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ROUTED(8)		  BSD System Manager's Manual		     ROUTED(8)

NAME
     routed, rdisc -- network RIP and router discovery routing daemon

SYNOPSIS
     routed [-sqdghmpAtv] [-T tracefile] [-F net[/mask[,metric]]] [-P parms]

DESCRIPTION
     The routed	utility	is a daemon invoked at boot time to manage the network
     routing tables.  It uses Routing Information Protocol, RIPv1 (RFC 1058),
     RIPv2 (RFC	1723), and Internet Router Discovery Protocol (RFC 1256) to
     maintain the kernel routing table.	 The RIPv1 protocol is based on	the
     reference 4.3BSD daemon.

     It	listens	on the udp(4) socket for the route(8) service (see
     services(5)) for Routing Information Protocol packets.  It	also sends and
     receives multicast	Router Discovery ICMP messages.	 If the	host is	a
     router, routed periodically supplies copies of its	routing	tables to any
     directly connected	hosts and networks.  It	also advertises	or solicits
     default routes using Router Discovery ICMP	messages.

     When started (or when a network interface is later	turned on), routed
     uses an AF_ROUTE address family facility to find those directly connected
     interfaces	configured into	the system and marked "up".  It	adds necessary
     routes for	the interfaces to the kernel routing table.  Soon after	being
     first started, and	provided there is at least one interface on which RIP
     has not been disabled, routed deletes all pre-existing non-static routes
     in	kernel table.  Static routes in	the kernel table are preserved and in-
     cluded in RIP responses if	they have a valid RIP metric (see route(8)).

     If	more than one interface	is present (not	counting the loopback inter-
     face), it is assumed that the host	should forward packets among the con-
     nected networks.  After transmitting a RIP	request	and Router Discovery
     Advertisements or Solicitations on	a new interface, the daemon enters a
     loop, listening for RIP request and response and Router Discovery packets
     from other	hosts.

     When a request packet is received,	routed formulates a reply based	on the
     information maintained in its internal tables.  The response packet gen-
     erated contains a list of known routes, each marked with a	"hop count"
     metric (a count of	16 or greater is considered "infinite").  Advertised
     metrics reflect the metric	associated with	interface (see ifconfig(8)),
     so	setting	the metric on an interface is an effective way to steer	traf-
     fic.

     Responses do not include routes with a first hop on the requesting	net-
     work to implement in part split-horizon.  Requests	from query programs
     such as rtquery(8)	are answered with the complete table.

     The routing table maintained by the daemon	includes space for several
     gateways for each destination to speed recovery from a failing router.
     RIP response packets received are used to update the routing tables pro-
     vided they	are from one of	the several currently recognized gateways or
     advertise a better	metric than at least one of the	existing gateways.

     When an update is applied,	routed records the change in its own tables
     and updates the kernel routing table if the best route to the destination
     changes.  The change in the kernel	routing	table is reflected in the next
     batch of response packets sent.  If the next response is not scheduled
     for a while, a flash update response containing only recently changed
     routes is sent.

     In	addition to processing incoming	packets, routed	also periodically
     checks the	routing	table entries.	If an entry has	not been updated for 3
     minutes, the entry's metric is set	to infinity and	marked for deletion.
     Deletions are delayed until the route has been advertised with an infi-
     nite metric to insure the invalidation is propagated throughout the local
     internet.	This is	a form of poison reverse.

     Routes in the kernel table	that are added or changed as a result of ICMP
     Redirect messages are deleted after a while to minimize black-holes.
     When a TCP	connection suffers a timeout, the kernel tells routed, which
     deletes all redirected routes through the gateway involved, advances the
     age of all	RIP routes through the gateway to allow	an alternate to	be
     chosen, and advances of the age of	any relevant Router Discovery Protocol
     default routes.

     Hosts acting as internetwork routers gratuitously supply their routing
     tables every 30 seconds to	all directly connected hosts and networks.
     These RIP responses are sent to the broadcast address on nets that	sup-
     port broadcasting,	to the destination address on point-to-point links,
     and to the	router's own address on	other networks.	 If RIPv2 is enabled,
     multicast packets are sent	on interfaces that support multicasting.

     If	no response is received	on a remote interface, if there	are errors
     while sending responses, or if there are more errors than input or	output
     (see netstat(1)), then the	cable or some other part of the	interface is
     assumed to	be disconnected	or broken, and routes are adjusted appropri-
     ately.

     The Internet Router Discovery Protocol is handled similarly.  When	the
     daemon is supplying RIP routes, it	also listens for Router	Discovery So-
     licitations and sends Advertisements.  When it is quiet and listening to
     other RIP routers,	it sends Solicitations and listens for Advertisements.
     If	it receives a good Advertisement and it	is not multi-homed, it stops
     listening for broadcast or	multicast RIP responses.  It tracks several
     advertising routers to speed recovery when	the currently chosen router
     dies.  If all discovered routers disappear, the daemon resumes listening
     to	RIP responses.	It continues listening to RIP while using Router Dis-
     covery if multi-homed to ensure all interfaces are	used.

     The Router	Discovery standard requires that advertisements	have a default
     "lifetime"	of 30 minutes.	That means should something happen, a client
     can be without a good route for 30	minutes.  It is	a good idea to reduce
     the default to 45 seconds using -P	rdisc_interval=45 on the command line
     or	rdisc_interval=45 in the /etc/gateways file.

     While using Router	Discovery (which happens by default when the system
     has a single network interface and	a Router Discover Advertisement	is re-
     ceived), there is a single	default	route and a variable number of redi-
     rected host routes	in the kernel table.  On a host	with more than one
     network interface,	this default route will	be via only one	of the inter-
     faces.  Thus, multi-homed hosts running with -q might need	no_rdisc de-
     scribed below.

     See the pm_rdisc facility described below to support "legacy" systems
     that can handle neither RIPv2 nor Router Discovery.

     By	default, neither Router	Discovery advertisements nor solicitations are
     sent over point to	point links (e.g. PPP).	 The netmask associated	with
     point-to-point links (such	as SLIP	or PPP,	with the IFF_POINTOPOINT flag)
     is	used by	routed to infer	the netmask used by the	remote system when
     RIPv1 is used.

     The following options are available:

     -s	     force routed to supply routing information.  This is the default
	     if	multiple network interfaces are	present	on which RIP or	Router
	     Discovery have not	been disabled, and if the kernel switch	ipfor-
	     warding=1.

     -q	     is	the opposite of	the -s option.	This is	the default when only
	     one interface is present.	With this explicit option, the daemon
	     is	always in "quiet-mode" for RIP and does	not supply routing in-
	     formation to other	computers.

     -d	     do	not run	in the background.  This option	is meant for interac-
	     tive use.

     -g	     used on internetwork routers to offer a route to the "default"
	     destination.  It is equivalent to -F 0/0,1	and is present mostly
	     for historical reasons.  A	better choice is -P pm_rdisc on	the
	     command line or pm_rdisc in the /etc/gateways file, since a
	     larger metric will	be used, reducing the spread of	the poten-
	     tially dangerous default route.  This is typically	used on	a
	     gateway to	the Internet, or on a gateway that uses	another	rout-
	     ing protocol whose	routes are not reported	to other local
	     routers.  Notice that because a metric of 1 is used, this feature
	     is	dangerous.  It is more commonly	accidentally used to create
	     chaos with	a routing loop than to solve problems.

     -h	     cause host	or point-to-point routes to not	be advertised, pro-
	     vided there is a network route going the same direction.  That is
	     a limited kind of aggregation.  This option is useful on gateways
	     to	Ethernets that have other gateway machines connected with
	     point-to-point links such as SLIP.

     -m	     cause the machine to advertise a host or point-to-point route to
	     its primary interface.  It	is useful on multi-homed machines such
	     as	NFS servers.  This option should not be	used except when the
	     cost of the host routes it	generates is justified by the popular-
	     ity of the	server.	 It is effective only when the machine is sup-
	     plying routing information, because there is more than one	inter-
	     face.  The	-m option overrides the	-q option to the limited ex-
	     tent of advertising the host route.

     -A	     do	not ignore RIPv2 authentication	if we do not care about	RIPv2
	     authentication.  This option is required for conformance with RFC
	     1723.  However, it	makes no sense and breaks using	RIP as a dis-
	     covery protocol to	ignore all RIPv2 packets that carry authenti-
	     cation when this machine does not care about authentication.

     -t	     increase the debugging level, which causes	more information to be
	     logged on the tracefile specified with -T or standard out.	 The
	     debugging level can be increased or decreased with	the SIGUSR1 or
	     SIGUSR2 signals or	with the rtquery(8) command.

     -T	tracefile
	     increases the debugging level to at least 1 and causes debugging
	     information to be appended	to the trace file.  Note that because
	     of	security concerns, it is wisest	to not run routed routinely
	     with tracing directed to a	file.

     -v	     display and logs the version of daemon.

     -F	net[/mask][,metric]
	     minimize routes in	transmissions via interfaces with addresses
	     that match	net/mask, and synthesizes a default route to this ma-
	     chine with	the metric.  The intent	is to reduce RIP traffic on
	     slow, point-to-point links	such as	PPP links by replacing many
	     large UDP packets of RIP information with a single, small packet
	     containing	a "fake" default route.	 If metric is absent, a	value
	     of	14 is assumed to limit the spread of the "fake"	default	route.
	     This is a dangerous feature that when used	carelessly can cause
	     routing loops.  Notice also that more than	one interface can
	     match the specified network number	and mask.  See also -g.

     -P	parms
	     is	equivalent to adding the parameter line	parms to the
	     /etc/gateways file.

     Any other argument	supplied is interpreted	as the name of a file in which
     the actions of routed should be logged.  It is better to use -T instead
     of	appending the name of the trace	file to	the command.

     The routed	utility	also supports the notion of "distant" passive or
     active gateways.  When routed is started, it reads	the file /etc/gateways
     to	find such distant gateways which may not be located using only infor-
     mation from a routing socket, to discover if some of the local gateways
     are passive, and to obtain	other parameters.  Gateways specified in this
     manner should be marked passive if	they are not expected to exchange
     routing information, while	gateways marked	active should be willing to
     exchange RIP packets.  Routes through passive gateways are	installed in
     the kernel's routing tables once upon startup and are not included	in
     transmitted RIP responses.

     Distant active gateways are treated like network interfaces.  RIP re-
     sponses are sent to the distant active gateway.  If no responses are re-
     ceived, the associated route is deleted from the kernel table and RIP re-
     sponses advertised	via other interfaces.  If the distant gateway resumes
     sending RIP responses, the	associated route is restored.

     Such gateways can be useful on media that do not support broadcasts or
     multicasts	but otherwise act like classic shared media like Ethernets
     such as some ATM networks.	 One can list all RIP routers reachable	on the
     HIPPI or ATM network in /etc/gateways with	a series of "host" lines.
     Note that it is usually desirable to use RIPv2 in such situations to
     avoid generating lists of inferred	host routes.

     Gateways marked external are also passive,	but are	not placed in the ker-
     nel routing table nor are they included in	routing	updates.  The function
     of	external entries is to indicate	that another routing process will in-
     stall such	a route	if necessary, and that other routes to that destina-
     tion should not be	installed by routed.  Such entries are only required
     when both routers may learn of routes to the same destination.

     The /etc/gateways file is comprised of a series of	lines, each in one of
     the following two formats or consist of parameters	described later.
     Blank lines and lines starting with '#' are comments.

     net Nname[/mask] gateway Gname metric value <passive | active | extern>

     host Hname	gateway	Gname metric value <passive | active | extern>

     Nname or Hname is the name	of the destination network or host.  It	may be
     a symbolic	network	name or	an Internet address specified in "dot" nota-
     tion (see inet(3)).  (If it is a name, then it must either	be defined in
     /etc/networks or /etc/hosts, or named(8), must have been started before
     routed.)

     Mask is an	optional number	between	1 and 32 indicating the	netmask	asso-
     ciated with Nname.

     Gname is the name or address of the gateway to which RIP responses	should
     be	forwarded.

     Value is the hop count to the destination host or network.

     Host hname	is equivalent to net nname/32.

     One of the	keywords passive, active or external must be present to	indi-
     cate whether the gateway should be	treated	as passive or active (as de-
     scribed above), or	whether	the gateway is external	to the scope of	the
     RIP protocol.

     As	can be seen when debugging is turned on	with -t, such lines create
     pseudo-interfaces.	 To set	parameters for remote or external interfaces,
     a line starting with if=alias(Hname), if=remote(Hname), etc. should be
     used.

     Lines that	start with neither "net" nor "host" must consist of one	or
     more of the following parameter settings, separated by commas or blanks:

     if=ifname
	     indicates that the	other parameters on the	line apply to the in-
	     terface name ifname.

     subnet=nname[/mask][,metric]
	     advertises	a route	to network nname with mask mask	and the	sup-
	     plied metric (default 1).	This is	useful for filling "holes" in
	     CIDR allocations.	This parameter must appear by itself on	a
	     line.  The	network	number must specify a full, 32-bit value, as
	     in	192.0.2.0 instead of 192.0.2.

	     Do	not use	this feature unless necessary.	It is dangerous.

     ripv1_mask=nname/mask1,mask2
	     specifies that netmask of the network of which nname/mask1	is a
	     subnet should be mask2.  For example ripv1_mask=192.0.2.16/28,27
	     marks 192.0.2.16/28 as a subnet of	192.0.2.0/27 instead of
	     192.0.2.0/24.  It is better to turn on RIPv2 instead of using
	     this facility, for	example	with ripv2_out.

     passwd=XXX[|KeyID[start|stop]]
	     specifies a RIPv2 cleartext password that will be included	on all
	     RIPv2 responses sent, and checked on all RIPv2 responses re-
	     ceived.  Any blanks, tab characters, commas, or '#', '|', or NULL
	     characters	in the password	must be	escaped	with a backslash (\).
	     The common	escape sequences \n, \r, \t, \b, and \xxx have their
	     usual meanings.  The KeyID	must be	unique but is ignored for
	     cleartext passwords.  If present, start and stop are timestamps
	     in	the form year/month/day@hour:minute.  They specify when	the
	     password is valid.	 The valid password with the most future is
	     used on output packets, unless all	passwords have expired,	in
	     which case	the password that expired most recently	is used, or
	     unless no passwords are valid yet,	in which case no password is
	     output.  Incoming packets can carry any password that is valid,
	     will be valid within 24 hours, or that was	valid within 24	hours.
	     To	protect	the secrets, the passwd	settings are valid only	in the
	     /etc/gateways file	and only when that file	is readable only by
	     UID 0.

     md5_passwd=XXX|KeyID[start|stop]
	     specifies a RIPv2 MD5 password.  Except that a KeyID is required,
	     this keyword is similar to	passwd.

     no_ag   turns off aggregation of subnets in RIPv1 and RIPv2 responses.

     no_super_ag
	     turns off aggregation of networks into supernets in RIPv2 re-
	     sponses.

     passive
	     marks the interface to not	be advertised in updates sent via
	     other interfaces, and turns off all RIP and router	discovery
	     through the interface.

     no_rip  disables all RIP processing on the	specified interface.  If no
	     interfaces	are allowed to process RIP packets, routed acts	purely
	     as	a router discovery daemon.

	     Note that turning off RIP without explicitly turning on router
	     discovery advertisements with rdisc_adv or	-s causes routed to
	     act as a client router discovery daemon, not advertising.

     no_rip_mcast
	     causes RIPv2 packets to be	broadcast instead of multicast.

     no_rip_out
	     causes no RIP updates to be sent.

     no_ripv1_in
	     causes RIPv1 received responses to	be ignored.

     no_ripv2_in
	     causes RIPv2 received responses to	be ignored.

     ripv2_out
	     turns on RIPv2 output and causes RIPv2 advertisements to be mul-
	     ticast when possible.

     ripv2   is	equivalent to no_ripv1_in and no_ripv1_out.  This enables
	     RIPv2.

     no_rdisc
	     disables the Internet Router Discovery Protocol.

     no_solicit
	     disables the transmission of Router Discovery Solicitations.

     send_solicit
	     specifies that Router Discovery solicitations should be sent,
	     even on point-to-point links, which by default only listen	to
	     Router Discovery messages.

     no_rdisc_adv
	     disables the transmission of Router Discovery Advertisements.

     rdisc_adv
	     specifies that Router Discovery Advertisements should be sent,
	     even on point-to-point links, which by default only listen	to
	     Router Discovery messages.

     bcast_rdisc
	     specifies that Router Discovery packets should be broadcast in-
	     stead of multicast.

     rdisc_pref=N
	     sets the preference in Router Discovery Advertisements to the op-
	     tionally signed integer N.	 The default preference	is 0.  Default
	     routes with smaller or more negative preferences are preferred by
	     clients.

     rdisc_interval=N
	     sets the nominal interval with which Router Discovery Advertise-
	     ments are transmitted to N	seconds	and their lifetime to 3*N.

     fake_default=metric
	     has an identical effect to	-F net[/mask][=metric] with the	net-
	     work and mask coming from the specified interface.

     pm_rdisc
	     is	similar	to fake_default.  When RIPv2 routes are	multicast, so
	     that RIPv1	listeners cannot receive them, this feature causes a
	     RIPv1 default route to be broadcast to RIPv1 listeners.  Unless
	     modified with fake_default, the default route is broadcast	with a
	     metric of 14.  That serves	as a "poor man's router	discovery"
	     protocol.

     trust_gateway=rname[|net1/mask1|net2/mask2|...]
	     causes RIP	packets	from that router and other routers named in
	     other trust_gateway keywords to be	accepted, and packets from
	     other routers to be ignored.  If networks are specified, then
	     routes to other networks will be ignored from that	router.

     redirect_ok
	     causes RIP	to allow ICMP Redirect messages	when the system	is
	     acting as a router	and forwarding packets.	 Otherwise, ICMP Redi-
	     rect messages are overridden.

FILES
     /etc/gateways  for	distant	gateways

SEE ALSO
     icmp(4), udp(4), rtquery(8)

     Internet Transport	Protocols, XSIS	028112,	Xerox System Integration
     Standard.

BUGS
     It	does not always	detect unidirectional failures in network interfaces,
     for example, when the output side fails.

HISTORY
     The routed	utility	appeared in 4.2BSD.

BSD				 June 1, 1996				   BSD

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | SEE ALSO | BUGS | HISTORY

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