6cp-use-persistent\fR option can be +used to replace the \fIipv6 ,\fR option. Otherwise the +identifier is randomized. +.TP .B active-filter \fIfilter-expression Specifies a packet filter to be applied to data packets to determine which packets are to be regarded as link activity, and therefore reset @@ -190,9 +191,15 @@ except that qualifiers which are inappropriate for a PPP link, such as \fBether\fR and \fBarp\fR, are not permitted. Generally the filter expression should be enclosed in single-quotes to prevent whitespace in the expression from being interpreted by the shell. This option -is currently only available under NetBSD, and then only +is currently only available under NetBSD or Linux, and then only if both the kernel and pppd were compiled with PPP_FILTER defined. .TP +.B allow-ip \fIaddress(es) +Allow peers to use the given IP address or subnet without +authenticating themselves. The parameter is parsed as for each +element of the list of allowed IP addresses in the secrets files (see +the AUTHENTICATION section below). +.TP .B bsdcomp \fInr,nt Request that the peer compress packets that it sends, using the BSD-Compress scheme, with a maximum code size of \fInr\fR bits, and @@ -205,6 +212,17 @@ Alternatively, a value of 0 for \fInr\fR or \fInt\fR disables compression in the corresponding direction. Use \fInobsdcomp\fR or \fIbsdcomp 0\fR to disable BSD-Compress compression entirely. .TP +.B cdtrcts +Use a non-standard hardware flow control (i.e. DTR/CTS) to control +the flow of data on the serial port. If neither the \fIcrtscts\fR, +the \fInocrtscts\fR, the \fIcdtrcts\fR nor the \fInocdtrcts\fR +option is given, the hardware flow control setting for the serial +port is left unchanged. +Some serial ports (such as Macintosh serial ports) lack a true +RTS output. Such serial ports use this mode to implement true +bi-directional flow control. The sacrifice is that this flow +control mode does not permit using DTR as a modem control line. +.TP .B chap-interval \fIn If this option is given, pppd will rechallenge the peer every \fIn\fR seconds. @@ -217,6 +235,14 @@ Set the maximum number of CHAP challenge transmissions to \fIn\fR Set the CHAP restart interval (retransmission timeout for challenges) to \fIn\fR seconds (default 3). .TP +.B connect-delay \fIn +Wait for up \fIn\fR milliseconds after the connect script finishes for +a valid PPP packet from the peer. At the end of this time, or when a +valid PPP packet is received from the peer, pppd will commence +negotiation by sending its first LCP packet. The default value is +1000 (1 second). This wait period only applies if the \fBconnect\fR +or \fBpty\fR option is used. +.TP .B debug Enables connection debugging facilities. If this option is given, pppd will log the contents of all @@ -239,7 +265,7 @@ Request that the peer compress packets that it sends, using the Deflate scheme, with a maximum window size of \fI2**nr\fR bytes, and agree to compress packets sent to the peer with a maximum window size of \fI2**nt\fR bytes. If \fInt\fR is not specified, it defaults to -the value given for \fInr\fR. Values in the range 8 to 15 may be used +the value given for \fInr\fR. Values in the range 9 to 15 may be used for \fInr\fR and \fInt\fR; larger values give better compression but consume more kernel memory for compression dictionaries. Alternatively, a value of 0 for \fInr\fR or \fInt\fR disables @@ -272,9 +298,38 @@ specify \fIdomain Quotron.COM\fR. Pppd would then use the name and as the default name to send to the peer when authenticating itself to the peer. This option is privileged. .TP +.B dryrun +With the \fBdryrun\fR option, pppd will print out all the option +values which have been set and then exit, after parsing the command +line and options files and checking the option values, but before +initiating the link. The option values are logged at level info, and +also printed to standard output unless the device on standard output +is the device that pppd would be using to communicate with the peer. +.TP +.B dump +With the \fBdump\fR option, pppd will print out all the option values +which have been set. This option is like the \fBdryrun\fR option +except that pppd proceeds as normal rather than exiting. +.TP +.B endpoint \fI +Sets the endpoint discriminator sent by the local machine to the peer +during multilink negotiation to \fI\fR. The default is to use +the MAC address of the first ethernet interface on the system, if any, +otherwise the IPv4 address corresponding to the hostname, if any, +provided it is not in the multicast or locally-assigned IP address +ranges, or the localhost address. The endpoint discriminator can be +the string \fBnull\fR or of the form \fItype\fR:\fIvalue\fR, where +type is a decimal number or one of the strings \fBlocal\fR, \fBIP\fR, +\fBMAC\fR, \fBmagic\fR, or \fBphone\fR. The value is an IP address in +dotted-decimal notation for the \fBIP\fR type, or a string of bytes in +hexadecimal, separated by periods or colons for the other types. For +the MAC type, the value may also be the name of an ethernet or similar +network interface. This option is currently only available under +Linux. +.TP .B hide-password When logging the contents of PAP packets, this option causes pppd to -exclude the password string from the log. +exclude the password string from the log. This is the default. .TP .B holdoff \fIn Specifies how many seconds to wait before re-initiating the link after @@ -320,6 +375,22 @@ Provides an extra parameter to the ip-up and ip-down scripts. If this option is given, the \fIstring\fR supplied is given as the 6th parameter to those scripts. .TP +.B ipv6cp-max-configure \fIn +Set the maximum number of IPv6CP configure-request transmissions to +\fIn\fR (default 10). +.TP +.B ipv6cp-max-failure \fIn +Set the maximum number of IPv6CP configure-NAKs returned before starting +to send configure-Rejects instead to \fIn\fR (default 10). +.TP +.B ipv6cp-max-terminate \fIn +Set the maximum number of IPv6CP terminate-request transmissions to +\fIn\fR (default 3). +.TP +.B ipv6cp-restart \fIn +Set the IPv6CP restart interval (retransmission timeout) to \fIn\fR +seconds (default 3). +.TP .B ipx Enable the IPXCP and IPX protocols. This option is presently only supported under Linux, and only if your kernel has been configured to @@ -386,13 +457,24 @@ default value is 3. .TP .B kdebug \fIn Enable debugging code in the kernel-level PPP driver. The argument -\fIn\fR is a number which is the sum of the following values: 1 to +values depend on the specific kernel driver, but in general a value of +1 will enable general kernel debug messages. (Note that these +messages are usually only useful for debugging the kernel driver +itself.) For the Linux 2.2.x kernel driver, the value is a sum of +bits: 1 to enable general debug messages, 2 to request that the contents of received packets be printed, and 4 to request that the contents of transmitted packets be printed. On most systems, messages printed by the kernel are logged by syslog(1) to a file as directed in the /etc/syslog.conf configuration file. .TP +.B ktune +Enables pppd to alter kernel settings as appropriate. Under Linux, +pppd will enable IP forwarding (i.e. set /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward +to 1) if the \fIproxyarp\fR option is used, and will enable the +dynamic IP address option (i.e. set /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_dynaddr to +1) in demand mode if the local address changes. +.TP .B lcp-echo-failure \fIn If this option is given, pppd will presume the peer to be dead if \fIn\fR LCP echo-requests are sent without receiving a valid LCP @@ -426,6 +508,13 @@ Set the maximum number of LCP terminate-request transmissions to Set the LCP restart interval (retransmission timeout) to \fIn\fR seconds (default 3). .TP +.B linkname \fIname\fR +Sets the logical name of the link to \fIname\fR. Pppd will create a +file named \fBppp-\fIname\fB.pid\fR in /var/run (or /etc/ppp on some +systems) containing its process ID. This can be useful in determining +which instance of pppd is responsible for the link to a given peer +system. This is a privileged option. +.TP .B local Don't use the modem control lines. With this option, pppd will ignore the state of the CD (Carrier Detect) signal from the modem and will @@ -443,6 +532,7 @@ already open on stdout. Append log messages to the file \fIfilename\fR (as well as sending the log messages to syslog). The file is opened with the privileges of the user who invoked pppd, in append mode. +.TP .B login Use the system password database for authenticating the peer using PAP, and record the user in the system wtmp file. Note that the peer @@ -454,6 +544,10 @@ Terminate the connection when it has been available for network traffic for \fIn\fR seconds (i.e. \fIn\fR seconds after the first network control protocol comes up). .TP +.B maxfail \fIn +Terminate after \fIn\fR consecutive failed connection attempts. A +value of 0 means no limit. The default value is 10. +.TP .B modem Use the modem control lines. This option is the default. With this option, pppd will wait for the CD (Carrier Detect) signal from the @@ -463,6 +557,27 @@ signal briefly when the connection is terminated and before executing the connect script. On Ultrix, this option implies hardware flow control, as for the \fIcrtscts\fR option. .TP +.B mp +Enables the use of PPP multilink; this is an alias for the `multilink' +option. This option is currently only available under Linux. +.TP +.B mppe-stateful +Allow MPPE to use stateful mode. Stateless mode is still attempted first. +The default is to disallow stateful mode. +.TP +.B mpshortseq +Enables the use of short (12-bit) sequence numbers in multilink +headers, as opposed to 24-bit sequence numbers. This option is only +available under Linux, and only has any effect if multilink is +enabled (see the multilink option). +.TP +.B mrru \fIn +Sets the Maximum Reconstructed Receive Unit to \fIn\fR. The MRRU is +the maximum size for a received packet on a multilink bundle, and is +analogous to the MRU for the individual links. This option is +currently only available under Linux, and only has any effect if +multilink is enabled (see the multilink option). +.TP .B ms-dns \fI If pppd is acting as a server for Microsoft Windows clients, this option allows pppd to supply one or two DNS (Domain Name Server) @@ -478,6 +593,14 @@ Internet Name Services) server addresses to the clients. The first instance of this option specifies the primary WINS address; the second instance (if given) specifies the secondary WINS address. .TP +.B multilink +Enables the use of the PPP multilink protocol. If the peer also +supports multilink, then this link can become part of a bundle between +the local system and the peer. If there is an existing bundle to the +peer, pppd will join this link to that bundle, otherwise pppd will +create a new bundle. See the MULTILINK section below. This option is +currently only available under Linux. +.TP .B name \fIname Set the name of the local system for authentication purposes to \fIname\fR. This is a privileged option. With this option, pppd will @@ -519,10 +642,10 @@ requests from pppd for CCP negotiation. .B nocrtscts Disable hardware flow control (i.e. RTS/CTS) on the serial port. If neither the \fIcrtscts\fR nor the \fInocrtscts\fR nor the -\fIcdtrcts\fR nor the \fInodtrcts\fR option is given, the hardware +\fIcdtrcts\fR nor the \fInocdtrcts\fR option is given, the hardware flow control setting for the serial port is left unchanged. .TP -.B nodtrcts +.B nocdtrcts This option is a synonym for \fInocrtscts\fR. Either of these options will disable both forms of hardware flow control. .TP @@ -540,11 +663,21 @@ Don't detach from the controlling terminal. Without this option, if a serial device other than the terminal on the standard input is specified, pppd will fork to become a background process. .TP +.B noendpoint +Disables pppd from sending an endpoint discriminator to the peer or +accepting one from the peer (see the MULTILINK section below). This +option should only be required if the peer is buggy. +.TP .B noip Disable IPCP negotiation and IP communication. This option should only be required if the peer is buggy and gets confused by requests from pppd for IPCP negotiation. .TP +.B noipv6 +Disable IPv6CP negotiation and IPv6 communication. This option should +only be required if the peer is buggy and gets confused by requests +from pppd for IPv6CP negotiation. +.TP .B noipdefault Disables the default behaviour when no local IP address is specified, which is to determine (if possible) the local IP address from the @@ -557,14 +690,45 @@ Disable the IPXCP and IPX protocols. This option should only be required if the peer is buggy and gets confused by requests from pppd for IPXCP negotiation. .TP +.B noktune +Opposite of the \fIktune\fR option; disables pppd from changing system +settings. +.TP .B nolog Do not send log messages to a file or file descriptor. This option cancels the \fBlogfd\fR and \fBlogfile\fR options. +.TP .B nomagic Disable magic number negotiation. With this option, pppd cannot detect a looped-back line. This option should only be needed if the peer is buggy. .TP +.B nomp +Disables the use of PPP multilink. This option is currently only +available under Linux. +.TP +.B nomppe +Disables MPPE (Microsoft Point to Point Encryption). This is the default. +.TP +.B nomppe-40 +Disable 40\-bit encryption with MPPE. +.TP +.B nomppe-128 +Disable 128\-bit encryption with MPPE. +.TP +.B nomppe-stateful +Disable MPPE stateful mode. This is the default. +.TP +.B nompshortseq +Disables the use of short (12-bit) sequence numbers in the PPP +multilink protocol, forcing the use of 24-bit sequence numbers. This +option is currently only available under Linux, and only has any +effect if multilink is enabled. +.TP +.B nomultilink +Disables the use of PPP multilink. This option is currently only +available under Linux. +.TP .B nopcomp Disable protocol field compression negotiation in both the receive and the transmit direction. @@ -575,7 +739,7 @@ default unless the \fIpersist\fR or \fIdemand\fR option has been specified. .TP .B nopredictor1 -Do not accept or agree to Predictor-1 comprssion. +Do not accept or agree to Predictor-1 compression. .TP .B noproxyarp Disable the \fIproxyarp\fR option. The system administrator who @@ -642,7 +806,15 @@ the kernel and pppd were compiled with PPP_FILTER defined. .TP .B persist Do not exit after a connection is terminated; instead try to reopen -the connection. +the connection. The \fBmaxfail\fR option still has an effect on +persistent connections. +.TP +.B plugin \fIfilename +Load the shared library object file \fIfilename\fR as a plugin. This +is a privileged option. If \fIfilename\fR does not contain a slash +(/), pppd will look in the \fB/usr/lib/pppd/\fIversion\fR directory +for the plugin, where +\fIversion\fR is the version number of pppd (for example, 2.4.2). .TP .B predictor1 Request that the peer compress frames that it sends using Predictor-1 @@ -669,7 +841,9 @@ rather than a specific terminal device. Pppd will allocate itself a pseudo-tty master/slave pair and use the slave as its terminal device. The \fIscript\fR will be run in a child process with the pseudo-tty master as its standard input and output. An explicit -device name may not be given if this option is used. +device name may not be given if this option is used. (Note: if the +\fIrecord\fR option is used in conjuction with the \fIpty\fR option, +the child process will have pipes on its standard input and output.) .TP .B receive-all With this option, pppd will accept all control characters from the @@ -695,6 +869,14 @@ to \fIname\fR. With this option, pppd will not agree to authenticate itself to the peer using CHAP. .TP +.B refuse-mschap +With this option, pppd will not agree to authenticate itself to the +peer using MS-CHAP. +.TP +.B refuse-mschap-v2 +With this option, pppd will not agree to authenticate itself to the +peer using MS-CHAPv2. +.TP .B refuse-pap With this option, pppd will not agree to authenticate itself to the peer using PAP. @@ -703,10 +885,36 @@ peer using PAP. Require the peer to authenticate itself using CHAP [Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol] authentication. .TP +.B require-mppe +Require the use of MPPE (Microsoft Point to Point Encryption). This +option disables all other compression types. This option enables +both 40\-bit and 128\-bit encryption. In order for MPPE to successfully +come up, you must have authenticated with either MS-CHAP or MS-CHAPv2. +This option is presently only supported under Linux, and only if your +kernel has been configured to include MPPE support. +.TP +.B require-mppe-40 +Require the use of MPPE, with 40\-bit encryption. +.TP +.B require-mppe-128 +Require the use of MPPE, with 128\-bit encryption. +.TP +.B require-mschap +Require the peer to authenticate itself using MS-CHAP [Microsft Challenge +Handshake Authentication Protocol] authentication. +.TP +.B require-mschap-v2 +Require the peer to authenticate itself using MS-CHAPv2 [Microsft Challenge +Handshake Authentication Protocol, Version 2] authentication. +.TP .B require-pap Require the peer to authenticate itself using PAP [Password Authentication Protocol] authentication. .TP +.B show-password +When logging the contents of PAP packets, this option causes pppd to +show the password string in the log message. +.TP .B silent With this option, pppd will not transmit LCP packets to initiate a connection until a valid LCP packet is received from the peer (as for @@ -733,7 +941,9 @@ the \fIname\fR option). This option is not normally needed since the .B usepeerdns Ask the peer for up to 2 DNS server addresses. The addresses supplied by the peer (if any) are passed to the /etc/ppp/ip-up script in the -environment variables DNS1 and DNS2. +environment variables DNS1 and DNS2. In addition, pppd will create an +/etc/ppp/resolv.conf file containing one or two nameserver lines with +the address(es) supplied by the peer. .TP .B user \fIname Sets the name used for authenticating the local system to the peer to @@ -848,7 +1058,8 @@ pppd will not agree to authenticate itself with a particular protocol if it has no secrets which could be used to do so. .LP Pppd stores secrets for use in authentication in secrets -files (/etc/ppp/pap-secrets for PAP, /etc/ppp/chap-secrets for CHAP). +files (/etc/ppp/pap-secrets for PAP, /etc/ppp/chap-secrets for +CHAP/MS-CHAP/MS-CHAPv2). Both secrets files have the same format. The secrets files can contain secrets for pppd to use in authenticating itself to other systems, as well as secrets for pppd to use when authenticating other @@ -865,15 +1076,7 @@ may use when connecting to the specified server. A secrets file is parsed into words as for a options file, so the client name, server name and secrets fields must each be one word, with any embedded spaces or other special characters quoted or -escaped. Any following words on the same line are taken to be a list -of acceptable IP addresses for that client. If there are only 3 words -on the line, or if the first word is "-", then all IP addresses are -disallowed. To allow any address, use "*". -A word starting with "!" indicates that the -specified address is \fInot\fR acceptable. An address may be followed -by "/" and a number \fIn\fR, to indicate a whole subnet, i.e. all -addresses which have the same value in the most significant \fIn\fR -bits. Note that case is significant in the client and server names +escaped. Note that case is significant in the client and server names and in the secret. .LP If the secret starts with an `@', what follows is assumed to be the @@ -881,6 +1084,19 @@ name of a file from which to read the secret. A "*" as the client or server name matches any name. When selecting a secret, pppd takes the best match, i.e. the match with the fewest wildcards. .LP +Any following words on the same line are taken to be a list of +acceptable IP addresses for that client. If there are only 3 words on +the line, or if the first word is "-", then all IP addresses are +disallowed. To allow any address, use "*". A word starting with "!" +indicates that the specified address is \fInot\fR acceptable. An +address may be followed by "/" and a number \fIn\fR, to indicate a +whole subnet, i.e. all addresses which have the same value in the most +significant \fIn\fR bits. In this form, the address may be followed +by a plus sign ("+") to indicate that one address from the subnet is +authorized, based on the ppp network interface unit number in use. +In this case, the host part of the address will be set to the unit +number plus one. +.LP Thus a secrets file contains both secrets for use in authenticating other hosts, plus secrets which we use for authenticating ourselves to others. When pppd is authenticating the peer (checking the peer's @@ -976,6 +1192,39 @@ IP address assignment), pppd has to change the interface IP addresses to the negotiated addresses. This may disrupt existing connections, and the use of demand dialling with peers that do dynamic IP address assignment is not recommended. +.SH MULTILINK +Multilink PPP provides the capability to combine two or more PPP links +between a pair of machines into a single `bundle', which appears as a +single virtual PPP link which has the combined bandwidth of the +individual links. Currently, multilink PPP is only supported under +Linux. +.LP +Pppd detects that the link it is controlling is connected to the same +peer as another link using the peer's endpoint discriminator and the +authenticated identity of the peer (if it authenticates itself). The +endpoint discriminator is a block of data which is hopefully unique +for each peer. Several types of data can be used, including +locally-assigned strings of bytes, IP addresses, MAC addresses, +randomly strings of bytes, or E-164 phone numbers. The endpoint +discriminator sent to the peer by pppd can be set using the endpoint +option. +.LP +In circumstances the peer may send no endpoint discriminator or a +non-unique value. The optional bundle option adds an extra string +which is added to the peer's endpoint discriminator and authenticated +identity when matching up links to be joined together in a bundle. +The bundle option can also be used to allow the establishment of +multiple bundles between the local system and the peer. Pppd uses a +TDB database in /var/run/pppd.tdb to match up links. +.LP +Assuming that multilink is enabled and the peer is willing to +negotiate multilink, then when pppd is invoked to bring up the first +link to the peer, it will detect that no other link is connected to +the peer and create a new bundle, that is, another ppp network +interface unit. When another pppd is invoked to bring up another link +to the peer, it will detect the existing bundle and join its link to +it. Currently, if the first pppd terminates (for example, because of +a hangup or a received signal) the bundle is destroyed. .SH EXAMPLES .LP The following examples assume that the /etc/ppp/options file contains @@ -1151,6 +1400,9 @@ The PPP negotiation failed because serial loopback was detected. .TP .B 18 The init script failed (returned a non-zero exit status). +.TP +.B 19 +We failed to authenticate ourselves to the peer. .SH SCRIPTS Pppd invokes scripts at various stages in its processing which can be used to perform site-specific ancillary processing. These scripts are @@ -1206,6 +1458,9 @@ connection. .B BYTES_RCVD The number of bytes received (at the level of the serial port) during the connection. +.TP +.B LINKNAME +The logical name of the link, set with the \fIlinkname\fR option. .P Pppd invokes the following scripts, if they exist. It is not an error if they don't exist. @@ -1239,6 +1494,18 @@ used for undoing the effects of the /etc/ppp/ip-up script. It is invoked in the same manner and with the same parameters as the ip-up script. .TP +.B /etc/ppp/ipv6-up +Like /etc/ppp/ip-up, except that it is executed when the link is available +for sending and receiving IPv6 packets. It is executed with the parameters +.IP +\fIinterface-name tty-device speed local-link-local-address +remote-link-local-address ipparam\fR +.TP +.B /etc/ppp/ipv6-down +Similar to /etc/ppp/ip-down, but it is executed when IPv6 packets can no +longer be transmitted on the link. It is executed with the same parameters +as the ipv6-up script. +.TP .B /etc/ppp/ipx-up A program or script which is executed when the link is available for sending and receiving IPX packets (that is, IPXCP has come up). It is @@ -1270,14 +1537,19 @@ script. .B /var/run/ppp\fIn\fB.pid \fR(BSD or Linux), \fB/etc/ppp/ppp\fIn\fB.pid \fR(others) Process-ID for pppd process on ppp interface unit \fIn\fR. .TP +.B /var/run/ppp-\fIname\fB.pid \fR(BSD or Linux), +\fB/etc/ppp/ppp-\fIname\fB.pid \fR(others) +Process-ID for pppd process for logical link \fIname\fR (see the +\fIlinkname\fR option). +.TP .B /etc/ppp/pap-secrets Usernames, passwords and IP addresses for PAP authentication. This file should be owned by root and not readable or writable by any other user. Pppd will log a warning if this is not the case. .TP .B /etc/ppp/chap-secrets -Names, secrets and IP addresses for CHAP authentication. As for -/etc/ppp/pap-secrets, this file should be owned by root and not +Names, secrets and IP addresses for CHAP/MS-CHAP/MS-CHAPv2 authentication. +As for /etc/ppp/pap-secrets, this file should be owned by root and not readable or writable by any other user. Pppd will log a warning if this is not the case. .TP @@ -1332,6 +1604,11 @@ July 1994. Simpson, W.A. .I PPP in HDLC-like Framing. July 1994. +.TP +.B RFC2472 +Haskin, D. +.I IP Version 6 over PPP +December 1998. .SH NOTES The following signals have the specified effect when sent to pppd. .TP