radvd
is the router advertisement daemon for IPv6. It listens to router
solicitations and sends router advertisements as described in
"Neighbor Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)" (RFC 2461).
With these advertisements hosts can automatically configure their
addresses and some other parameters. They also can choose a default
router based on these advertisements.
Note that if debugging is not enabled,
radvd
will not start if IPv6 forwarding is disabled. IPv6 forwarding can be
controlled via sysctl(8),
net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding
on Linux or
net.inet6.ip6.forwarding
on BSD.
Similarly, the configuration file must not be writable by others, and if
non-root operation is requested, not even by self/own group.
OPTIONS
For every one character option there is also a long option, which
is listed right next to the "short" option name:
-v, --version
Displays the version of
radvd
and then aborts.
-h, --help
Displays a short usage description and then aborts.
-d debuglevel, --debug debuglevel
With this option you turn on debugging information. The debugging level is
an integer in the range from 1 to 4, from quiet to very verbose. A
debugging level of 0 completely turns off debugging. If a debugging level
greater than 0 is used,
radvd
doesn't background itself on start. The default debugging level is 0.
-C configfile, --config configfile
Specifies an alternate config file. Normally the compiled in default
/etc/radvd.conf
is used.
-p pidfile, --pidfile pidfile
Specifies an alternate pidfile. Normally the compiled in default
/var/run/radvd/radvd.pid
is used.
-m method, --method method
Specifies the logging method to use. Possibly values are:
none
Completely disables any logging.
logfile
Logs to the logfile which is specified by the
-l
option. If no logfile is specified on the command line, then
a compiled in default is used (see next option).
stderr
Logs to standard error.
syslog
Logs to syslog (default method).
-l logfile, --logfile logfile
Specifies the logfile to use when using the logging method
logfile.
The default logfile is
/var/log/radvd.log.
-f facility, --facility facility
Specifies the facility (as an integer) when using syslog logging. Default
is LOG_DAEMON.
-t chrootdir, --chrootdir chrootdir
If specified, switches to
chrootdir
before doing anything else. This directory and its
subdirectories must have been populated first.
For security reasons,
-u
must always be used when using
chrootdir.
Note that this option will not currently work under Linux because
radvd
requires access to the
/proc
filesystem.
-u username, --username username
If specified, drops root privileges and changes user ID to
username
and group ID to the primary group of
username.
This is recommended for security reasons.
You might also need to use
-p
to point to a file in a
username
-writable directory (e.g. /var/run/radvd/radvd.pid).
There certainly are some bugs. If you find them or have other
suggestions please contact Nathan Lutchansky <lutchann@litech.org> or
Pekka Savola <pekkas@netcore.fi>.