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ROUTE6D(8)		    System Manager's Manual		    ROUTE6D(8)

NAME
       route6d -- RIP6 Routing Daemon

SYNOPSIS
       route6d	[-adDhlnqsS]  [-R  routelog]  [-A prefix/preflen,if1[,if2...]]
	       [-L     prefix/preflen,if1[,if2...]]	[-N	 if1[,if2...]]
	       [-O   prefix/preflen,if1[,if2...]]  [-P	number]	 [-p  pidfile]
	       [-Q number] [-T if1[,if2...]] [-t tag]

DESCRIPTION
       The route6d utility is a	routing	daemon which supports RIP over IPv6.

       Options are:

       -a      Enables aging of	the statically defined routes.	With this  op-
	       tion, any statically defined routes will	be removed unless cor-
	       responding  updates arrive as if	the routes are received	at the
	       startup of route6d.

       -R routelog
	       This  option  makes  the	 route6d  to  log  the	route	change
	       (add/delete) to the file	routelog.

       -A prefix/preflen,if1[,if2...]
	       This  option  is	 used  for aggregating routes.	prefix/preflen
	       specifies the prefix and	the prefix length  of  the  aggregated
	       route.	When  advertising  routes,  route6d  filters  specific
	       routes covered by the aggregate,	and advertises the  aggregated
	       route prefix/preflen, to	the interfaces specified in the	comma-
	       separated  interface  list,  if1[,if2...].  The characters "*",
	       "?", and	"[" in the  interface  list  will  be  interpreted  as
	       shell-style  pattern.   The  route6d  utility  creates a	static
	       route to	prefix/preflen with RTF_REJECT flag, into  the	kernel
	       routing table.

       -d      Enables	output	of  debugging  message.	  This option also in-
	       structs route6d to run in foreground mode (does not become dae-
	       mon).

       -D      Enables extensive output	of  debugging  message.	  This	option
	       also  instructs route6d to run in foreground mode (does not be-
	       come daemon).

       -h      Disables	the split horizon processing.

       -l      By default, route6d will	not exchange  site  local  routes  for
	       safety  reasons.	  This	is because semantics of	site local ad-
	       dress space is rather vague (specification is  still  in	 being
	       worked),	 and  there is no good way to define site local	bound-
	       ary.  With -l option, route6d will exchange site	 local	routes
	       as  well.   It must not be used on site boundary	routers, since
	       -l option assumes that all interfaces are in the	same site.

       -L prefix/preflen,if1[,if2...]
	       Filter  incoming	 routes	 from  interfaces  if1,[if2...].   The
	       route6d	utility	 will  accept  incoming	 routes	 that  are  in
	       prefix/preflen.	If multiple  -L	 options  are  specified,  any
	       routes  that  match  one	 of  the options is accepted.  ::/0 is
	       treated specially as default route, not	"any  route  that  has
	       longer  prefix  length than, or equal to	0".  If	you would like
	       to accept any route, specify no -L option.  For	example,  with
	       "-L  2001:db8::/16,if1 -L ::/0,if1" route6d will	accept default
	       route and routes	in 6bone test address, but no others.

       -n      Do not update the kernel	routing	table.

       -N if1[,if2...]
	       Do not listen to, or advertise, route from/to interfaces	speci-
	       fied by if1,[if2...].

       -O prefix/preflen,if1[,if2...]
	       Restrict	route advertisement  toward  interfaces	 specified  by
	       if1,[if2...].   With  this  option  route6d will	only advertise
	       routes that matches prefix/preflen.

       -P number
	       Specifies routes	to be ignored  in  calculation	of  expiration
	       timer.	The number must	be 1, 2, or 3 and it means route flags
	       of RTF_PROTO1, RTF_PROTO2, or RTF_PROTO3.  When 1 is specified,
	       routes with RTF_PROTO1 will never expire.

       -p pidfile
	       Specifies an alternative	file in	which to store the process ID.
	       The default is /var/run/route6d.pid.

       -Q number
	       Specifies flag which will be used for routes added by RIP  pro-
	       tocol.  The default is 2	(RTF_PROTO2).

       -q      Makes route6d in	listen-only mode.  No advertisement is sent.

       -s      Makes  route6d to advertise the statically defined routes which
	       exist in	the kernel routing table when  route6d	invoked.   An-
	       nouncements obey	the regular split horizon rule.

       -S      This option is the same as -s option except that	no split hori-
	       zon rule	does apply.

       -T if1[,if2...]
	       Advertise only default route, toward if1,[if2...].

       -t tag  Attach  route  tag tag to originated route entries.  tag	can be
	       decimal,	octal prefixed by 0, or	hexadecimal prefixed by	0x.

       Upon receipt of signal SIGINT or	SIGUSR1, route6d will dump the current
       internal	state into /var/run/route6d_dump.

FILES
       /var/run/route6d_dump  dumps internal state on SIGINT or	SIGUSR1

SEE ALSO
       G. Malkin and R.	Minnear, RIPng for IPv6, RFC2080, January 1997.

NOTE
       The route6d utility uses	IPv6 advanced API,  defined  in	 RFC2292,  for
       communicating with peers	using link-local addresses.

       Internally  route6d  embeds  interface  identifier into bit 32 to 63 of
       link-local addresses (fe80::xx and ff02::xx) so they will be visible on
       internal	state dump file	(/var/run/route6d_dump).

       Routing table manipulation differs from IPv6 implementation  to	imple-
       mentation.   Currently  route6d	obeys WIDE Hydrangea/KAME IPv6 kernel,
       and will	not be able to run on other platforms.

       Current route6d does not	reduce the rate	of the triggered updates  when
       consecutive updates arrive.

FreeBSD	14.3		       November	18, 2012		    ROUTE6D(8)

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