pppoe - user-space PPPoE client.
pppd pty 'pppoe [pppoe_options]'
[pppd_options]
pppoe -A [pppoe_options]
pppoe is a user-space client for PPPoE (Point-to-Point
Protocol over Ethernet) for Linux and other UNIX systems. pppoe works
in concert with the pppd PPP daemon to provide a PPP connection over
Ethernet, as is used by many DSL service providers.
- -I interface
- The -I option specifies the Ethernet interface to use. Under Linux,
it is typically eth0 or eth1. The interface should be
"up" before you start pppoe, but should not be
configured to have an IP address.
- -T timeout
- The -T option causes pppoe to exit if no session traffic is
detected for timeout seconds. I recommend that you use this option
as an extra safety measure, but if you do, you should make sure that PPP
generates enough traffic so the timeout will normally not be triggered.
The best way to do this is to use the lcp-echo-interval option to
pppd. You should set the PPPoE timeout to be about four times the
LCP echo interval.
- -D file_name
- The -D option causes every packet to be dumped to the specified
file_name. This is intended for debugging only; it produces huge
amounts of output and greatly reduces performance.
- -V
- The -V option causes pppoe to print its version number and
exit.
- -A
- The -A option causes pppoe to send a PADI packet and then
print the names of access concentrators in each PADO packet it receives.
Do not use this option in conjunction with pppd; the -A
option is meant to be used interactively to give interesting information
about the access concentrator.
- -S
service_name
- Specifies the desired service name. pppoe will only initiate
sessions with access concentrators which can provide the specified
service. In most cases, you should not specify this option. Use it
only if you know that there are multiple access concentrators or know that
you need a specific service name.
- -C ac_name
- Specifies the desired access concentrator name. pppoe will only
initiate sessions with the specified access concentrator. In most cases,
you should not specify this option. Use it only if you know that
there are multiple access concentrators. If both the -S and
-C options are specified, they must both match for
pppoe to initiate a session.
- -U
- Causes pppoe to use the Host-Uniq tag in its discovery packets.
This lets you run multiple pppoe daemons without having their
discovery packets interfere with one another. You must supply this option
to all pppoe daemons if you intend to run multiple daemons
simultaneously. The specific Host-Uniq value used is the hexadecimal
representation of the pppoe process's PID.
- -W value
- Causes pppoe to use the Host-Uniq tag in its discovery packets, and
furthermore to set the value of Host-Uniq to value. Use with
caution. Note that -W and -U are mutually-incompatible.
- -s
- Causes pppoe to use synchronous PPP encapsulation. If you
use this option, then you must use the sync option with
pppd. You are encouraged to use this option if it works, because it
greatly reduces the CPU overhead of pppoe. However, it MAY be
unreliable on slow machines -- there is a race condition between pppd
writing data and pppoe reading it. For this reason, the default setting is
asynchronous. If you encounter bugs or crashes with Synchronous PPP, turn
it off -- don't e-mail me for support!
- -m MSS
- Causes pppoe to clamp the TCP maximum segment size at the
specified value. Because of PPPoE overhead, the maximum segment size for
PPPoE is smaller than for normal Ethernet encapsulation. This could cause
problems for machines on a LAN behind a gateway using PPPoE. If you have a
LAN behind a gateway, and the gateway connects to the Internet using
PPPoE, you are strongly recommended to use a -m 1412 option. This
avoids having to set the MTU on all the hosts on the LAN.
- -H MAC
- Causes pppoe to use the indicated Ethernet MAC address as the
source address for sending packets. MAC must be specified in the
AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF syntax. If
this option is specified, pppoe puts the interface into promiscuous
mode.
- -p file
- Causes pppoe to write its process-ID to the specified file. This
can be used to locate and kill pppoe processes.
- -e sess:mac
- Causes pppoe to skip the discovery phase and move directly to the
session phase. The session is given by sess and the MAC address of
the peer by mac. This mode is not meant for normal use; it
is designed only for pppoe-server(8).
- -n
- Causes pppoe not to open a discovery socket. This mode is
not meant for normal use; it is designed only for
pppoe-server(8).
- -k
- Causes pppoe to terminate an existing session by sending a PADT
frame, and then exit. You must use the -e option in conjunction
with this option to specify the session to kill. This may be useful for
killing sessions when a buggy peer does not realize the session has ended.
- -d
- Causes pppoe to perform discovery and then exit, after printing
session information to standard output. The session information is printed
in exactly the format expected by the -e option. This option lets
you initiate a PPPoE discovery, perform some other work, and then start
the actual PPP session. Be careful; if you use this option in a
loop, you can create many sessions, which may annoy your peer.
- -f disc:sess
- The -f option sets the Ethernet frame types for PPPoE discovery and
session frames. The types are specified as hexadecimal numbers separated
by a colon. Standard PPPoE uses frame types 8863:8864. You should not
use this option unless you are absolutely sure the peer you are
dealing with uses non-standard frame types. If your ISP uses non-standard
frame types, complain!
- -h
- The -h option causes pppoe to print usage information and
exit.
PPPoE (Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet) is described in RFC
2516 and is a protocol which allows the session abstraction to be maintained
over bridged Ethernet networks.
PPPoE works by encapsulating PPP frames in Ethernet frames. The
protocol has two distinct stages: The discovery and the
session stage.
In the discovery stage, the host broadcasts a special PADI (PPPoE
Active Discovery Initiation) frame to discover any access
concentrators. The access concentrators (typically, only one access
concentrator) reply with PADO (PPPoE Active Discovery Offer) packets,
announcing their presence and the services they offer. The host picks one of
the access concentrators and transmits a PADR (PPPoE Active Discovery
Request) packet, asking for a session. The access concentrator replies with
a PADS (PPPoE Active Discovery Session-Confirmation) packet. The protocol
then moves to the session stage.
In the session stage, the host and access concentrator exchange
PPP frames embedded in Ethernet frames. The normal Ethernet MTU is 1500
bytes, but the PPPoE overhead plus two bytes of overhead for the
encapsulated PPP frame mean that the MTU of the PPP interface is at most
1492 bytes. This causes all kinds of problems if you are using a
Linux machine as a firewall and interfaces behind the firewall have an MTU
greater than 1492. In fact, to be safe, I recommend setting the MTU of
machines behind the firewall to 1412, to allow for worst-case TCP and IP
options in their respective headers.
Normally, PPP uses the Link Control Protocol (LCP) to shut down a
PPP link. However, the PPPoE specification allows the link to be shut down
with a special PADT (PPPoE Active Discovery Terminate) packet. This client
recognizes this packet and will correctly terminate if a terminate request
is received for the PPP session.
My design goals for this PPPoE client were as follows, in
descending order of importance:
- o
- It must work.
- o
- It must be a user-space program and not a kernel patch.
- o
- The code must be easy to read and maintain.
- o
- It must be fully compliant with RFC 2516, the proposed PPPoE standard.
- o
- It must never hang up forever -- if the connection is broken, it must
detect this and exit, allowing a wrapper script to restart the connection.
- o
- It must be fairly efficient.
I believe I have achieved all of these goals, but (of course) am
open to suggestions, patches and ideas. See my home page,
https://dianne.skoll.ca/projects/rp-pppoe/, for contact information.
For best results, you must give pppd an mtu option of 1492.
I have observed problems with excessively-large frames unless I set this
option. Also, if pppoe is running on a firewall machine, all machines
behind the firewall should have MTU's of 1412.
If you have problems, check your system logs. pppoe logs
interesting things to syslog. You may have to turn on logging of
debug-level messages for complete diagnosis.
pppoe was written by Dianne Skoll <dianne@skoll.ca>,
with much inspiration from an earlier version by Luke Stras.
The pppoe home page is
https://dianne.skoll.ca/projects/rp-pppoe/.
pppd(8), pppoe-sniff(8), pppoe-server(8), pppoe-relay(8),
/usr/share/doc/pppoe/README.Debian.gz