Table of Contents
pppd - Point-to-Point Protocol Daemon
pppd
[ options ]
PPP is the protocol used for establishing internet
links over dial-up modems, DSL connections, and many other types of point-to-point
links. The pppd daemon works together with the kernel PPP driver to establish
and maintain a PPP link with another system (called the peer) and to negotiate
Internet Protocol (IP) addresses for each end of the link. Pppd can also
authenticate the peer and/or supply authentication information to the peer.
PPP can be used with other network protocols besides IP, but such use
is becoming increasingly rare.
- ttyname
- Use the serial
port called ttyname to communicate with the peer. The string "/dev/" is
prepended to ttyname to form the name of the device to open. If no device
name is given, or if the name of the terminal connected to the standard
input is given, pppd will use that terminal, and will not fork to put itself
in the background. A value for this option from a privileged source cannot
be overridden by a non-privileged user.
- speed
- An option that is a decimal
number is taken as the desired baud rate for the serial device. On systems
such as 4.4BSD and NetBSD, any speed can be specified. Other systems (e.g.
Linux, SunOS) only support the commonly-used baud rates.
- asyncmap map
- This
option sets the Async-Control-Character-Map (ACCM) for this end of the link.
The ACCM is a set of 32 bits, one for each of the ASCII control characters
with values from 0 to 31, where a 1 bit indicates that the corresponding
control character should not be used in PPP packets sent to this system.
The map is encoded as a hexadecimal number (without a leading 0x) where
the least significant bit (00000001) represents character 0 and the most
significant bit (80000000) represents character 31. Pppd will ask the peer
to send these characters as a 2-byte escape sequence. If multiple asyncmap
options are given, the values are ORed together. If no asyncmap option
is given, the default is zero, so pppd will ask the peer not to escape
any control characters. To escape transmitted characters, use the escape
option.
- auth
- Require the peer to authenticate itself before allowing network
packets to be sent or received. This option is the default if the system
has a default route. If neither this option nor the noauth option is specified,
pppd will only allow the peer to use IP addresses to which the system does
not already have a route.
- call name
- Read additional options from the file
/etc/ppp/peers/name. This file may contain privileged options, such as
noauth, even if pppd is not being run by root. The name string may not
begin with / or include .. as a pathname component. The format of the options
file is described below.
- connect script
- Usually there is something which
needs to be done to prepare the link before the PPP protocol can be started;
for instance, with a dial-up modem, commands need to be sent to the modem
to dial the appropriate phone number. This option specifies an command
for pppd to execute (by passing it to a shell) before attempting to start
PPP negotiation. The chat (8)
program is often useful here, as it provides
a way to send arbitrary strings to a modem and respond to received characters.
A value for this option from a privileged source cannot be overridden by
a non-privileged user.
- crtscts
- Specifies that pppd should set the serial
port to use hardware flow control using the RTS and CTS signals in the
RS-232 interface. If neither the crtscts, the nocrtscts, the cdtrcts nor
the nocdtrcts 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
unidirectional flow control. The serial port will suspend transmission when
requested by the modem (via CTS) but will be unable to request the modem
to stop sending to the computer. This mode retains the ability to use DTR
as a modem control line.
- defaultroute
- Add a default route to the system
routing tables, using the peer as the gateway, when IPCP negotiation is
successfully completed. This entry is removed when the PPP connection is
broken. This option is privileged if the nodefaultroute option has been
specified.
- disconnect script
- Execute the command specified by script, by
passing it to a shell, after pppd has terminated the link. This command
could, for example, issue commands to the modem to cause it to hang up
if hardware modem control signals were not available. The disconnect script
is not run if the modem has already hung up. A value for this option from
a privileged source cannot be overridden by a non-privileged user.
- escape
xx,yy,...
- Specifies that certain characters should be escaped on transmission
(regardless of whether the peer requests them to be escaped with its async
control character map). The characters to be escaped are specified as a
list of hex numbers separated by commas. Note that almost any character
can be specified for the escape option, unlike the asyncmap option which
only allows control characters to be specified. The characters which may
not be escaped are those with hex values 0x20 - 0x3f or 0x5e.
- file name
- Read
options from file name (the format is described below). The file must be
readable by the user who has invoked pppd.
- init script
- Execute the command
specified by script, by passing it to a shell, to initialize the serial
line. This script would typically use the chat(8)
program to configure
the modem to enable auto answer. A value for this option from a privileged
source cannot be overridden by a non-privileged user.
- lock
- Specifies that
pppd should create a UUCP-style lock file for the serial device to ensure
exclusive access to the device.
- mru n
- Set the MRU [Maximum Receive Unit]
value to n. Pppd will ask the peer to send packets of no more than n bytes.
The value of n must be between 128 and 16384; the default is 1500. A value
of 296 works well on very slow links (40 bytes for TCP/IP header + 256
bytes of data). Note that for the IPv6 protocol, the MRU must be at least
1280.
- mtu n
- Set the MTU [Maximum Transmit Unit] value to n. 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 n bytes through
the PPP network interface. Note that for the IPv6 protocol, the MTU must
be at least 1280.
- passive
- Enables the "passive" option in the LCP. With
this option, pppd will attempt to initiate a connection; if no reply is
received from the peer, pppd will then just wait passively for a valid
LCP packet from the peer, instead of exiting, as it would without this
option.
- <local_IP_address>:<remote_IP_address>
- Set the local and/or remote
interface IP addresses. Either one may be omitted. The IP addresses can
be specified with a host name or in decimal dot notation (e.g. 150.234.56.78).
The default local address is the (first) IP address of the system (unless
the noipdefault option is given). The remote address will be obtained from
the peer if not specified in any option. Thus, in simple cases, this option
is not required. If a local and/or remote IP address is specified with
this option, pppd will not accept a different value from the peer in the
IPCP negotiation, unless the ipcp-accept-local and/or ipcp-accept-remote options
are given, respectively.
- ipv6 <local_interface_identifier>,<remote_interface_identifier>
- 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 ipv6cp-use-ipaddr 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, ipv6cp-use-persistent option can be used to replace the ipv6
<local>,<remote> option. Otherwise the identifier is randomized.
- active-filter
filter-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 the idle timer, or cause the link to be brought up in demand-dialling
mode. This option is useful in conjunction with the idle option if there
are packets being sent or received regularly over the link (for example,
routing information packets) which would otherwise prevent the link from
ever appearing to be idle. The filter-expression syntax is as described for
tcpdump(1)
, except that qualifiers which are inappropriate for a PPP link,
such as ether and arp, 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 Linux, and requires that the kernel was configured to include PPP
filtering support (CONFIG_PPP_FILTER). Note that it is possible to apply
different constraints to incoming and outgoing packets using the inbound
and outbound qualifiers.
- allow-ip address(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).
- allow-number number
- Allow peers
to connect from the given telephone number. A trailing `*' character will
match all numbers beginning with the leading part.
- bsdcomp nr,nt
- Request
that the peer compress packets that it sends, using the BSD-Compress scheme,
with a maximum code size of nr bits, and agree to compress packets sent
to the peer with a maximum code size of nt bits. If nt is not specified,
it defaults to the value given for nr. Values in the range 9 to 15 may
be used for nr and nt; larger values give better compression but consume
more kernel memory for compression dictionaries. Alternatively, a value
of 0 for nr or nt disables compression in the corresponding direction.
Use nobsdcomp or bsdcomp 0 to disable BSD-Compress compression entirely.
- 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 crtscts, the nocrtscts,
the cdtrcts nor the nocdtrcts 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.
- chap-interval n
- If this option is given, pppd will rechallenge the peer
every n seconds.
- chap-max-challenge n
- Set the maximum number of CHAP challenge
transmissions to n (default 10).
- chap-restart n
- Set the CHAP restart interval
(retransmission timeout for challenges) to n seconds (default 3).
- child-timeout
n
- When exiting, wait for up to n seconds for any child processes (such
as the command specified with the pty command) to exit before exiting.
At the end of the timeout, pppd will send a SIGTERM signal to any remaining
child processes and exit. A value of 0 means no timeout, that is, pppd
will wait until all child processes have exited.
- connect-delay n
- Wait for
up to n 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 connect or pty option is used.
- debug
- Enables connection
debugging facilities. If this option is given, pppd will log the contents
of all control packets sent or received in a readable form. The packets
are logged through syslog with facility daemon and level debug. This information
can be directed to a file by setting up /etc/syslog.conf appropriately (see
syslog.conf(5)
).
- default-asyncmap
- Disable asyncmap negotiation, forcing all
control characters to be escaped for both the transmit and the receive
direction.
- default-mru
- Disable MRU [Maximum Receive Unit] negotiation. With
this option, pppd will use the default MRU value of 1500 bytes for both
the transmit and receive direction.
- deflate nr,nt
- Request that the peer
compress packets that it sends, using the Deflate scheme, with a maximum
window size of 2**nr bytes, and agree to compress packets sent to the peer
with a maximum window size of 2**nt bytes. If nt is not specified, it defaults
to the value given for nr. Values in the range 9 to 15 may be used for
nr and nt; larger values give better compression but consume more kernel
memory for compression dictionaries. Alternatively, a value of 0 for nr
or nt disables compression in the corresponding direction. Use nodeflate
or deflate 0 to disable Deflate compression entirely. (Note: pppd requests
Deflate compression in preference to BSD-Compress if the peer can do either.)
- demand
- Initiate the link only on demand, i.e. when data traffic is present.
With this option, the remote IP address must be specified by the user on
the command line or in an options file. Pppd will initially configure the
interface and enable it for IP traffic without connecting to the peer.
When traffic is available, pppd will connect to the peer and perform negotiation,
authentication, etc. When this is completed, pppd will commence passing
data packets (i.e., IP packets) across the link.
The demand option implies
the persist option. If this behaviour is not desired, use the nopersist
option after the demand option. The idle and holdoff options are also useful
in conjuction with the demand option.
- domain d
- Append the domain name d
to the local host name for authentication purposes. For example, if gethostname()
returns the name porsche, but the fully qualified domain name is porsche.Quotron.COM,
you could specify domain Quotron.COM. Pppd would then use the name porsche.Quotron.COM
for looking up secrets in the secrets file, and as the default name to
send to the peer when authenticating itself to the peer. This option is
privileged.
- dryrun
- With the dryrun 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.
- dump
- With the dump option,
pppd will print out all the option values which have been set. This option
is like the dryrun option except that pppd proceeds as normal rather than
exiting.
- endpoint <epdisc>
- Sets the endpoint discriminator sent by the local
machine to the peer during multilink negotiation to <epdisc>. 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
null or of the form type:value, where type is a decimal number or one of
the strings local, IP, MAC, magic, or phone. The value is an IP address
in dotted-decimal notation for the IP 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.
- eap-interval n
- If this
option is given and pppd authenticates the peer with EAP (i.e., is the server),
pppd will restart EAP authentication every n seconds. For EAP SRP-SHA1,
see also the srp-interval option, which enables lightweight rechallenge.
- eap-max-rreq n
- Set the maximum number of EAP Requests to which pppd will
respond (as a client) without hearing EAP Success or Failure. (Default
is 20.)
- eap-max-sreq n
- Set the maximum number of EAP Requests that pppd will
issue (as a server) while attempting authentication. (Default is 10.)
- eap-restart
n
- Set the retransmit timeout for EAP Requests when acting as a server (authenticator).
(Default is 3 seconds.)
- eap-timeout n
- Set the maximum time to wait for the
peer to send an EAP Request when acting as a client (authenticatee). (Default
is 20 seconds.)
- hide-password
- When logging the contents of PAP packets, this
option causes pppd to exclude the password string from the log. This is
the default.
- holdoff n
- Specifies how many seconds to wait before re-initiating
the link after it terminates. This option only has any effect if the persist
or demand option is used. The holdoff period is not applied if the link
was terminated because it was idle.
- idle n
- Specifies that pppd should disconnect
if the link is idle for n seconds. The link is idle when no data packets
(i.e. IP packets) are being sent or received. Note: it is not advisable to
use this option with the persist option without the demand option. If the
active-filter option is given, data packets which are rejected by the specified
activity filter also count as the link being idle.
- ipcp-accept-local
- With
this option, pppd will accept the peer's idea of our local IP address, even
if the local IP address was specified in an option.
- ipcp-accept-remote
- With
this option, pppd will accept the peer's idea of its (remote) IP address,
even if the remote IP address was specified in an option.
- ipcp-max-configure
n
- Set the maximum number of IPCP configure-request transmissions to n (default
10).
- ipcp-max-failure n
- Set the maximum number of IPCP configure-NAKs returned
before starting to send configure-Rejects instead to n (default 10).
- ipcp-max-terminate
n
- Set the maximum number of IPCP terminate-request transmissions to n (default
3).
- ipcp-restart n
- Set the IPCP restart interval (retransmission timeout)
to n seconds (default 3).
- ipparam string
- Provides an extra parameter to
the ip-up and ip-down scripts. If this option is given, the string supplied
is given as the 6th parameter to those scripts.
- ipv6cp-max-configure n
- Set
the maximum number of IPv6CP configure-request transmissions to n (default
10).
- ipv6cp-max-failure n
- Set the maximum number of IPv6CP configure-NAKs returned
before starting to send configure-Rejects instead to n (default 10).
- ipv6cp-max-terminate
n
- Set the maximum number of IPv6CP terminate-request transmissions to n
(default 3).
- ipv6cp-restart n
- Set the IPv6CP restart interval (retransmission
timeout) to n seconds (default 3).
- ipx
- Enable the IPXCP and IPX protocols.
This option is presently only supported under Linux, and only if your
kernel has been configured to include IPX support.
- ipx-network n
- Set the
IPX network number in the IPXCP configure request frame to n, a hexadecimal
number (without a leading 0x). There is no valid default. If this option
is not specified, the network number is obtained from the peer. If the
peer does not have the network number, the IPX protocol will not be started.
- ipx-node n:m
- Set the IPX node numbers. The two node numbers are separated
from each other with a colon character. The first number n is the local
node number. The second number m is the peer's node number. Each node number
is a hexadecimal number, at most 10 digits long. The node numbers on the
ipx-network must be unique. There is no valid default. If this option is not
specified then the node numbers are obtained from the peer.
- ipx-router-name
<string>
- Set the name of the router. This is a string and is sent to the peer
as information data.
- ipx-routing n
- Set the routing protocol to be received
by this option. More than one instance of ipx-routing may be specified. The
'none' option (0) may be specified as the only instance of ipx-routing. The
values may be 0 for NONE, 2 for RIP/SAP, and 4 for NLSP.
- ipxcp-accept-local
- Accept the peer's NAK for the node number specified in the ipx-node option.
If a node number was specified, and non-zero, the default is to insist that
the value be used. If you include this option then you will permit the peer
to override the entry of the node number.
- ipxcp-accept-network
- Accept the
peer's NAK for the network number specified in the ipx-network option. If
a network number was specified, and non-zero, the default is to insist that
the value be used. If you include this option then you will permit the peer
to override the entry of the node number.
- ipxcp-accept-remote
- Use the peer's
network number specified in the configure request frame. If a node number
was specified for the peer and this option was not specified, the peer
will be forced to use the value which you have specified.
- ipxcp-max-configure
n
- Set the maximum number of IPXCP configure request frames which the system
will send to n. The default is 10.
- ipxcp-max-failure n
- Set the maximum number
of IPXCP NAK frames which the local system will send before it rejects
the options. The default value is 3.
- ipxcp-max-terminate n
- Set the maximum
nuber of IPXCP terminate request frames before the local system considers
that the peer is not listening to them. The default value is 3.
- kdebug n
- Enable debugging code in the kernel-level PPP driver. The argument 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.
- 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 proxyarp 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.
- lcp-echo-failure n
- If this
option is given, pppd will presume the peer to be dead if n LCP echo-requests
are sent without receiving a valid LCP echo-reply. If this happens, pppd
will terminate the connection. Use of this option requires a non-zero value
for the lcp-echo-interval parameter. This option can be used to enable pppd
to terminate after the physical connection has been broken (e.g., the modem
has hung up) in situations where no hardware modem control lines are available.
- lcp-echo-interval n
- If this option is given, pppd will send an LCP echo-request
frame to the peer every n seconds. Normally the peer should respond to
the echo-request by sending an echo-reply. This option can be used with the
lcp-echo-failure option to detect that the peer is no longer connected.
- lcp-max-configure
n
- Set the maximum number of LCP configure-request transmissions to n (default
10).
- lcp-max-failure n
- Set the maximum number of LCP configure-NAKs returned
before starting to send configure-Rejects instead to n (default 10).
- lcp-max-terminate
n
- Set the maximum number of LCP terminate-request transmissions to n (default
3).
- lcp-restart n
- Set the LCP restart interval (retransmission timeout) to
n seconds (default 3).
- linkname name
- Sets the logical name of the link to
name. Pppd will create a file named ppp-name.pid 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.
- 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 not change the state of the DTR (Data Terminal
Ready) signal.
- logfd n
- Send log messages to file descriptor n. Pppd will
send log messages to at most one file or file descriptor (as well as sending
the log messages to syslog), so this option and the logfile option are
mutually exclusive. The default is for pppd to send log messages to stdout
(file descriptor 1), unless the serial port is already open on stdout.
- logfile
filename
- Append log messages to the file filename (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.
- 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 must have an entry in the /etc/ppp/pap-secrets
file as well as the system password database to be allowed access.
- maxconnect
n
- Terminate the connection when it has been available for network traffic
for n seconds (i.e. n seconds after the first network control protocol comes
up).
- maxfail n
- Terminate after n consecutive failed connection attempts.
A value of 0 means no limit. The default value is 10.
- 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 modem to be asserted when
opening the serial device (unless a connect script is specified), and it
will drop the DTR (Data Terminal Ready) signal briefly when the connection
is terminated and before executing the connect script. On Ultrix, this
option implies hardware flow control, as for the crtscts option.
- mp
- Enables
the use of PPP multilink; this is an alias for the `multilink' option. This
option is currently only available under Linux.
- mppe-stateful
- Allow MPPE
to use stateful mode. Stateless mode is still attempted first. The default
is to disallow stateful mode.
- 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).
- mrru n
- Sets the Maximum
Reconstructed Receive Unit to n. 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).
- ms-dns <addr>
- If pppd is acting as a server for Microsoft Windows clients, this option
allows pppd to supply one or two DNS (Domain Name Server) addresses to
the clients. The first instance of this option specifies the primary DNS
address; the second instance (if given) specifies the secondary DNS address.
(This option was present in some older versions of pppd under the name
dns-addr.)
- ms-wins <addr>
- If pppd is acting as a server for Microsoft Windows
or "Samba" clients, this option allows pppd to supply one or two WINS (Windows
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.
- 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.
- name
name
- Set the name of the local system for authentication purposes to name.
This is a privileged option. With this option, pppd will use lines in
the secrets files which have name as the second field when looking for
a secret to use in authenticating the peer. In addition, unless overridden
with the user option, name will be used as the name to send to the peer
when authenticating the local system to the peer. (Note that pppd does
not append the domain name to name.)
- noaccomp
- Disable Address/Control compression
in both directions (send and receive).
- noauth
- Do not require the peer to
authenticate itself. This option is privileged.
- nobsdcomp
- Disables BSD-Compress
compression; pppd will not request or agree to compress packets using the
BSD-Compress scheme.
- noccp
- Disable CCP (Compression Control Protocol) negotiation.
This option should only be required if the peer is buggy and gets confused
by requests from pppd for CCP negotiation.
- nocrtscts
- Disable hardware flow
control (i.e. RTS/CTS) on the serial port. If neither the crtscts nor the
nocrtscts nor the cdtrcts nor the nocdtrcts option is given, the hardware
flow control setting for the serial port is left unchanged.
- nocdtrcts
- This
option is a synonym for nocrtscts. Either of these options will disable
both forms of hardware flow control.
- nodefaultroute
- Disable the defaultroute
option. The system administrator who wishes to prevent users from creating
default routes with pppd can do so by placing this option in the /etc/ppp/options
file.
- nodeflate
- Disables Deflate compression; pppd will not request or agree
to compress packets using the Deflate scheme.
- nodetach
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- noipdefault
- Disables the default
behaviour when no local IP address is specified, which is to determine
(if possible) the local IP address from the hostname. With this option,
the peer will have to supply the local IP address during IPCP negotiation
(unless it specified explicitly on the command line or in an options file).
- noipx
- 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.
- noktune
- Opposite of the ktune option; disables pppd from changing
system settings.
- nolog
- Do not send log messages to a file or file descriptor.
This option cancels the logfd and logfile options.
- 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.
- nomp
- Disables the
use of PPP multilink. This option is currently only available under Linux.
- nomppe
- Disables MPPE (Microsoft Point to Point Encryption). This is the
default.
- nomppe-40
- Disable 40-bit encryption with MPPE.
- nomppe-128
- Disable 128-bit
encryption with MPPE.
- nomppe-stateful
- Disable MPPE stateful mode. This is
the default.
- 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.
- nomultilink
- Disables the use of PPP multilink.
This option is currently only available under Linux.
- nopcomp
- Disable protocol
field compression negotiation in both the receive and the transmit direction.
- nopersist
- Exit once a connection has been made and terminated. This is
the default unless the persist or demand option has been specified.
- nopredictor1
- Do not accept or agree to Predictor-1 compression.
- noproxyarp
- Disable the
proxyarp option. The system administrator who wishes to prevent users from
creating proxy ARP entries with pppd can do so by placing this option in
the /etc/ppp/options file.
- notty
- Normally, pppd requires a terminal device.
With this option, pppd will allocate itself a pseudo-tty master/slave pair
and use the slave as its terminal device. Pppd will create a child process
to act as a `character shunt' to transfer characters between the pseudo-tty
master and its standard input and output. Thus pppd will transmit characters
on its standard output and receive characters on its standard input even
if they are not terminal devices. This option increases the latency and
CPU overhead of transferring data over the ppp interface as all of the
characters sent and received must flow through the character shunt process.
An explicit device name may not be given if this option is used.
- novj
- Disable
Van Jacobson style TCP/IP header compression in both the transmit and the
receive direction.
- novjccomp
- Disable the connection-ID compression option
in Van Jacobson style TCP/IP header compression. With this option, pppd
will not omit the connection-ID byte from Van Jacobson compressed TCP/IP
headers, nor ask the peer to do so.
- papcrypt
- Indicates that all secrets
in the /etc/ppp/pap-secrets file which are used for checking the identity
of the peer are encrypted, and thus pppd should not accept a password which,
before encryption, is identical to the secret from the /etc/ppp/pap-secrets
file.
- pap-max-authreq n
- Set the maximum number of PAP authenticate-request
transmissions to n (default 10).
- pap-restart n
- Set the PAP restart interval
(retransmission timeout) to n seconds (default 3).
- pap-timeout n
- Set the
maximum time that pppd will wait for the peer to authenticate itself with
PAP to n seconds (0 means no limit).
- pass-filter filter-expression
- Specifies
a packet filter to applied to data packets being sent or received to determine
which packets should be allowed to pass. Packets which are rejected by the
filter are silently discarded. This option can be used to prevent specific
network daemons (such as routed) using up link bandwidth, or to provide
a very basic firewall capability. The filter-expression syntax is as described
for tcpdump(1)
, except that qualifiers which are inappropriate for a PPP
link, such as ether and arp, 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. Note that it is possible to apply
different constraints to incoming and outgoing packets using the inbound
and outbound qualifiers. This option is currently only available under Linux,
and requires that the kernel was configured to include PPP filtering support
(CONFIG_PPP_FILTER).
- password password-string
- Specifies the password to use
for authenticating to the peer. Use of this option is discouraged, as the
password is likely to be visible to other users on the system (for example,
by using ps(1)
).
- persist
- Do not exit after a connection is terminated; instead
try to reopen the connection. The maxfail option still has an effect on
persistent connections.
- plugin filename
- Load the shared library object file
filename as a plugin. This is a privileged option. If filename does not
contain a slash (/), pppd will look in the /usr/lib/pppd/version directory
for the plugin, where version is the version number of pppd (for example,
2.4.2).
- predictor1
- Request that the peer compress frames that it sends using
Predictor-1 compression, and agree to compress transmitted frames with Predictor-1
if requested. This option has no effect unless the kernel driver supports
Predictor-1 compression.
- privgroup group-name
- Allows members of group group-name
to use privileged options. This is a privileged option. Use of this option
requires care as there is no guarantee that members of group-name cannot
use pppd to become root themselves. Consider it equivalent to putting the
members of group-name in the kmem or disk group.
- proxyarp
- Add an entry to
this system's ARP [Address Resolution Protocol] table with the IP address
of the peer and the Ethernet address of this system. This will have the
effect of making the peer appear to other systems to be on the local ethernet.
- pty script
- Specifies that the command script is to be used to communicate
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 script
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. (Note: if the record option is used in conjuction with the pty
option, the child process will have pipes on its standard input and output.)
- receive-all
- With this option, pppd will accept all control characters from
the peer, including those marked in the receive asyncmap. Without this
option, pppd will discard those characters as specified in RFC1662. This
option should only be needed if the peer is buggy.
- record filename
- Specifies
that pppd should record all characters sent and received to a file named
filename. This file is opened in append mode, using the user's user-ID and
permissions. This option is implemented using a pseudo-tty and a process
to transfer characters between the pseudo-tty and the real serial device,
so it will increase the latency and CPU overhead of transferring data over
the ppp interface. The characters are stored in a tagged format with timestamps,
which can be displayed in readable form using the pppdump(8)
program.
- remotename
name
- Set the assumed name of the remote system for authentication purposes
to name.
- remotenumber number
- Set the assumed telephone number of the remote
system for authentication purposes to number.
- refuse-chap
- With this option,
pppd will not agree to authenticate itself to the peer using CHAP.
- refuse-mschap
- With this option, pppd will not agree to authenticate itself to the peer
using MS-CHAP.
- refuse-mschap-v2
- With this option, pppd will not agree to authenticate
itself to the peer using MS-CHAPv2.
- refuse-eap
- With this option, pppd will
not agree to authenticate itself to the peer using EAP.
- refuse-pap
- With this
option, pppd will not agree to authenticate itself to the peer using PAP.
- require-chap
- Require the peer to authenticate itself using CHAP [Challenge
Handshake Authentication Protocol] authentication.
- 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.
- require-mppe-40
- Require the use of MPPE, with 40-bit encryption.
- require-mppe-128
- Require the use of MPPE, with 128-bit encryption.
- require-mschap
- Require the
peer to authenticate itself using MS-CHAP [Microsoft Challenge Handshake
Authentication Protocol] authentication.
- require-mschap-v2
- Require the peer
to authenticate itself using MS-CHAPv2 [Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication
Protocol, Version 2] authentication.
- require-eap
- Require the peer to authenticate
itself using EAP [Extensible Authentication Protocol] authentication.
- require-pap
- Require the peer to authenticate itself using PAP [Password Authentication
Protocol] authentication.
- show-password
- When logging the contents of PAP
packets, this option causes pppd to show the password string in the log
message.
- 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 the `passive' option with ancient versions of pppd).
- srp-interval n
- If this parameter is given and pppd uses EAP SRP-SHA1 to authenticate the
peer (i.e., is the server), then pppd will use the optional lightweight SRP
rechallenge mechanism at intervals of n seconds. This option is faster
than eap-interval reauthentication because it uses a hash-based mechanism
and does not derive a new session key.
- srp-pn-secret string
- Set the long-term
pseudonym-generating secret for the server. This value is optional and if
set, needs to be known at the server (authenticator) side only, and should
be different for each server (or poll of identical servers). It is used
along with the current date to generate a key to encrypt and decrypt the
client's identity contained in the pseudonym.
- srp-use-pseudonym
- When operating
as an EAP SRP-SHA1 client, attempt to use the pseudonym stored in ~/.ppp_psuedonym
first as the identity, and save in this file any pseudonym offered by the
peer during authentication.
- sync
- Use synchronous HDLC serial encoding instead
of asynchronous. The device used by pppd with this option must have sync
support. Currently supports Microgate SyncLink adapters under Linux and
FreeBSD 2.2.8 and later.
- unit num
- Sets the ppp unit number (for a ppp0 or
ppp1 etc interface name) for outbound connections.
- updetach
- With this option,
pppd will detach from its controlling terminal once it has successfully
established the ppp connection (to the point where the first network control
protocol, usually the IP control protocol, has come up).
- usehostname
- Enforce
the use of the hostname (with domain name appended, if given) as the name
of the local system for authentication purposes (overrides the name option).
This option is not normally needed since the name option is privileged.
- 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, and the environment variable USEPEERDNS
will be set to 1. 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.
- user name
- Sets the name used for authenticating the local system
to the peer to name.
- vj-max-slots n
- Sets the number of connection slots to
be used by the Van Jacobson TCP/IP header compression and decompression
code to n, which must be between 2 and 16 (inclusive).
- welcome script
- Run
the executable or shell command specified by script before initiating PPP
negotiation, after the connect script (if any) has completed. A value for
this option from a privileged source cannot be overridden by a non-privileged
user.
- xonxoff
- Use software flow control (i.e. XON/XOFF) to control the flow
of data on the serial port.
Options can be taken from files
as well as the command line. Pppd reads options from the files /etc/ppp/options,
~/.ppprc and /etc/ppp/options.ttyname (in that order) before processing the
options on the command line. (In fact, the command-line options are scanned
to find the terminal name before the options.ttyname file is read.) In forming
the name of the options.ttyname file, the initial /dev/ is removed from
the terminal name, and any remaining / characters are replaced with dots.
An options file is parsed into a series of words, delimited by whitespace.
Whitespace can be included in a word by enclosing the word in double-quotes
("). A backslash (\) quotes the following character. A hash (#) starts a
comment, which continues until the end of the line. There is no restriction
on using the file or call options within an options file.
pppd provides
system administrators with sufficient access control that PPP access to
a server machine can be provided to legitimate users without fear of compromising
the security of the server or the network it's on. This control is provided
through restrictions on which IP addresses the peer may use, based on its
authenticated identity (if any), and through restrictions on which options
a non-privileged user may use. Several of pppd's options are privileged,
in particular those which permit potentially insecure configurations; these
options are only accepted in files which are under the control of the system
administrator, or if pppd is being run by root.
The default behaviour of
pppd is to allow an unauthenticated peer to use a given IP address only
if the system does not already have a route to that IP address. For example,
a system with a permanent connection to the wider internet will normally
have a default route, and thus all peers will have to authenticate themselves
in order to set up a connection. On such a system, the auth option is the
default. On the other hand, a system where the PPP link is the only connection
to the internet will not normally have a default route, so the peer will
be able to use almost any IP address without authenticating itself.
As indicated
above, some security-sensitive options are privileged, which means that
they may not be used by an ordinary non-privileged user running a setuid-root
pppd, either on the command line, in the user's ~/.ppprc file, or in an options
file read using the file option. Privileged options may be used in /etc/ppp/options
file or in an options file read using the call option. If pppd is being
run by the root user, privileged options can be used without restriction.
When opening the device, pppd uses either the invoking user's user ID or
the root UID (that is, 0), depending on whether the device name was specified
by the user or the system administrator. If the device name comes from
a privileged source, that is, /etc/ppp/options or an options file read
using the call option, pppd uses full root privileges when opening the
device. Thus, by creating an appropriate file under /etc/ppp/peers, the
system administrator can allow users to establish a ppp connection via
a device which they would not normally have permission to access. Otherwise
pppd uses the invoking user's real UID when opening the device.
Authentication
is the process whereby one peer convinces the other of its identity. This
involves the first peer sending its name to the other, together with some
kind of secret information which could only come from the genuine authorized
user of that name. In such an exchange, we will call the first peer the
"client" and the other the "server". The client has a name by which it
identifies itself to the server, and the server also has a name by which
it identifies itself to the client. Generally the genuine client shares
some secret (or password) with the server, and authenticates itself by
proving that it knows that secret. Very often, the names used for authentication
correspond to the internet hostnames of the peers, but this is not essential.
At present, pppd supports three authentication protocols: the Password
Authentication Protocol (PAP), Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol
(CHAP), and Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP). PAP involves the
client sending its name and a cleartext password to the server to authenticate
itself. In contrast, the server initiates the CHAP authentication exchange
by sending a challenge to the client (the challenge packet includes the
server's name). The client must respond with a response which includes its
name plus a hash value derived from the shared secret and the challenge,
in order to prove that it knows the secret. EAP supports CHAP-style authentication,
and also includes the SRP-SHA1 mechanism, which is resistant to dictionary-based
attacks and does not require a cleartext password on the server side.
The
PPP protocol, being symmetrical, allows both peers to require the other
to authenticate itself. In that case, two separate and independent authentication
exchanges will occur. The two exchanges could use different authentication
protocols, and in principle, different names could be used in the two exchanges.
The default behaviour of pppd is to agree to authenticate if requested,
and to not require authentication from the peer. However, pppd will not
agree to authenticate itself with a particular protocol if it has no secrets
which could be used to do so.
Pppd stores secrets for use in authentication
in secrets files (/etc/ppp/pap-secrets for PAP, /etc/ppp/chap-secrets for
CHAP, MS-CHAP, MS-CHAPv2, and EAP MD5-Challenge, and /etc/ppp/srp-secrets for
EAP SRP-SHA1). All 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 systems to
itself.
Each line in a secrets file contains one secret. A given secret
is specific to a particular combination of client and server - it can only
be used by that client to authenticate itself to that server. Thus each
line in a secrets file has at least 3 fields: the name of the client, the
name of the server, and the secret. These fields may be followed by a list
of the IP addresses that the specified client 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.
Note that case is significant in the client and server names and in the
secret.
If the secret starts with an `@', what follows is assumed to be the
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.
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 not acceptable.
An address may be followed by "/" and a number n, to indicate a whole
subnet, i.e. all addresses which have the same value in the most significant
n 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.
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 identity), it chooses a secret with the peer's
name in the first field and the name of the local system in the second
field. The name of the local system defaults to the hostname, with the
domain name appended if the domain option is used. This default can be
overridden with the name option, except when the usehostname option is
used. (For EAP SRP-SHA1, see the srp-entry(8)
utility for generating proper
validator entries to be used in the "secret" field.)
When pppd is choosing
a secret to use in authenticating itself to the peer, it first determines
what name it is going to use to identify itself to the peer. This name
can be specified by the user with the user option. If this option is not
used, the name defaults to the name of the local system, determined as
described in the previous paragraph. Then pppd looks for a secret with
this name in the first field and the peer's name in the second field. Pppd
will know the name of the peer if CHAP or EAP authentication is being used,
because the peer will have sent it in the challenge packet. However, if
PAP is being used, pppd will have to determine the peer's name from the
options specified by the user. The user can specify the peer's name directly
with the remotename option. Otherwise, if the remote IP address was specified
by a name (rather than in numeric form), that name will be used as the
peer's name. Failing that, pppd will use the null string as the peer's name.
When authenticating the peer with PAP, the supplied password is first compared
with the secret from the secrets file. If the password doesn't match the
secret, the password is encrypted using crypt() and checked against the
secret again. Thus secrets for authenticating the peer can be stored in
encrypted form if desired. If the papcrypt option is given, the first (unencrypted)
comparison is omitted, for better security.
Furthermore, if the login option
was specified, the username and password are also checked against the system
password database. Thus, the system administrator can set up the pap-secrets
file to allow PPP access only to certain users, and to restrict the set
of IP addresses that each user can use. Typically, when using the login
option, the secret in /etc/ppp/pap-secrets would be "", which will match
any password supplied by the peer. This avoids the need to have the same
secret in two places.
Authentication must be satisfactorily completed before
IPCP (or any other Network Control Protocol) can be started. If the peer
is required to authenticate itself, and fails to do so, pppd will terminated
the link (by closing LCP). If IPCP negotiates an unacceptable IP address
for the remote host, IPCP will be closed. IP packets can only be sent or
received when IPCP is open.
In some cases it is desirable to allow some
hosts which can't authenticate themselves to connect and use one of a restricted
set of IP addresses, even when the local host generally requires authentication.
If the peer refuses to authenticate itself when requested, pppd takes
that as equivalent to authenticating with PAP using the empty string for
the username and password. Thus, by adding a line to the pap-secrets file
which specifies the empty string for the client and password, it is possible
to allow restricted access to hosts which refuse to authenticate themselves.
When IPCP negotiation is completed successfully, pppd will inform
the kernel of the local and remote IP addresses for the ppp interface. This
is sufficient to create a host route to the remote end of the link, which
will enable the peers to exchange IP packets. Communication with other machines
generally requires further modification to routing tables and/or ARP (Address
Resolution Protocol) tables. In most cases the defaultroute and/or proxyarp
options are sufficient for this, but in some cases further intervention
is required. The /etc/ppp/ip-up script can be used for this.
Sometimes it
is desirable to add a default route through the remote host, as in the
case of a machine whose only connection to the Internet is through the
ppp interface. The defaultroute option causes pppd to create such a default
route when IPCP comes up, and delete it when the link is terminated.
In
some cases it is desirable to use proxy ARP, for example on a server machine
connected to a LAN, in order to allow other hosts to communicate with the
remote host. The proxyarp option causes pppd to look for a network interface
on the same subnet as the remote host (an interface supporting broadcast
and ARP, which is up and not a point-to-point or loopback interface). If
found, pppd creates a permanent, published ARP entry with the IP address
of the remote host and the hardware address of the network interface found.
When the demand option is used, the interface IP addresses have already
been set at the point when IPCP comes up. If pppd has not been able to
negotiate the same addresses that it used to configure the interface (for
example when the peer is an ISP that uses dynamic 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.
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.
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.
In some circumstances the peer may send no endpoint discriminator or a
non-unique value. The 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/pppd2.tdb to match
up links.
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.
If the first link terminates
(for example, because of a hangup or a received LCP terminate-request) the
bundle is not destroyed unless there are no other links remaining in the
bundle. Rather than exiting, the first pppd keeps running after its link
terminates, until all the links in the bundle have terminated. If the first
pppd receives a SIGTERM or SIGINT signal, it will destroy the bundle and
send a SIGHUP to the pppd processes for each of the links in the bundle.
If the first pppd receives a SIGHUP signal, it will terminate its link
but not the bundle.
Note: demand mode is not currently supported with multilink.
The following examples assume that the /etc/ppp/options file contains
the auth option (as in the default /etc/ppp/options file in the ppp distribution).
Probably the most common use of pppd is to dial out to an ISP. This can
be done with a command such as
- pppd call isp
where the /etc/ppp/peers/isp
file is set up by the system administrator to contain something like this:
- ttyS0 19200 crtscts
connect '/usr/sbin/chat -v -f /etc/ppp/chat-isp'
noauth
In this example, we are using chat to dial the ISP's modem and go
through any logon sequence required. The /etc/ppp/chat-isp file contains
the script used by chat; it could for example contain something like this:
- ABORT "NO CARRIER"
ABORT "NO DIALTONE"
ABORT "ERROR"
ABORT "NO ANSWER"
ABORT "BUSY"
ABORT "Username/Password Incorrect"
"" "at"
OK "at&d0&c1"
OK "atdt2468135"
"name:" "^Umyuserid"
"word:" "\qmypassword"
"ispts" "\q^Uppp"
"~-^Uppp-~"
See the chat(8)
man page for details of chat scripts.
Pppd can
also be used to provide a dial-in ppp service for users. If the users already
have login accounts, the simplest way to set up the ppp service is to let
the users log in to their accounts and run pppd (installed setuid-root)
with a command such as
- pppd proxyarp
To allow a user to use the PPP facilities,
you need to allocate an IP address for that user's machine and create an
entry in /etc/ppp/pap-secrets, /etc/ppp/chap-secrets, or /etc/ppp/srp-secrets
(depending on which authentication method the PPP implementation on the
user's machine supports), so that the user's machine can authenticate itself.
For example, if Joe has a machine called "joespc" that is to be allowed
to dial in to the machine called "server" and use the IP address joespc.my.net,
you would add an entry like this to /etc/ppp/pap-secrets or /etc/ppp/chap-secrets:
- joespc server "joe's secret" joespc.my.net
(See srp-entry(8)
for a means to generate
the server's entry when SRP-SHA1 is in use.) Alternatively, you can create
a username called (for example) "ppp", whose login shell is pppd and whose
home directory is /etc/ppp. Options to be used when pppd is run this way
can be put in /etc/ppp/.ppprc.
If your serial connection is any more complicated
than a piece of wire, you may need to arrange for some control characters
to be escaped. In particular, it is often useful to escape XON (^Q) and
XOFF (^S), using asyncmap a0000. If the path includes a telnet, you probably
should escape ^] as well (asyncmap 200a0000). If the path includes an rlogin,
you will need to use the escape ff option on the end which is running the
rlogin client, since many rlogin implementations are not transparent; they
will remove the sequence [0xff, 0xff, 0x73, 0x73, followed by any 8 bytes]
from the stream.
Messages are sent to the syslog daemon using
facility LOG_DAEMON. (This can be overridden by recompiling pppd with the
macro LOG_PPP defined as the desired facility.) See the syslog(8)
documentation
for details of where the syslog daemon will write the messages. On most
systems, the syslog daemon uses the /etc/syslog.conf file to specify the
destination(s) for syslog messages. You may need to edit that file to suit.
The debug option causes the contents of all control packets sent or received
to be logged, that is, all LCP, PAP, CHAP, EAP, or IPCP packets. This can
be useful if the PPP negotiation does not succeed or if authentication
fails. If debugging is enabled at compile time, the debug option also causes
other debugging messages to be logged.
Debugging can also be enabled or
disabled by sending a SIGUSR1 signal to the pppd process. This signal acts
as a toggle.
The exit status of pppd is set to indicate whether
any error was detected, or the reason for the link being terminated. The
values used are:
- Pppd has detached, or otherwise the connection was successfully
established and terminated at the peer's request.
- An immediately fatal error
of some kind occurred, such as an essential system call failing, or running
out of virtual memory.
- An error was detected in processing the options given,
such as two mutually exclusive options being used.
- Pppd is not setuid-root
and the invoking user is not root.
- The kernel does not support PPP, for
example, the PPP kernel driver is not included or cannot be loaded.
- Pppd
terminated because it was sent a SIGINT, SIGTERM or SIGHUP signal.
- The serial
port could not be locked.
- The serial port could not be opened.
- The connect
script failed (returned a non-zero exit status).
- The command specified as
the argument to the pty option could not be run.
- The PPP negotiation failed,
that is, it didn't reach the point where at least one network protocol (e.g.
IP) was running.
- The peer system failed (or refused) to authenticate itself.
- The link was established successfully and terminated because it was idle.
- The link was established successfully and terminated because the connect
time limit was reached.
- Callback was negotiated and an incoming call should
arrive shortly.
- The link was terminated because the peer is not responding
to echo requests.
- The link was terminated by the modem hanging up.
- The PPP
negotiation failed because serial loopback was detected.
- The init script
failed (returned a non-zero exit status).
- We failed to authenticate ourselves
to the peer.
Pppd invokes scripts at various stages in its processing
which can be used to perform site-specific ancillary processing. These scripts
are usually shell scripts, but could be executable code files instead. Pppd
does not wait for the scripts to finish. The scripts are executed as root
(with the real and effective user-id set to 0), so that they can do things
such as update routing tables or run privileged daemons. Be careful that
the contents of these scripts do not compromise your system's security.
Pppd runs the scripts with standard input, output and error redirected
to /dev/null, and with an environment that is empty except for some environment
variables that give information about the link. The environment variables
that pppd sets are:
- DEVICE
- The name of the serial tty device being used.
- IFNAME
- The name of the network interface being used.
- IPLOCAL
- The IP address
for the local end of the link. This is only set when IPCP has come up.
- IPREMOTE
- The IP address for the remote end of the link. This is only set when IPCP
has come up.
- PEERNAME
- The authenticated name of the peer. This is only set
if the peer authenticates itself.
- SPEED
- The baud rate of the tty device.
- ORIG_UID
- The real user-id of the user who invoked pppd.
- PPPLOGNAME
- The username
of the real user-id that invoked pppd. This is always set.
For the ip-down
and auth-down scripts, pppd also sets the following variables giving statistics
for the connection:
- CONNECT_TIME
- The number of seconds from when the PPP
negotiation started until the connection was terminated.
- BYTES_SENT
- The
number of bytes sent (at the level of the serial port) during the connection.
- BYTES_RCVD
- The number of bytes received (at the level of the serial port)
during the connection.
- LINKNAME
- The logical name of the link, set with the
linkname option.
- DNS1
- If the peer supplies DNS server addresses, this variable
is set to the first DNS server address supplied.
- DNS2
- If the peer supplies
DNS server addresses, this variable is set to the second DNS server address
supplied.
Pppd invokes the following scripts, if they exist. It is not an
error if they don't exist.
- /etc/ppp/auth-up
- A program or script which is executed
after the remote system successfully authenticates itself. It is executed
with the parameters
- interface-name peer-name user-name tty-device speed
- Note
that this script is not executed if the peer doesn't authenticate
- itself,
for example when the noauth option is used.
- /etc/ppp/auth-down
- A program
or script which is executed when the link goes down, if /etc/ppp/auth-up
was previously executed. It is executed in the same manner with the same
parameters as /etc/ppp/auth-up.
- /etc/ppp/ip-up
- A program or script which is
executed when the link is available for sending and receiving IP packets
(that is, IPCP has come up). It is executed with the parameters
- interface-name
tty-device speed local-IP-address
- remote-IP-address ipparam
- /etc/ppp/ip-down
- A program or script which is executed when the link is no longer available
for sending and receiving IP packets. This script can be 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.
- /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
- interface-name
tty-device speed local-link-local-address
- remote-link-local-address ipparam
- /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.
- /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 executed with the parameters
- interface-name
tty-device speed network-number local-IPX-node-address
- remote-IPX-node-address
local-IPX-routing-protocol remote-IPX-routing-protocol local-IPX-router-name remote-IPX-router-name
ipparam pppd-pid
- The local-IPX-routing-protocol and remote-IPX-routing-protocol
field
- may be one of the following:
- NONE to indicate that there is
no routing protocol
RIP to indicate that RIP/SAP should be used
NLSP to indicate that Novell NLSP should be used
RIP NLSP to indicate that both RIP/SAP and NLSP should be used
- /etc/ppp/ipx-down
- A program or script which is executed when the link is no longer available
for sending and receiving IPX packets. This script can be used for undoing
the effects of the /etc/ppp/ipx-up script. It is invoked in the same manner
and with the same parameters as the ipx-up script.
- /var/run/pppn.pid
(BSD or Linux), /etc/ppp/pppn.pid (others)
- Process-ID for pppd process on
ppp interface unit n.
- /var/run/ppp-name.pid (BSD or Linux),
- /etc/ppp/ppp-name.pid
(others) Process-ID for pppd process for logical link name (see the linkname
option).
- /var/run/pppd2.tdb
- Database containing information about pppd processes,
interfaces and links, used for matching links to bundles in multilink operation.
May be examined by external programs to obtain information about running
pppd instances, the interfaces and devices they are using, IP address assignments,
etc. /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.
- /etc/ppp/chap-secrets
- 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.
- /etc/ppp/srp-secrets
- Names, secrets, and IP addresses for EAP 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.
- ~/.ppp_pseudonym
- Saved client-side SRP-SHA1 pseudonym. See
the srp-use-pseudonym option for details.
- /etc/ppp/options
- System default
options for pppd, read before user default options or command-line options.
- ~/.ppprc
- User default options, read before /etc/ppp/options.ttyname.
- /etc/ppp/options.ttyname
- System default options for the serial port being used, read after ~/.ppprc.
In forming the ttyname part of this filename, an initial /dev/ is stripped
from the port name (if present), and any slashes in the remaining part
are converted to dots.
- /etc/ppp/peers
- A directory containing options files
which may contain privileged options, even if pppd was invoked by a user
other than root. The system administrator can create options files in this
directory to permit non-privileged users to dial out without requiring the
peer to authenticate, but only to certain trusted peers.
- RFC1144
- Jacobson, V. Compressing TCP/IP headers for low-speed serial links. February
1990.
- RFC1321
- Rivest, R. The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm. April 1992.
- RFC1332
- McGregor, G. PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol (IPCP). May 1992.
- RFC1334
- Lloyd, B.; Simpson, W.A. PPP authentication protocols. October 1992.
- RFC1661
- Simpson, W.A. The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP). July 1994.
- RFC1662
- Simpson,
W.A. PPP in HDLC-like Framing. July 1994.
- RFC2284
- Blunk, L.; Vollbrecht, J., PPP
Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP). March 1998.
- RFC2472
- Haskin, D. IP
Version 6 over PPP December 1998.
- RFC2945
- Wu, T., The SRP Authentication
and Key Exchange System September 2000.
- draft-ietf-pppext-eap-srp-03.txt
- Carlson,
J.; et al., EAP SRP-SHA1 Authentication Protocol. July 2001.
Some limited
degree of control can be exercised over a running pppd process by sending
it a signal from the list below.
- SIGINT, SIGTERM
- These signals cause pppd
to terminate the link (by closing LCP), restore the serial device settings,
and exit.
- SIGHUP
- This signal causes pppd to terminate the link, restore
the serial device settings, and close the serial device. If the persist
or demand option has been specified, pppd will try to reopen the serial
device and start another connection (after the holdoff period). Otherwise
pppd will exit. If this signal is received during the holdoff period, it
causes pppd to end the holdoff period immediately.
- SIGUSR1
- This signal toggles
the state of the debug option.
- SIGUSR2
- This signal causes pppd to renegotiate
compression. This can be useful to re-enable compression after it has been
disabled as a result of a fatal decompression error. (Fatal decompression
errors generally indicate a bug in one or other implementation.)
Paul
Mackerras (paulus@samba.org), based on earlier work by Drew Perkins, Brad
Clements, Karl Fox, Greg Christy, and Brad Parker.
Pppd is copyrighted
and made available under conditions which provide that it may be copied
and used in source or binary forms provided that the conditions listed
below are met. Portions of pppd are covered by the following copyright
notices:
Copyright (c) 1984-2000 Carnegie Mellon University. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 1993-2004 Paul Mackerras. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 1995 Pedro Roque Marques. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 1995 Eric Rosenquist. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 1999 Tommi Komulainen. All rights reserved.
Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 1999
Copyright (c) 2000 by Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2001 by Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2002 Google, Inc. All rights reserved.
The copyright notices
contain the following statements.
Redistribution and use in source and binary
forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following
conditions are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
distribution.
3. The name "Carnegie Mellon University" must not be used to endorse
or promote products derived from this software without
prior written permission. For permission or any legal
details, please contact
Office of Technology Transfer
Carnegie Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
(412) 268-4387, fax: (412) 268-7395
tech-transfer@andrew.cmu.edu
3b. The name(s) of the authors of this software must not be used to
endorse or promote products derived from this software without
prior written permission.
4. Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following
acknowledgments:
"This product includes software developed by Computing Services
at Carnegie Mellon University (http://www.cmu.edu/computing/)."
"This product includes software developed by Paul Mackerras
<paulus@samba.org>".
"This product includes software developed by Pedro Roque Marques
<pedro_m@yahoo.com>".
"This product includes software developed by Tommi Komulainen
<Tommi.Komulainen@iki.fi>".
CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS
SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS,
IN NO EVENT SHALL CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL,
INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM
LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE
OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE
OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
THE AUTHORS OF THIS SOFTWARE DISCLAIM ALL
WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE
FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER
RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH
THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
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