| ROUTE6D(8) | System Manager's Manual | ROUTE6D(8) |
route6d — Routing
Information Protocol (RIP) for IPv6 daemon
route6d |
[-aDdhlnqSsu]
[-A prefix/preflen,if1[,if2,...]]
[-L prefix/preflen,if1[,if2,...]]
[-N if1[,if2,...]]
[-O prefix/preflen,if1[,if2,...]]
[-T if1[,if2,...]]
[-t tag] |
The route6d utility is a routing daemon
which supports RIP over IPv6.
The options are as follows:
-A
prefix/preflen,if1[,if2,...]route6d filters specific routes covered by
the aggregate and advertises the aggregated route
prefix/preflen to the
interfaces specified in the comma-separated interface list
if1[,if2,...].
route6d creates a static route to
prefix/preflen, with the
RTF_REJECT flag set, into the kernel routing
table.-aroute6d.-Droute6d to run in foreground mode (i.e. it does
not become a daemon process).-droute6d to run in foreground mode (i.e. it does
not become a daemon process).-h-L
prefix/preflen,if1[,if2,...]route6d will accept incoming routes that are in
prefix/preflen. If multiple
-L options are specified, all routes that match
any of the options are accepted. ::/0 is treated
specially as the default route, not “any route that has longer
prefix length than, or equal to, 0”. For example, with “-L
2001:db8::/32,if1 -L ::/0,if1”, route6d
will accept the default route and routes in the 2001:db8::/32 address
range, but no others. To accept any route, simply do not specify the
-L option.-lroute6d will not exchange site local
routes for safety reasons. This is because the semantics of site local
address space are rather vague, as the specification is still being worked
on, and there is no good way to define the site local boundary. With
-l, route6d will exchange
site local routes as well. It must not be used on site boundary routers,
since -l assumes that all interfaces are in the
same site.-N
if1[,if2,...]-n-O
prefix/preflen,if1[,if2,...]route6d will only advertise
routes that match
prefix/preflen.-qroute6d use listen-only mode. No
advertisement is sent.-S-s, except that the
split horizon rule does apply.-sroute6d advertise the statically defined
routes which exist in the kernel routing table when
route6d is invoked. Announcements obey the regular
split horizon rule.-T
if1[,if2,...]-t
tag0, or hexadecimal prefixed by
0x.-uUpon receipt of signal SIGINT or
SIGUSR1, route6d will log a
dump of the current internal state.
G. Malkin and R. Minnear, RIPng for IPv6, RFC 2080, January 1997.
route6d uses the advanced IPv6 API,
defined in RFC 3542, for communicating with peers using link-local
addresses.
Routing table manipulation differs from IPv6 implementation to
implementation. Currently route6d obeys the WIDE
Hydrangea/KAME IPv6 kernel, and will not be able to run on other
platforms.
Currently, route6d does not reduce the
rate of the triggered updates when consecutive updates arrive.
| March 4, 2023 | Debian |