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115 lines
3.6 KiB
Plaintext
115 lines
3.6 KiB
Plaintext
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## $Id$
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## This file contains a sample configuration for the network shown
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## below:
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##
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## -------------- ---------- -------------
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## | DHCP Server | | | | |
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## | 192.168.8.66 |------<eth1>| dhcp-fwd |<eth2>------| Clients |
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## | | | | | |
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## -------------- ---------- -------------
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##
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## By default, the dhcp-fwd agent looks at /etc/dhcp-fwd.conf
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## for this file. By using the '-c' option when calling dhcp-fwd, this
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## path can be changed.
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######### ENVIRONMENT SETTINGS #########
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####
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###
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## The server will drop its privileges and goes into a chroot-jail
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## after doing its initialization. The following parameters are
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## defining the needed parameters:
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## User and group names/ids. It can be a numeric id or a resolvable
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## alphanumeric-name.
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##
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## WARNING: when compiled with dietlibc the user-/group-names must be
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## resolvable by files-NSS. LDAP or NIS NSS will not work so
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## the numeric ids must be used
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user daemon
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group daemon
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## chroot() path
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chroot /var/run/dhcp-fwd
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## Logfile and loglevel. The logfile-location is relatively to the
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## directory where dhcp-fwd was started and not to the chroot-directory.
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##
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## The loglevel option is not supported yet.
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logfile /var/log/dhcp-fwd.log
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loglevel 1
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## SysV pidfile; contains the PID of the daemon-process and will be
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## written with root-privileges
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pidfile /var/run/dhcp-fwd.pid
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## Set limit for resources. When using much interfaces or servers
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## below you will need to increase some values. Same holds when not
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## using dietlibc. Use '-1' as the value to disable the upper limit
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## for the given resource.
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##
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## Look into /proc/<pid>/status to find out the real usage of the
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## resources.
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ulimit core 0
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ulimit stack 64K
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ulimit data 32K
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ulimit rss 200K
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ulimit nproc 0
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ulimit nofile 0
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ulimit as 0
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######### INTERFACE SETTINGS #########
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####
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###
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## The interface where the forwarder listens for messages. There must
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## be specified BOTH the server-side and client-side interfaces!
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##
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## Each interface will be identified by its system-wide name
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## (e.g. eth0). After this it must be told whether there are
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## clients and servers, and if it is allowed to send broadcast
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## messages to clients. The bcast flags will be IGNORED when
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## forwarding messages to servers.
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# IFNAME clients servers bcast
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if eth2 true false true
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if eth1 false true true
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## Each interface can be given an RFC 3046 agent ID. The 'name' config
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## option sets this value; if an interface is not specified here, the
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## IFNAME will be assumed.
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# IFNAME agent-id
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name eth2 ws-c
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## Each interface can be given an specific IP to be filled into the
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## 'giaddr' field.
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##
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## BEWARE: because the outgoing DHCP message will contain the "normal" IP
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## address of the outgoing-interface in its IP-header, some additional
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## work in the system must be done. You can e.g. add an iptables rule to
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## the 'nat' table similarly to this:
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##
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## | Chain POSTROUTING (policy ACCEPT)
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## | target prot opt source destination
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## | SNAT udp -- 192.168.0.6 192.168.8.66 udp spt:68 dpt:67 to:192.168.2.255
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# ip eth0 192.168.2.255
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######### SERVER SETTINGS #########
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####
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###
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## Definitions of the servers. There must be told the type ('ip' or
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## 'bcast') and the address. When using 'ip', the address is a non-bcast
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## IPv4 address (dotted, DNS-names are NOT supported); and when using
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## 'bcast' servers, the address is an IFNAME.
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# TYPE address
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server ip 192.168.8.66
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#server bcast eth1
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