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igmpproxy.conf(5)	      File Formats Manual	     igmpproxy.conf(5)

NAME
       igmpproxy.conf -	Configuration file for igmpproxy(8) multicast daemon

DESCRIPTION
       igmpproxy.conf  contains	 the configuration for the igmpproxy multicast
       daemon. It defines which	network	interfaces should be used by the rout-
       ing daemon. Each	interface must be give one of the following roles: up-
       stream ,	downstream or disabled

       The upstream network interface is the outgoing interface	which  is  re-
       sponsible  for communicating to available multicast data	sources. There
       can only	be one upstream	interface.

       Downstream network interfaces are the distribution  interfaces  to  the
       destination  networks,  where multicast clients can join	groups and re-
       ceive multicast data. One or more downstream interfaces must be config-
       ured.

       On disabled network interfaces all IGMP or multicast traffic is ignored
       altogether. If multiple IP addresses is used on	one  single  interface
       (ae. eth0:1 ...), all interface aliases not in use should be configured
       as disabled.

       Any line	in the configuration file starting with	# is treated as	a com-
       ment.  Keywords and parameters can be distributed over many lines.  The
       configuration file has four main	keywords:

       chroot directory
	      Changes the apparent root	directory  to  the  given  path	 after
	      startup,	thus  denying  igmpproxy  access to files and commands
	      outside that environmental directory tree.

       user username
	      Specifies	the  userid  to	 which	igmpproxy  will	 change	 after
	      startup.	 igmpproxy  must  be started as	root, but it will drop
	      root privileges to the specified user.

       quickleave
	      Enables quickleave mode. In this mode the	 daemon	 will  send  a
	      Leave  IGMP message upstream as soon as it receives a Leave mes-
	      sage for any downstream interface.  The daemon will then ask for
	      Membership reports on the	downstream interfaces, and if a	report
	      is received the group is joined again upstream. Normally this is
	      not noticed at all by clients on	the  downstream	 networks.  If
	      it's  vital  that	the daemon should act exactly as a real	multi-
	      cast client on the upstream interface, this function should  not
	      be used. Disabling this function increases the risk of bandwidth
	      saturation.

       phyint  interface  role	[ ratelimit limit ] [ threshold	ttl ] [	altnet
       networkaddr ...	]
	      Defines the state	and settings of	a network interface.

PHYINT OPTIONS
       interface
	      The name of the interface	the settings are for. This  option  is
	      required for phyint settings.

       role
	      The  role	of the interface. This should be either	upstream (only
	      one interface), downstream (one or more interfaces) or  disabled
	      .	This option is required.

       ratelimit limit
	      Defines  a  ratelimit for	the network interface. If ratelimit is
	      set to 0 (default), no ratelimit will be applied.	 This  setting
	      is optional.

       threshold ttl
	      Defines  the  TTL	 threshold  for	the network interface. Packets
	      with a lower TTL than the	threshols value	will be	ignored.  This
	      setting is optional, and by default the threshold	is 1.

       altnet networkaddr ...
	      Defines  alternate  sources  for multicasting and	IGMP data. The
	      network address must be on the following format 'a.b.c.d/n'.  By
	      default  the  router  will  accept data from sources on the same
	      network as configured on an interface. If	the  multicast	source
	      lies  on	a  remote  network, one	must define from where traffic
	      should be	accepted.

	      This is especially useful	for the	upstream interface, since  the
	      source  for  multicast  traffic is often from a remote location.
	      Any number of altnet parameters can be specified.

       whitelist networkaddr
	      Defines a	whitelist for multicast	groups.	 The  network  address
	      must  be in the following	format 'a.b.c.d/n'. If you want	to al-
	      low  one	single	group  use  a  network	mask  of   /32,	  i.e.
	      'a.b.c.d/32'.

	      By  default  all	multicast groups are allowed on	any downstream
	      interface. If at least one whitelist entry is defined, all  igmp
	      membership  reports  for	not  explicitly	 whitelisted multicast
	      groups will be ignored and therefore not be served by igmpproxy.
	      This is especially useful, if your provider does	only  allow  a
	      predefined  set  of  multicast groups. These whitelists are only
	      obeyed by	igmpproxy itself, they won't prevent  any  other  igmp
	      client  running on the same machine as igmpproxy from requesting
	      'unallowed' multicast groups.

	      You may specify as many whitelist	entries	 as  needed.  Although
	      you should keep it as simple as possible,	as this	list is	parsed
	      for  every  membership  report and therefore this	increases igmp
	      response times. Often used or large  groups  should  be  defined
	      first, as	parsing	ends as	soon as	a group	matches	an entry.

	      You  may	also specify whitelist entries for the upstream	inter-
	      face. Only igmp membership reports  for  explicitly  whitelisted
	      multicast	 groups	 will  be  sent	out on the upstream interface.
	      This is useful if	you want to use	multicast groups only  between
	      your downstream interfaces, like SSDP from a UPnP	server.

	      This option can be combined with blacklist for fine-grained con-
	      trol.

       blacklist networkaddr
	      Defines  a  blacklist for	multicast groups. Similar to whitelist
	      except that if a blacklist entry is defined, all igmp membership
	      reports for that multicast group will be ignored	and  therefore
	      not be served by igmpproxy.

	      Each time	a multicast group is forwarded or requested, whitelist
	      and  blacklist  entries  are evaluated in	sequential order, from
	      first to last. The last matching entry decides  what  action  is
	      taken;  if no entry matches the multicast	group, the default ac-
	      tion is to serve.	Note that, if at least one whitelist entry  is
	      defined  before any blacklist entry, all igmp membership reports
	      for not explicitly whitelisted multicast groups will be ignored.

EXAMPLE
       ## Enable quickleave quickleave
       ## Define settings for eth0 (upstream)
       phyint eth0 upstream
	      altnet 10.0.0.0/8

       ## Disable alternate IP on eth0 (eth0:0)
       phyint eth0:0 disabled

       ## Define settings for eth1 (downstream)
       phyint eth1 downstream ratelimit	0 threshold 1

       ## Define settings for eth2 (also downstream)
       phyint eth2 downstream

SEE ALSO
       igmpproxy(8)

AUTHOR
       Originally written by Johnny Egeland <johnny@rlo.org>

igmpproxy 0.4						     igmpproxy.conf(5)

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