LinuxCommandLibrary

pppoe-relay

user-space PPPoE relay agent.

SYNOPSIS

pppoe-relay [options]

DESCRIPTION

pppoe-relay is a user-space relay agent for PPPoE (Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet) for Linux. pppoe-relay works in concert with the pppoe client and pppoe-server server. See the OPERATION section later in this manual for details on how pppoe-relay works.

OPTIONS

-S interface

Adds the Ethernet interface interface to the list of interfaces managed by pppoe-relay. Only PPPoE servers may be connected to this interface.

-C interface

Adds the Ethernet interface interface to the list of interfaces managed by pppoe-relay. Only PPPoE clients may be connected to this interface.

-B interface

Adds the Ethernet interface interface to the list of interfaces managed by pppoe-relay. Both PPPoE clients and servers may be connected to this interface.

-n num

Allows at most num concurrent PPPoE sessions. If not specified, the default is 5000. num can range from 1 to 65534.

-i timeout

Specifies the session idle timeout. If both peers in a session are idle for more than timeout seconds, the session is terminated. If timeout is specified as zero, sessions will never be terminated because of idleness.

Note that the idle-session expiry routine is never run more frequently than every 30 seconds, so the timeout is approximate. The default value for timeout is 600 seconds (10 minutes.)

-F

The -F option causes pppoe-relay not to fork into the background; instead, it remains in the foreground.

-h

The -h option prints a brief usage message and exits.

OPERATION

pppoe-relay listens for incoming PPPoE PADI frames on all interfaces specified with -B or -C options. When a PADI frame appears, pppoe-relay adds a Relay-Session-ID tag and broadcasts the PADI on all interfaces specified with -B or -S options (except the interface on which the frame arrived.)

Any PADO frames received are relayed back to the client which sent the PADI (assuming they contain valid Relay-Session-ID tags.) Likewise, PADR frames from clients are relayed back to the matching access concentrator.

When a PADS frame is received, pppoe-relay enters the two peers’ MAC addresses and session-ID’s into a hash table. (The session-ID seen by the access concentrator may be different from that seen by the client; pppoe-relay must renumber sessions to avoid the possibility of duplicate session-ID’s.) Whenever either peer sends a session frame, pppoe-relay looks up the session entry in the hash table and relays the frame to the correct peer.

When a PADT frame is received, pppoe-relay relays it to the peer and deletes the session entry from its hash table.

If a client and server crash (or frames are lost), PADT frames may never be sent, and pppoe-relay’s hash table can fill up with stale sessions. Therefore, a session-cleaning routine runs periodically, and removes old sessions from the hash table. A session is considered "old" if no traffic has been seen within timeout seconds. When a session is deleted because of a timeout, a PADT frame is sent to each peer to make certain that they are aware the session has been killed.

EXAMPLE INVOCATIONS

pppoe-relay -C eth0 -S eth1

The example above relays frames between PPPoE clients on the eth0 network and PPPoE servers on the eth1 network.

pppoe-relay -B eth0 -B eth1

This example is a transparent relay -- frames are relayed between any mix of clients and servers on the eth0 and eth1 networks.

pppoe-relay -S eth0 -C eth1 -C eth2 -C eth3

This example relays frames between servers on the eth0 network and clients on the eth1, eth2 and eth3 networks.

AUTHORS

pppoe-relay was written by David F. Skoll <dfs@roaringpenguin.com>.

The pppoe home page is http://www.roaringpenguin.com/pppoe/.

SEE ALSO

pppd(8), pppoe(8), pppoe-sniff(8), pppoe-relay(8), /usr/share/doc/pppoe/README.Debian.gz

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