Point-to-Point protocol daemon
pppd [options]
Neutrino
For details about the options, see
http://netbsd.gw.com/cgi-bin/man-cgi?pppd++NetBSD-4.0
in the NetBSD documentation.
The following are specific to Neutrino:
- ccp
- Enable CCP (Compression Control Protocol) negotiation. This protocol
is disabled by default.
- +chap
- Require the peer to authenticate itself using CHAP
(Challenge-Handshake Authentication Protocol)
authentication. Default is no authentication required
(usually a server option).
- confstr
- Write the server-supplied nameserver address to the
_CS_RESOLVE configuration string (the default).
- netmask n
- Set the interface netmask to n, a 32-bit
netmask in "decimal dot" notation (e.g.
255.255.255.0). The default depends on the class of the IP
address (usually a server option).
- noconfstr
- Don't write the server-supplied nameserver address to the _CS_RESOLVE configuration string.
- nologfd
- Don't send log messages to any file descriptor.
- noresconf
- Don't write the server-supplied nameserver address to /etc/resolv.conf file (the default).
- +pap
- Require the peer to authenticate itself using PAP
(Password Authentication Protocol). The default is no
authentication required (usually a server option).
- resconf
- Write the server-supplied nameserver address to the /etc/resolv.conf file.
- +stdinsecret
- Read PAP or CHAP secrets from standard input.
If you use this option, you need to specify explicitly a serial device
on the command line.
- usefd filedes
- Use this file descriptor to send or receive pppd packets
instead of opening a tty_name.
- useuserdns nameserver_IP
- Specify the nameserver to use.
This overrides any nameservers provided by the server.
- vj
- Enable Van jacobson style TCP/IP header compression in both transmit
and receive directions. The default is disabling VJ compressed.
The pppd daemon is used to establish TCP/IP
serial connections using the point-to-point protocol (PPP).
For more information, see
http://netbsd.gw.com/cgi-bin/man-cgi?pppd++NetBSD-4.0
in the NetBSD documentation.
 |
This utility needs to have the setuid ("set user ID")
bit set in its permissions.
If you use
mkefs,
mketfs,
or
mkifs
on a Windows host to include this utility in an image,
use the perms attribute to specify its permissions explicitly,
and the uid and gid attributes to set the ownership
correctly. |
The following signals have the specified effect when sent to
the pppd process:
- SIGINT, SIGTERM
- These signals cause pppd to terminate the
link (by closing LCP), restore the serial device settings,
and exit.
- SIGHUP
- Indicates that the physical layer has been disconnected;
pppd attempts to restore the serial device
settings and then exits.
- MS-CHAP
- Authentication support is client-side only. It can be used
to authenticate ourselves, but not the peer.
If you spawn pppd from another program and specify the
nodetach or updetach option, and if a signal is dropped
on pppd while it's running a connect or disconnect script,
pppd raises the signal on the entire process
group, including the parent (i.e. the program that spawned pppd).
This could cause the parent to terminate unexpectedly.
To avoid this, spawn pppd with the SPAWN_SETGROUP
set in the inheritence structure.
For more information, see
spawn()
in the Neutrino Library Reference.
/etc/autoconnect,
chat,
devc-*,
io-pkt*,
pppoed,
syslogd
http://netbsd.gw.com/cgi-bin/man-cgi?pppd++NetBSD-4.0
in the NetBSD documentation.
Based on
RFC 1144, RFC 1321, RFC
1332, RFC 1334, RFC 1549, RFC 1661,
RFC 1662, RFC 1962, RFC 1990