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RADVD.CONF(5)                                                                                                      RADVD.CONF(5)



NAME
       radvd.conf - configuration file of the router advertisement daemon radvd

DESCRIPTION
       This file describes the information which is included in the router advertisement (RA) of a specific interface.

       The file contains one or more interface definitions of the form:

       interface name {
            list of interface specific options
            list of prefix definitions
            list of clients (IPv6 addresses) to advertise to
            list of route definitions
            list of RDNSS definitions
            list of DNSSL definitions
       };

       All the possible interface specific options are detailed below.  Each option has to be terminated by a semicolon.

       Prefix definitions are of the form:

       prefix prefix/length {
            list of prefix specific options
       };

       Prefix  can be network prefix or the address of the inferface.  The address of interface should be used when using Mobile
       IPv6 extensions.

       Special prefix "::/64" is also supported on systems that implement getifaddrs() (on other systems, configuration  activa-
       tion fails and radvd exits).  When configured, radvd picks all non-link-local prefix assigned to the interface and starts
       advertising it.  This may be applicable in non-6to4 scenarios where the upstream prefix might  change.   This  option  is
       incompatible with Base6to4Interface option.  AdvRouterAddr option is always enabled when this configuration is used.

       All the possible prefix specific options are described below.  Each option has to be terminated by a semicolon.

       Decimal  values  are allowed only for MinDelayBetweenRAs, MaxRtrAdvInterval and MinRtrAdvInterval.  Decimal values should
       be used only when using Mobile IPv6 extensions.

       Route definitions are of the form:

       route prefix/length {
            list of route specific options
       };

       The prefix of a route definition should be network prefix; it can be used to advertise more specific routes to the hosts.

       RDNSS (Recursive DNS server) definitions are of the form:

       RDNSS ip [ip] [ip] {
            list of rdnss specific options
       };

       DNSSL (DNS Search List) definitions are of the form:

       DNSSL suffix [suffix] [suffix] [...] {
            list of dnssl specific options
       };

       By default radvd will send route advertisements so that every node on the link can use them.  The list of  clients  (IPv6
       address)  to advertise to, and accept route solicitations from can be configured.  If done, radvd does not send send mes-
       sages to the multicast addresses but to the configured unicast addresses only.  Solicitations from  other  addresses  are
       refused.   This  is  similar to UnicastOnly but includes periodic messages and incoming client access configuration.  See
       examples section for a use case of this.

       The definitions are of the form:

       clients {
               list of IPv6 addresses
       };


INTERFACE SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       IgnoreIfMissing on|off

              A flag indicating whether or not the interface is ignored if it does not exist at  start-up.   By  default,  radvd
              exits.

              This is useful for dynamic interfaces which are not active when radvd starts or which are dynamically disabled and
              re-enabled during the time radvd runs.

              Current versions of radvd automatically try to re-enable interfaces.

              Enabling IgnoreIfMissing also quenches certain warnings in log messages relating to missing interfaces.

              Default: on


       AdvSendAdvert on|off

              A flag indicating whether or not the router sends periodic router advertisements and responds to router  solicita-
              tions.

              This option no longer has to be specified first, but it needs to be on to enable advertisement on this interface.

              Default: off


       UnicastOnly on|off

              Indicates  that  the interface link type only supports unicast.  This will prevent unsolicited advertisements from
              being sent, and will cause solicited advertisements to be unicast to the soliciting node.  This option  is  neces-
              sary for non-broadcast, multiple-access links, such as ISATAP.

              Default: off


       MaxRtrAdvInterval seconds

              The  maximum  time allowed between sending unsolicited multicast router advertisements from the interface, in sec-
              onds.

              Must be no less than 4 seconds and no greater than 1800 seconds.

              Minimum when using Mobile IPv6 extensions: 0.07.

              For values less than 0.2 seconds, 0.02 seconds is added to account for scheduling granularities  as  specified  in
              RFC3775.

              Default: 600 seconds


       MinRtrAdvInterval seconds

              The  minimum  time allowed between sending unsolicited multicast router advertisements from the interface, in sec-
              onds.

              Must be no less than 3 seconds and no greater than 0.75 * MaxRtrAdvInterval.

              Minimum when using Mobile IPv6 extensions: 0.03.

              Default: 0.33 * MaxRtrAdvInterval


       MinDelayBetweenRAs seconds

              The minimum time allowed between sending multicast router advertisements from the interface, in seconds.

              This applies to solicited multicast RAs.  This is  defined  as  the  protocol  constant  MIN_DELAY_BETWEEN_RAS  in
              RFC4861.  MIPv6 redefines this parameter to have a minimum of 0.03 seconds.

              Minimum when using Mobile IPv6 extensions: 0.03.

              Default: 3


       AdvManagedFlag on|off

              When  set,  hosts  use  the  administered  (stateful)  protocol  for  address autoconfiguration in addition to any
              addresses autoconfigured using stateless address autoconfiguration.  The use of this  flag  is  described  in  RFC
              4862.

              Default: off


       AdvOtherConfigFlag on|off

              When set, hosts use the administered (stateful) protocol for autoconfiguration of other (non-address) information.
              The use of this flag is described in RFC 4862.

              Default: off


       AdvLinkMTU integer

              The MTU option is used in  router advertisement messages to insure that all nodes on a link use the same MTU value
              in those cases where the link MTU is not well known.

              If specified, i.e. not 0, must not be smaller than 1280 and not greater than the maximum MTU allowed for this link
              (e.g. ethernet has a maximum MTU of 1500. See RFC 4864).

              Default: 0


       AdvReachableTime milliseconds

              The time, in milliseconds, that a node assumes a neighbor is reachable after having received a  reachability  con-
              firmation.   Used  by  the  Neighbor Unreachability Detection algorithm (see Section 7.3 of RFC 4861).  A value of
              zero means unspecified (by this router).

              Must be no greater than 3,600,000 milliseconds (1 hour).

              Default: 0


       AdvRetransTimer milliseconds

              The time, in milliseconds, between retransmitted Neighbor Solicitation messages.  Used by address  resolution  and
              the  Neighbor  Unreachability  Detection  algorithm (see Sections 7.2 and 7.3 of RFC 4861).  A value of zero means
              unspecified (by this router).

              Default: 0


       AdvCurHopLimit integer

              The default value that should be placed in the Hop Count field of the IP header for outgoing (unicast) IP packets.
              The  value  should  be  set  to  the  current diameter of the Internet.  The value zero means unspecified (by this
              router).

              Default: 64


       AdvDefaultLifetime seconds

              The lifetime associated with the default router in units of seconds.  The maximum value corresponds to 18.2 hours.
              A  lifetime  of  0  indicates  that the router is not a default router and should not appear on the default router
              list.  The router lifetime applies only to the router's usefulness as a default  router;  it  does  not  apply  to
              information  contained  in  other  message fields or options.  Options that need time limits for their information
              include their own lifetime fields.

              Must be either zero or between MaxRtrAdvInterval and 9000 seconds.

              Default: 3 * MaxRtrAdvInterval (Minimum 1 second).


       AdvDefaultPreference low|medium|high

              The preference associated with the default router, as either "low", "medium", or "high".

              Default: medium


       AdvSourceLLAddress on|off

              When set, the link-layer address of the outgoing interface is included in the RA.

              Default: on


       AdvHomeAgentFlag on|off

              When set, indicates that sending router is able to serve as Mobile IPv6 Home  Agent.   When  set,  minimum  limits
              specified by Mobile IPv6 are used for MinRtrAdvInterval and MaxRtrAdvInterval.

              Default: off


       AdvHomeAgentInfo on|off

              When set, Home Agent Information Option (specified by Mobile IPv6) is included in Router Advertisements.  AdvHome-
              AgentFlag must also be set when using this option.

              Default: off


       HomeAgentLifetime seconds

              The length of time in seconds (relative to the time the packet is sent) that the router is  offering  Mobile  IPv6
              Home  Agent  services.   A  value  0  must not be used.  The maximum lifetime is 65520 seconds (18.2 hours).  This
              option is ignored, if AdvHomeAgentInfo is not set.

              If both HomeAgentLifetime and HomeAgentPreference are set to their default values, Home Agent  Information  Option
              will not be sent.

              Default: AdvDefaultLifetime


       HomeAgentPreference integer

              The  preference for the Home Agent sending this Router Advertisement.  Values greater than 0 indicate more prefer-
              able Home Agent, values less than 0 indicate less preferable Home Agent.  This  option  is  ignored,  if  AdvHome-
              AgentInfo is not set.

              If  both  HomeAgentLifetime and HomeAgentPreference are set to their default values, Home Agent Information Option
              will not be sent.

              Default: 0


       AdvMobRtrSupportFlag on|off

              When set, the Home Agent signals it supports Mobile Router registrations  (specified  by  NEMO  Basic).   AdvHome-
              AgentInfo must also be set when using this option.

              Default: off


       AdvIntervalOpt on|off

              When  set,  Advertisement  Interval  Option (specified by Mobile IPv6) is included in Router Advertisements.  When
              set, minimum limits specified by Mobile IPv6 are used for MinRtrAdvInterval and MaxRtrAdvInterval.

              The advertisement interval is based on the configured MaxRtrAdvInterval parameter except where this is  less  than
              200ms.  In this case, the advertised interval is ( MaxRtrAdvInterval + 20ms ).

              Default: off


PREFIX SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       AdvOnLink on|off

              When  set, indicates that this prefix can be used for on-link determination.  When not set the advertisement makes
              no statement about on-link or off-link properties of the prefix.  For instance,  the  prefix  might  be  used  for
              address configuration with some of the addresses belonging to the prefix being on-link and others being off-link.

              Default: on


       AdvAutonomous on|off

              When set, indicates that this prefix can be used for autonomous address configuration as specified in RFC 4862.

              Default: on


       AdvRouterAddr on|off

              When  set,  indicates  that  the  address of interface is sent instead of network prefix, as is required by Mobile
              IPv6.  When set, minimum limits specified by Mobile IPv6 are used for MinRtrAdvInterval and MaxRtrAdvInterval.

              Default: off


       AdvValidLifetime seconds|infinity

              The length of time in seconds (relative to the time the packet is sent) that the prefix is valid for  the  purpose
              of  on-link  determination.   The  symbolic  value  infinity  represents  infinity  (i.e.  a value of all one bits
              (0xffffffff)).  The valid lifetime is also used by RFC 4862.

              Note that clients will ignore AdvValidLifetime of an existing prefix if  the  lifetime  is  below  two  hours,  as
              required in RFC 4862 Section 5.5.3 point e).

              Note: RFC4861's suggested default value is significantly longer: 30 days.

              Default: 86400 seconds (1 day)


       AdvPreferredLifetime seconds|infinity

              The  length  of time in seconds (relative to the time the packet is sent) that addresses generated from the prefix
              via stateless address autoconfiguration remain preferred.  The symbolic value infinity represents infinity (i.e. a
              value of all one bits (0xffffffff)).  See RFC 4862.

              Note: RFC4861's suggested default value is significantly longer: 7 days.

              Default: 14400 seconds (4 hours)


       DeprecatePrefix on|off

              Upon shutdown, this option will cause radvd to deprecate the prefix by announcing it in the radvd shutdown RA with
              a zero preferred lifetime and a valid lifetime slightly greater than 2 hours. This will encourage end-nodes  using
              this prefix to deprecate any associated addresses immediately. Note that this option should only be used when only
              one router is announcing the prefix onto the link, otherwise end-nodes will deprecate associated addresses despite
              the prefix still being valid for preferred use.

              See RFC4862, section 5.5.3., "Router Advertisement Processing", part (e).

              Default: off


       DecrementLifetimes on|off

              This  option  causes  radvd to decrement the values of the preferred and valid lifetimes for the prefix over time.
              The lifetimes are decremented by the number of seconds since the last RA. If radvd receives a SIGUSR1  signal,  it
              will  reset  the  values  of  the  preferred  and valid lifetimes back to the initial values used by radvd when it
              started. If radvd never receives a SIGUSR1 signal, it will continue to decrement the lifetimes until the preferred
              lifetime  reaches  zero.  After  a final RA with a zero value preferred lifetime, radvd will cease to announce the
              prefix. If a SIGUSR1 signal then causes the lifetimes to be reset, the prefix will then re-appear in the RAs.

              This option is intended to be used in conjunction with a DHCPv6 client that is using the Identity Association  for
              Prefix  Delegation  (IA_PD) option to acquire a prefix from a Delegating Router for use by a Requesting Router. In
              this scenario, the prefix(es) from within the delegated prefix that are announced by radvd would age  in  parallel
              with  and  at  the  same rate as the delegated prefix, and expire at approximately the same time, if the delegated
              prefix's life isn't extended.

              See RFC3633, "IPv6 Prefix Options for Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) version 6".

              Default: off


       Base6Interface name

              If this options is specified, this prefix will be combined with the IPv6 address of  the  interface  specified  by
              name.  The resulting prefix length will be 64.


       Base6to4Interface name

              If  this  option  is  specified, this prefix will be combined with the IPv4 address of interface name to produce a
              valid 6to4 prefix. The first 16 bits of this prefix will be replaced by 2002 and the next 32 bits of  this  prefix
              will  be  replaced  by the IPv4 address assigned to interface name at configuration time. The remaining 80 bits of
              the prefix (including the SLA ID) will be advertised as specified in the configuration file.  See the next section
              for an example.

              If  interface  name  is  not available at configuration time, a warning will be written to the log and this prefix
              will be disabled until radvd is reconfigured.

              This option enables systems with dynamic IPv4 addresses  to  update  their  advertised  6to4  prefixes  simply  by
              restarting radvd or sending a SIGHUP signal to cause radvd to reconfigure itself.

              Note that 6to4 prefixes derived from dynamically-assigned IPv4 addresses should be advertised with a significantly
              shorter lifetime (see the AdvValidLifetime and AdvPreferredLifetime options).

              For more information on 6to4, see RFC 3056.

              Default: 6to4 is not used


ROUTE SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       AdvRouteLifetime seconds|infinity

              The lifetime associated with the route in units of seconds.  The symbolic value infinity represents infinity (i.e.
              a value of all one bits (0xffffffff)).

              Default: 3 * MaxRtrAdvInterval


       AdvRoutePreference low|medium|high

              The preference associated with the default router, as either "low", "medium", or "high".

              Default: medium


       RemoveRoute on|off

              Upon  shutdown,  announce  this  route  with a zero second lifetime. This should cause the route to be immediately
              removed from the receiving end-nodes' route table.

              Default: on


RDNSS SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       AdvRDNSSLifetime seconds|infinity
              The maximum duration how long the RDNSS entries are used for name resolution. A value of 0  means  the  nameserver
              must  no longer be used. The value, if not 0, must be at least MaxRtrAdvInterval.  To ensure stale RDNSS info gets
              removed in a timely fashion, this should not be greater than 2*MaxRtrAdvInterval.

              Default: 2*MaxRtrAdvInterval


       FlushRDNSS on|off

              Upon shutdown, announce the RDNSS entries with a zero second lifetime. This should cause the RDNSS addresses to be
              immediately removed from the end-nodes' list of Recursive DNS Servers.

              Default: on


DNSSL SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       AdvDNSSLLifetime seconds|infinity;
              The  maximum  duration  how  long  the  DNSSL entries are used for name resolution.  A value of 0 means the suffix
              should no longer be used.  The value, if not 0, must be at least MaxRtrAdvInterval.  To ensure  stale  DNSSL  info
              gets removed in a timely fashion, this should not be greater than 2*MaxRtrAdvInterval.

              Default: 2*MaxRtrAdvInterval


       FlushDNSSL on|off

              Upon  shutdown,  announce the DNSSL entries with a zero second lifetime. This should cause the DNSSL entries to be
              immediately removed from the end-nodes' DNS search list.

              Default: on


EXAMPLES
       interface eth0
       {
               AdvSendAdvert on;
               prefix 2001:db8:0:1::/64
               {
                       AdvOnLink on;
                       AdvAutonomous on;
               };
       };

       It says that router advertisement daemon should advertise (AdvSendAdvert on;)  the  prefix  2001:db8:0:1::  which  has  a
       lenght  of  64  on the interface eth0.  Also the prefix should be marked as autonomous (AdvAutonomous on;) and as on-link
       (AdvOnLink on;).  All the other options are left on their default values.

       To support movement detection of Mobile IPv6 Mobile Nodes, the address of interface should be  used  instead  of  network
       prefix:

       interface eth0
       {
               AdvSendAdvert on;
               prefix 2001:db8:0:1::4/64
               {
                       AdvOnLink on;
                       AdvAutonomous on;
                       AdvRouterAddr on;
               };
       };

       For  6to4  support,  include  the Base6to4Interface option in each prefix section. When using a dynamic IPv4 address, set
       small prefix lifetimes to prevent hosts from retaining unreachable prefixes after a new IPv4 address has  been  assigned.
       When advertising to on a dynamic interface (e.g., Bluetooth), skip the interface if it is not active yet.

       interface bnep0
       {
               IgnoreIfMissing on;
               AdvSendAdvert on;

               # Advertise at least every 30 seconds
               MaxRtrAdvInterval 30;

               prefix 0:0:0:5678::/64
               {
                       AdvOnLink on;
                       AdvAutonomous on;
                       Base6to4Interface ppp0;

                       # Very short lifetimes for dynamic addresses
                       AdvValidLifetime 300;
                       AdvPreferredLifetime 120;
               };
       };

       Since  6to4  is enabled, the prefix will be advertised as 2002:WWXX:YYZZ:5678::/64, where WW.XX.YY.ZZ is the IPv4 address
       of ppp0 at configuration time. (IPv6 addresses are written in hexadecimal whereas IPv4 addresses are written in  decimal,
       so the IPv4 address WW.XX.YY.ZZ in the 6to4 prefix will be represented in hex.)

       In  this  specific  case,  the  configuration scripts may send HUP signal to radvd when taking bnep0 up or down to notify
       about the status; in the current radvd releases, sending HUP is no longer mandatory when the link comes back up.

       interface eth0
       {
               AdvSendAdvert on;
               prefix 2001:db8:0:1::/64
               {
                       AdvOnLink on;
                       AdvAutonomous on;
               };
               clients
               {
                       fe80::21f:16ff:fe06:3aab;
                       fe80::21d:72ff:fe96:aaff;
               };
       };

       This configuration would only announce the prefix to fe80::21f:16ff:fe06:3aab and fe80::21d:72ff:fe96:aaff.  Furthermore,
       all RA requests of other clients are denied.

       This may come in handy if you want to roll out IPv6 only partially because some clients are broken or untested.



FILES
       /usr/sbin/radvd
       /etc/radvd.conf
       /var/run/radvd/radvd.pid
       /var/log/radvd.log


CREDIT
       The description of the different flags and variables is in large parts taken from RFC 4861.


RFCS
       Narten,  T., Nordmark, E., Simpson, W., and H. Soliman, "Neighbor Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)", RFC 4861, September
       2007.

       Thomson, S., Narten, T., T. Jinmei, "IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration", RFC 4862, September 2007.

       Deering, S., and R. Hinden, "IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.

       Conta, A., Deering, S., and M. Gupta "Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMPv6) for  the  Internet  Protocol  Version  6
       (IPv6)", RFC 4443, March 2006.

       Crawford, M., "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over Ethernet Networks", RFC 2464, December 1998.

       Carpenter B., K. Moore, "Connection of IPv6 Domains via IPv4 Clouds", RFC 3056, February 2001. (6to4 specification)

       Draves, R., D. Thaler, "Default Router Preferences and More-Specific Routes", RFC 4191, November 2005.

       Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support in IPv6", RFC 3775, June 2004.

       Devarapalli,  V.,  Wakikawa, R., Petrescu, A., and P. Thubert "Network Mobility (NEMO) Basic Support Protocol", RFC 3963,
       January 2005.

       J. Jeong, S. Park, L. Beloeil, and S. Madanapalli, "IPv6 Router Advertisement Options for DNS Configuration",  RFC  6106,
       November 2010.


SEE ALSO
       radvd(8), radvdump(8)


BUGS
       radvd  does  not  support  splitting  up RAs to multiple packets (RFC4861 6.2.3 last paragraph).  In practise this limits
       advertising to ~45 prefixes on a link, but there is no reason to be able to so.




radvd 1.8.2                                                4 Jan 2011                                              RADVD.CONF(5)

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