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in.routed(8)

System Administration Commands                                    in.routed(8)



NAME
       in.routed, routed - network routing daemon

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/sbin/in.routed [-AdghmnqsStVz] [-T tracefile [-v]]
        [-F net[/mask ][,metric]] [-P params]

DESCRIPTION
       The  daemon  in.routed, often referred to as routed, is invoked at boot
       time to manage the network routing tables. It uses Routing  Information
       Protocol,  RIPv1 (RFC 1058), RIPv2 (RFC 2453), and Internet Router Dis‐
       covery Protocol (RFC 1256) to maintain the kernel  routing  table.  The
       RIPv1 protocol is based on the reference 4.3BSD daemon.


       in.routed is managed by means of the service management facility (SMF),
       using the fault management resource identifier (FMRI):

         svc:/network/routing/route:default



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


       When  started  (or  when  a  network  interface  is  later  turned on),
       in.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, in.routed deletes all
       pre-existing  non-static  routes  in the kernel table. Static routes in
       the kernel table are preserved and included 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
       connected networks. After transmitting a RIP request and Router Discov‐
       ery Advertisements or Solicitations on  a  new  interface,  the  daemon
       enters  a  loop, listening for RIP request and response and Router Dis‐
       covery packets from other hosts.


       When a request packet is received, in.routed formulates a  reply  based
       on  the  information  maintained  in  its internal tables. The response
       packet generated 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 an interface (see
       ifconfig(8)), so setting the metric on an interface is an effective way
       to steer traffic.


       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,
       provided they are from one of the several currently recognized gateways
       or advertise a better metric than at least one of  the  existing  gate‐
       ways.


       When  an  update  is  applied,  in.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 contain‐
       ing only recently changed routes is sent.


       In addition to processing incoming packets, in.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  dele‐
       tion. Deletions are delayed until the route has been advertised with an
       infnite metric to ensure 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
       in.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  rele‐
       vant 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 out‐
       put (see netstat(8)), then the cable or some other part of  the  inter‐
       face  is  assumed to be disconnected or broken, and routes are adjusted
       appropriately.


       The Internet Router Discovery Protocol is handled similarly.  When  the
       daemon  is  supplying  RIP routes, it also listens for Router Discovery
       Solicitations and sends Advertisements. When it is quiet and  listening
       to other RIP routers, it sends Solicitations and listens for Advertise‐
       ments. 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 Discovery 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. See gate‐
       ways(5).


       While using Router Discovery (which happens by default when the  system
       has  a  single network interface and a Router Discover Advertisement is
       received), there is a single default route and  a  variable  number  of
       redirected  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
       interfaces.  Thus,  multi-homed  hosts  running  with -q might need the
       no_rdisc argument described below.


       To support "legacy" systems that can handle neither  RIPv2  nor  Router
       Discovery, you can use the pm_rdisc parameter in the /etc/gateways. See
       gateways(5).


       By default, neither Router Discovery advertisements  nor  solicitations
       are  sent  over  point-to-point links. The Solaris OS uses a netmask of
       all ones (255.255.255.255) on point-to-point links.


       in.routed supports the notion of "distant" passive or active  gateways.
       When  the  daemon  is  started, it reads the file /etc/gateways to find
       such distant gateways that cannot be  located  using  only  information
       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
       responses are sent to the distant active gateway. If no  responses  are
       received, the associated route is deleted from the kernel table and RIP
       responses are advertised via other interfaces. If the  distant  gateway
       resumes sending RIP responses, the associated route is restored.


       Distant  active  gateways  can  be  useful on media that do not support
       broadcasts or multicasts but otherwise act like classic  shared  media,
       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 situa‐
       tions to avoid generating lists of inferred host routes.


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

OPTIONS
       Listed below are available options.  Any  other  argument  supplied  is
       interpreted  as  the  name  of a file in which the actions of in.routed
       should be logged. It is better to use -T (described below)  instead  of
       appending  the  name  of  the trace file to the command. Associated SMF
       properties for these options are described, and can be set by means  of
       a command of the form:

         # routeadm -m route:default name=value


       -A

           Do  not  ignore  RIPv2 authentication if we do not care about RIPv2
           authentication. This option is required for  conformance  with  RFC
           2453.  However, it makes no sense and breaks using RIP as a discov‐
           ery protocol to ignore all RIPv2 packets that carry  authentication
           when  this  machine does not care about authentication. This option
           is equivalent to setting the ignore_auth property value to false.


       -d

           Do not run in the background. This option is meant for  interactive
           use and is not usable under the SMF.


       -F net[/mask][,metric]

           Minimize routes in transmissions via interfaces with addresses that
           match  net  (network  number)/mask  (netmask),  and  synthesizes  a
           default  route  to  this  machine with the metric. The intent is to
           reduce RIP traffic on slow, point-to-point 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  rout‐
           ing  loops.  Notice also that more than one interface can match the
           specified network number and mask. See also -g. Use of this  option
           is equivalent to setting the minimize_routes property.


       -g

           Used on internetwork routers to offer a route to the "default" des‐
           tination. 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. A larger metric will be
           used  with  the  latter  alternatives,  reducing  the spread of the
           potentially dangerous default route. The -g (or -P) option is typi‐
           cally  used on a gateway to the Internet, or on a gateway that uses
           another routing protocol whose routes are  not  reported  to  other
           local  routers.  Note that because a metric of 1 is used, this fea‐
           ture is dangerous. Its use more often creates chaos with a  routing
           loop than solves problems. Use of this option is equivalent to set‐
           ting the offer_default_route property to true.


       -h

           Causes host or point-to-point routes not to be advertised, provided
           there  is  a network route going the same direction. That is a lim‐
           ited kind of aggregation. This option is useful on gateways to LANs
           that  have  other  gateway  machines  connected with point-to-point
           links such as SLIP. Use of this option is equivalent to setting the
           advertise_host_routes property to false.


       -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 popularity of  the
           server.  It is effective only when the machine is supplying routing
           information, because there is  more  than  one  interface.  The  -m
           option overrides the -q option to the limited extent of advertising
           the host route. Use of this option is  equivalent  to  setting  the
           advertise_host_routes_primary property to true.


       -n

           Do  not  install routes in kernel. By default, routes are installed
           in the kernel. Use of this option  is  equivalent  to  setting  the
           install_routes property to false.


       -P params

           Equivalent to adding the parameter line params to the /etc/gateways
           file. Can also be set by means of the parameters property.


       -q

           Opposite of the -s option. This is the default when only one inter‐
           face is present. With this explicit option, the daemon is always in
           "quiet mode" for RIP and does not  supply  routing  information  to
           other  computers.  Use  of this option is equivalent to setting the
           quiet_mode property to true.


       -s

           Force in.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 global IPv4 forwarding  is
           turned  on (by means of ipadm(8)). Use of this option is equivalent
           to setting the supply_routes property to true.


       -S

           If in.routed is not acting as an internetwork  router,  instead  of
           entering  the  whole  routing table in the kernel, it enters only a
           default route for each internetwork router. This reduces the memory
           requirements without losing any routing reliability. This option is
           provided for compatibility with the previous, RIPv1-only in.routed.
           Use  of this option is generally discouraged. Use of this option is
           equivalent to setting the default_routes_only property to true.


       -t

           Runs in the foreground (as with -d) and logs the  contents  of  the
           packets  received  (as  with  -zz).  This is for compatibility with
           prior versions of Solaris and has no SMF equivalent.


       -T tracefile

           Increases the debugging level to at least 1  and  causes  debugging
           information  to  be appended to the trace file. Because of security
           concerns, do not to run in.routed routinely with  tracing  directed
           to a file. Use of this option is equivalent to setting the log_file
           property to trace file path.


       -v

           Enables  debug.  Similar  to  -z,  except,  where   -z   increments
           trace_level,  -v  sets  trace_level  to 1. Also, -v requires the -T
           option. Use of this option is equivalent to setting the debug prop‐
           erty to true.


       -V

           Displays the version of the daemon.


       -z

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


FILES
       /etc/gateways    List of distant  gateways  and  general  configuration
                        options for in.routed. See gateways(5).


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       tab()  box; cw(2.75i) |cw(2.75i) lw(2.75i) |lw(2.75i) ATTRIBUTE TYPEAT‐
       TRIBUTE VALUE _ Availabilitysystem/network/routing


SEE ALSO
       ioctl(2),   inet(3C),   icmp(4P),   inet(4P),   udp(4P),   gateways(5),
       attributes(7), ipadm(8), route(8), routeadm(8), rtquery(8), svcadm(8)


       Internet  Transport  Protocols,  XSIS  028112, Xerox System Integration
       Standard


       Routing Information Protocol, v2 (RFC 2453, STD 0056, November 1998)


       RIP-v2 MD5 Authentication (RFC 2082, January 1997)


       Routing Information Protocol, v1 (RFC 1058, June 1988)


       ICMP Router Discovery Messages (RFC 1256, September 1991)

NOTES
       In keeping with its intended design, this daemon deviates from RFC 2453
       in two notable ways:

           o      By  default,  in.routed does not discard authenticated RIPv2
                  messages when RIP authentication is not configured. There is
                  little  to  gain  from  dropping  authenticated packets when
                  RIPv1 listeners will  gladly  process  them.  Using  the  -A
                  option causes in.routed to conform to the RFC in this case.


           o      Unauthenticated  RIP requests are never discarded, even when
                  RIP authentication is configured. Forwarding tables are  not
                  secret  and can be inferred through other means such as test
                  traffic. RIP is also the most common router-discovery proto‐
                  col, and hosts need to send queries that will be answered.



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



Oracle Solaris 11.4               11 Dec 2020                     in.routed(8)
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