server/peer.c, etc.: Introduce who-goes-there protocol.
[tripe] / server / tripe-admin.5.in
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d6623498 1.\" -*-nroff-*-
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2.\".
3.\" Manual for the administration protocol
4.\"
5.\" (c) 2008 Straylight/Edgeware
060ca767 6.\"
13a55605 7.
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8.\"----- Licensing notice ---------------------------------------------------
9.\"
10.\" This file is part of Trivial IP Encryption (TrIPE).
11.\"
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12.\" TrIPE is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
13.\" the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
14.\" Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your
15.\" option) any later version.
fc916a09 16.\"
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17.\" TrIPE is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
18.\" ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
19.\" FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
20.\" for more details.
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21.\"
22.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
11ad66c2 23.\" along with TrIPE. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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24.
25.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
e99aedcf 26.so ../common/defs.man \" @@@PRE@@@
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27.
28.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
0647ba7c 29.TH tripe-admin 5tripe "18 February 2001" "Straylight/Edgeware" "TrIPE: Trivial IP Encryption"
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30.
31.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
32.SH "NAME"
33.
d6623498 34tripe-admin \- administrator commands for TrIPE
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35.
36.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
37.SH "DESCRIPTION"
38.
d6623498 39This manual page describes the administration interface provided by the
40.BR tripe (8)
41daemon.
42.PP
43The
44.BR tripectl (8)
45program can be used either interactively or in scripts to communicate
46with the server using this interface. Alternatively, simple custom
47clients can be written in scripting languages such as Perl, Python or
48Tcl, or more advanced clients such as GUI monitors can be written in C
49with little difficulty.
50.PP
37941236 51Administration commands use a textual protocol. Each client command or
52server response consists of a line of ASCII text terminated by a single
53linefeed character. No command may be longer than 255 characters.
d6623498 54.SS "General structure"
55Each command or response line consists of a sequence of
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56whitespace-separated tokens. The number and nature of whitespace
57characters separating two tokens in a client command is not significant;
58the server always uses a single space character. The first token in a
d6623498 59line is a
60.I keyword
61identifying the type of command or response contained. Keywords in
62client commands are not case-sensitive; the server always uses uppercase
63for its keywords.
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64.PP
65In order to allow tokens to contain internal whitespace, a quoting
66mechanism is provided. Whitespace within matched pairs of quotes \(en
67either single
68.RB ` ' '
69or double
70.RB ` """" '
71\(en is considered to be internal. Any character (other than newline)
72may be escaped by preceding it with a backslash
73.RB ` \e ':
74in particular, this can be used to include quote characters. It is
75impossible for a token to contain a newline character.
76.PP
77On output, the server will use double quotes when necessary.
de014da6 78.SS "Simple commands"
79For simple client command, the server responds with zero or more
d6623498 80.B INFO
81lines, followed by either an
82.B OK
83line or a
84.B FAIL
85line. Each
86.B INFO
87provides information requested in the command. An
88.B OK
89response contains no further data. A
90.B FAIL
3cdc3f3a 91code is followed by a machine-readable explanation of why the command
d6623498 92failed.
93.PP
de014da6 94Simple command processing is strictly synchronous: the server reads a
95command, processes it, and responds, before reading the next command.
96All commands can be run as simple commands. Long-running commands
97(e.g.,
98.B ADD
99and
100.BR PING )
101block the client until they finish, but the rest of the server continues
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102running. See
103.B "Background commands"
104to find out how to issue long-running commands without blocking.
105.SS "Asynchronous broadcasts"
106There are three types of asynchronous broadcast messages which aren't
107associated with any particular command. Clients can select which
108broadcast messages they're interested in using the
109.B WATCH
110command.
de014da6 111.PP
112The
d6623498 113.B WARN
3cdc3f3a 114message contains a machine-readable message warning of an error
d6623498 115encountered while processing a command, unexpected or unusual behaviour
116by a peer, or a possible attack by an adversary. Under normal
de014da6 117conditions, the server shouldn't emit any warnings.
118.PP
119The
d6623498 120.B TRACE
3cdc3f3a 121message contains a human-readable tracing message containing diagnostic
d6623498 122information. Trace messages are controlled using the
123.B \-T
124command-line option to the server, or the
125.B TRACE
126administration command (see below). Support for tracing can be disabled
127when the package is being configured, and may not be available in your
de014da6 128version.
129.PP
130Finally, the
3cdc3f3a 131.B NOTE
132message is a machine-readable notification about some routine but
133interesting event such as creation or destruction of peers.
de014da6 134.SS "Background commands"
135Some commands (e.g.,
136.B ADD
137and
138.BR PING )
139take a long time to complete. To prevent these long-running commands
140from tying up a server connection, they can be run in the background.
141Not all commands can be run like this: the ones that can provide a
142.B \-background
143option, which must be supplied with a
144.IR tag .
145.PP
146A command may fail before it starts running in the background. In this
147case, the server emits a
148.B FAIL
149response, as usual. To indicate that a command has started running in
150the background, the server emits a response of the form
151.BI "BGDETACH " tag \fR,
152where
153.I tag
154is the value passed to the
155.B \-background
156option. From this point on, the server is ready to process more
157commands and reply to them.
158.PP
159Responses to background commands are indicated by a line beginning with
e04c2d50 160one of the tokens
de014da6 161.BR BGOK ,
162.BR BGFAIL ,
163or
164.BR BGINFO ,
e04c2d50 165followed by the command tag. These correspond to the
de014da6 166.BR OK ,
167.BR FAIL ,
168and
169.B INFO
170responses for simple commands:
171.B BGINFO
172indicates information from a background command which has not completed
173yet; and
174.B BGOK
175and
176.B BGFAIL
177indicates that a background command succeeded or failed, respectively.
178.PP
179A background command will never issue an
180.B OK
060ca767 181or
9df937a3 182.B INFO
060ca767 183response: it will always detach and then issue any
184.B BGINFO
185lines followed by
de014da6 186.B BGOK
187response.
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188.SS "Client-provided services"
189.\"* 25 Service-related messages
190An administration client can provide services to other clients.
191Services are given names and versions. A client can attempt to
192.I claim
193a particular service by issuing the
194.B SVCCLAIM
195command. This may fail, for example, if some other client already
196provides the same or later version of the service.
197.PP
198Other clients can issue
199.I "service commands"
200using the
201.B "SVCSUBMIT"
202command; the service provider is expected to handle these commands and
203reply to them.
204.PP
205There are three important asynchronous messages which will be sent to
206service providers.
207.SP
208.BI "SVCCANCEL " jobid
209The named job has been cancelled, either because the issuing client has
210disconnected or explicitly cancelled the job using the
211.B BGCANCEL
212command.
213.SP
214.BI "SVCCLAIM " service " " version
215Another client has claimed a later version of the named
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216.IR service .
217The recipient is no longer the provider of this service.
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218.SP
219.BI "SVCJOB " jobid " " service " " command " " args \fR...
220Announces the arrival of a new job. The
221.I jobid
222is a simple token consisting of alphanumeric characters which
223.B tripe
224uses to identify this job.
225.PP
226The service provider can reply to the job using the commands
227.BR SVCINFO ,
228.B SVCOK
229and
230.BR SVCFAIL .
231The first of these sends an
232.B INFO
233response and leaves the job active; the other two send an
234.B OK
235or
236.B FAIL
237response respectively, and mark the job as being complete.
238.PP
239(Since
240.B SVCSUBMIT
241is a potentially long-running command, it can be run in the background.
242This detail is hidden from service providers:
243.B tripe
244will issue the corresponding
245.BR BG ...
246responses when appropriate.)
3cdc3f3a 247.SS "Network addresses"
83487ded 248A network address is a sequence of tokens. The first is a token
3cdc3f3a 249identifying the network address family. The length of an address and
83487ded 250the meanings of the subsequent tokens depend on the address family.
3cdc3f3a 251Address family tokens are not case-sensitive on input; on output, they
252are always in upper-case.
253.PP
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254The following address families are recognized.
255.TP
256.BI "ANY " address " \fR[" port \fR]
257An address and port number for any supported address family. On output,
258.B tripe
259never uses this form. On input, the
260.I address
261is examined: if it is a numeric address for some recognized address
262family, then it is interpreted as such; otherwise it is looked up using
263the DNS (in the background). The background resolver's address-sorting
264rules apply, and
265.B tripe
266simply takes the first address in the returned list which is of a
267supported address family. Symbolic port numbers are permitted; if
268omitted, the default port 4070 is used.
3cdc3f3a 269.TP
165efde7 270.BI "INET " address " \fR[" port \fR]
3cdc3f3a 271An Internet socket, naming an IPv4 address and UDP port. On output, the
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272.I address
273is always in numeric dotted-quad form, and the
274.I port
275is given as a plain decimal number. On input, DNS hostnames and
276symbolic port names are permitted; if omitted, the default port 4070 is
277used.
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278.TP
279.BI "INET6 " address " \fR[" port \fR]
280An Internet socket, naming an IPv6 address and UDP port. On output, the
281.I address
282is always in numeric hex-and-colons form, and the
283.I port
284is given as a plain decimal number. On input, DNS hostnames and
285symbolic port names may be permitted, depending on how
286.B tripe
287was compiled; if omitted, the default port 4070 is used.
3cdc3f3a 288.PP
78dcf842 289If, on input, no recognized address family token is found, the following
83487ded 290tokens are assumed to represent an
870ff51a 291.B ANY
2acd7cd6 292address. Addresses output by the server always have an address family
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293token, and do not use
294.BR ANY .
295.PP
296Name resolution never blocks the main server, but will block the
297requesting client, unless the command is run in the background.
060ca767 298.SS "Key-value output"
299Some commands (e.g.,
300.B STATS
301and
302.BR SERVINFO )
303produce output in the form of
304.IB key = value
83487ded 305pairs, one per token. Neither the
060ca767 306.I key
307nor the
308.I value
309contain spaces.
310.SS "Trace lists"
311Commands which enable or disable kinds of output (e.g.,
312.B TRACE
313and
314.BR WATCH )
315work in similar ways. They take a single optional argument, which
316consists of a string of letters selecting message types, optionally
317interspersed with
318.RB ` + '
319to enable, or
320.RB ` \- '
321to disable, the subsequently listed types.
322.PP
323If the argument is omitted, the available message types are displayed,
324one to an
325.B INFO
326line, in a fixed-column format. Column zero contains the key letter for
327selecting that message type; column one contains either a space or a
e04c2d50 328.RB ` + '
060ca767 329sign, if the message type is disabled or enabled respectively; and a
330textual description of the message type begins at column 3 and continues
331to the end of the line.
332.PP
333Lowercase key letters control individual message types. Uppercase key
334letters control collections of message types.
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335.
336.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
3cdc3f3a 337.SH "COMMAND REFERENCE"
fc916a09 338.
13a55605 339.\"* 10 Commands
d6623498 340The commands provided are:
13a55605 341.SP
9986f0b5 342.BI "ADD \fR[" options "\fR] " peer " " address "\fR..."
3cdc3f3a 343Adds a new peer. The peer is given the name
344.IR peer ;
345the peer's public key is assumed to be in the file
346.B keyring.pub
347(or whatever alternative file was specified in the
348.B \-K
349option on the command line). The
350.I address
351is the network address (see above for the format) at which the peer can
78dcf842 352be contacted. The following options are recognized.
42da2a58 353.RS
13a55605 354.\"+opts
42da2a58 355.TP
de014da6 356.BI "\-background " tag
357Run the command in the background, using the given
358.IR tag .
359.TP
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360.B "\-cork"
361Don't send an immediate challenge to the peer; instead, wait until it
362sends us something before responding.
363.TP
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364.B "\-ephemeral"
365The association with the peer is not intended to persist indefinitely.
136f3f44 366When a peer is killed, or the
067aa5f0 367.BR tripe (8)
136f3f44 368daemon is shut down, a
067aa5f0 369.B bye
136f3f44 370packet is to the peer(s). If a peer marked as ephemeral sends us a
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371.B bye
372packet then it is killed (but in this case no further
373.B bye
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374packet is sent). A
375.B bye
376packet from a peer which isn't marked as ephemeral leaves the peer alone
377in the hope that the connection can be reestablished.
067aa5f0 378.TP
0ba8de86 379.BI "\-keepalive " time
380Send a no-op packet if we've not sent a packet to the peer in the last
381.I time
382interval. This is useful for persuading port-translating firewalls to
383believe that the `connection' is still active. The
384.I time
385is expressed as a nonnegative integer followed optionally by
386.BR d ,
387.BR h ,
388.BR m ,
389or
390.BR s
391for days, hours, minutes, or seconds respectively; if no suffix is
392given, seconds are assumed.
393.TP
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394.BI "\-key " tag
395Use the public key
396.I tag
397to authenticate the peer. The default is to use the key tagged
398.IR peer .
399.TP
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400.BI "\-knock \fR[" prefix .\fR] tag
401Send the string
402.RI [ prefix\fB. ] tag
403in
404.B token-rq
405and
406.B knock
407messages to the peer during key-exchange. The string as a whole should
408name the local machine to the peer, and
409.I tag
410should name its public key. When such messages are received from a
411currently unknown peer,
412.BR tripe (8)
413emits a
414.B KNOCK
415notification stating the peer's (claimed) name and address. The server
416will already have verified that the sender is using the peer's private
c60b5015 417key by this point. Prior to version 1.6.0, this option used to imply
067aa5f0 418.BR \-ephemeral .
8362ac1c 419.TP
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420.B "\-mobile"
421The peer is a mobile device, and is likely to change address rapidly.
422If a packet arrives from an unknown address, the server's usual response
423is to log a warning and discard it. If the server knows of any mobile
424peers, however, it will attempt to decrypt the packet using their keys,
425and if one succeeds, the server will update its idea of the peer's
426address and emit an
427.B NEWADDR
c60b5015 428notification. Prior to version 1.6.0, this option used to imply
067aa5f0 429.BR \-ephemeral .
6411163d 430.TP
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431.BI "\-priv " tag
432Use the private key
433.I tag
434to authenticate to the peer. The default is to use the key named in the
435.RB ` \-t '
436command-line option, or a key with type
437.B tripe
438or
439.BR tripe-dh :
440see
441.BR tripe (8)
442for the details.
443.TP
0ba8de86 444.BI "\-tunnel " tunnel
42da2a58 445Use the named tunnel driver, rather than the default.
13a55605 446.\"-opts
42da2a58 447.RE
13a55605 448.SP
3cdc3f3a 449.BI "ADDR " peer
450Emits an
451.B INFO
452line reporting the IP address and port number stored for
453.IR peer .
13a55605 454.SP
35c8b547 455.BI "ALGS \fR[" peer \fR]
449991a3 456Emits information about the cryptographic algorithms in use, in
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457key-value form. If a
458.I peer
459is given, then describe the algorithms used in the association with that
460peer; otherwise describe the default algorithms.
449991a3 461.RS
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462.PP
463The keys are as follows.
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464.TP
465.B kx-group
466Type of key-exchange group in use, currently either
467.B ec
468or
469.BR prime .
470.TP
471.B kx-group-order-bits
472Length of the group order, in bits. This gives an approximate measure
473of the group strength.
474.TP
475.B kx-group-elt-bits
476Length of a group element, in bits. This may be useful when analyzing
477protocol traces.
478.TP
479.B hash
480The hash function in use, e.g.,
481.BR sha256 .
482.TP
483.B mgf
484The mask-generating function in use, e.g.,
485.BR whirlpool-mgf .
486.TP
487.B hashsz
488The size of the hash function's output, in octets.
489.TP
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490.B bulk-transform
491The name of the bulk-crypto transform.
492.TP
493.B bulk-overhead
494The amount of overhead, in bytes, caused by the crypto transform.
495.TP
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496.B cipher
497The name of the bulk data cipher in use, e.g.,
498.BR blowfish-cbc .
499.TP
500.B cipher-keysz
501The length of key used by the bulk data cipher, in octets.
502.TP
503.B cipher-blksz
504The block size of the bulk data cipher, or zero if it's not based on a
505block cipher.
506.TP
507.B cipher-data-limit
508The maximum amount of data to be encrypted using a single key. (A new
509key exchange is instigated well before the limit is reached, in order to
510allow for a seamless changeover of keys.)
511.TP
512.B mac
513The message authentication algorithm in use, e.g.,
494a7ac0 514.BR ripemd160-hmac .
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515.TP
516.B mac-keysz
517The length of the key used by the message authentication algorithm, in
518octets.
519.TP
520.B mac-tagsz
521The length of the message authentication tag, in octets.
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522.TP
523.B blkc
524The block cipher in use, e.g.,
525.BR blowfish .
526.TP
527.B blkc-keysz
528The length of key used by the block cipher, in octets.
529.TP
530.B blkc-blksz
531The block size of the block cipher.
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532.PP
533The various sizes are useful, for example, when computing the MTU for a
534tunnel interface. If
535.I MTU
536is the MTU of the path to the peer, then the tunnel MTU should be
537.IP
538.I MTU
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539\-
540.I header-length
541\- 9 \-
a93aacce 542.I bulk-overhead
449991a3 543.PP
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544allowing
545.I header-length
546= 20 (IPv4) or 40 (IPv6) bytes of IP header, 8 bytes of UDP header, a
547packet type octet, and the bulk-crypto transform overhead (which
548includes the sequence number).
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549.RE
550.SP
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551.BI "BGCANCEL " tag
552Cancels the background job with the named
553.IR tag .
554.SP
37941236 555.BI "CHECKCHAL " challenge
556Verifies a challenge as being one earlier issued by
557.B GETCHAL
558and not previously either passed to
559.B CHECKCHAL
560or in a greeting message.
13a55605 561.SP
3cdc3f3a 562.B "DAEMON"
563Causes the server to disassociate itself from its terminal and become a
c37b77e0 564background task. This only works once. A notification is issued.
2acd7cd6 565.SP
0ba8de86 566.BI "EPING \fR[" options "\fR] " peer
567Sends an encrypted ping to the peer, and expects an encrypted response.
568This checks that the peer is running (and not being impersonated), and
569that it can encrypt and decrypt packets correctly. Options and
570responses are the same as for the
571.B PING
572command.
13a55605 573.SP
75fe7f88 574.BI "FORCEKX \fR[" options "\fR] " peer
de014da6 575Requests the server to begin a new key exchange with
576.I peer
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577immediately. The following options are recognized.
578.RS
579.\"+opts
580.TP
581.B "\-quiet"
582Don't actually start a new key exchange; just quietly mark any previous
583key exchange as stale so that a fresh attempt from the peer will
584succeed. This is was introduced for use during testing, but it's also
585useful when a remote peer has forgotten about us: it would be
586annoying if, once it's learns about us and tries to reinitiate a key
587exchange, we ignore it because we think we've already done one recently;
588on the other hand, forcing a key exchange before the remote peer has
589been reinformed about us is a waste of packets.
590.\"-opts
591.RE
13a55605 592.SP
37941236 593.B "GETCHAL"
594Requests a challenge. The challenge is returned in an
595.B INFO
596line, as a base64-encoded string. See
597.BR CHECKCHAL .
13a55605 598.SP
37941236 599.BI "GREET " peer " " challenge
600Sends a greeting packet containing the
601.I challenge
602(base-64 encoded) to the named
603.IR peer .
604The expectation is that this will cause the peer to recognize us and
605begin a key-exchange.
13a55605 606.SP
d6623498 607.B "HELP"
608Causes the server to emit an
609.B INFO
610line for each command it supports. Each line lists the command name,
611followed by the names of the arguments. This may be helpful as a memory
612aid for interactive use, or for program clients probing for features.
e04c2d50 613.SP
3cdc3f3a 614.BI "IFNAME " peer
615Emits an
616.B INFO
617line containing the name of the network interface used to collect IP
618packets which are to be encrypted and sent to
619.IR peer .
620Used by configuration scripts so that they can set up routing tables
621appropriately after adding new peers.
13a55605 622.SP
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623.B "JOBS"
624Emits an
625.B INFO
626line giving the tag for each outstanding background job.
627.SP
3cdc3f3a 628.BI "KILL " peer
629Causes the server to forget all about
630.IR peer .
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631All keys are destroyed, and no more packets are sent. A
632.B bye
633message is sent to the peer if it's marked as
634.B "\-ephemeral"
635\(en see the
636.B "ADD"
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637command. The following options are
638recognized.
639.RS
640.\"+opts
641.TP
642.B "\-quiet"
643Suppress any
644.B bye
645message to an ephemeral peer: just quietly forget about it. This is
646used during testing, and is not expected to be generally useful.
647.\"-opts
648.RE
13a55605 649.SP
3cdc3f3a 650.B "LIST"
651For each currently-known peer, an
652.B INFO
653line is written containing the peer's name, as given to
654.BR ADD .
13a55605 655.SP
bd58d532 656.BI "NOTIFY " tokens\fR...
e04c2d50 657Issues a
bd58d532 658.B USER
659notification to all interested administration clients.
13a55605 660.SP
060ca767 661.BI "PEERINFO " peer
662Returns information about a peer, in key-value form. The following keys
663are returned.
664.RS
665.TP
666.B tunnel
667The tunnel driver used for this peer.
668.TP
669.B keepalive
670The keepalive interval, in seconds, or zero if no keepalives are to be
671sent.
48b84569 672.TP
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673.B knock
674If present, the string sent to the peer to set up the association; see
675the
676.B \-knock
677option to
678.BR ADD ,
679and the
680.B KNOCK
681notification.
682.TP
48b84569 683.B key
fe2a5dcf 684The (short) key tag being used for the peer, as passed to the
48b84569 685.B ADD
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686command.
687.TP
688.B current-key
689The full key tag of the peer's public key currently being used. This
690may change during the life of the association.
691.TP
692.B private-key
693The private key tag being used for the peer, as passed to the
694.B ADD
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695command, or the
696.RB ` \-t '
697command-line option. If neither of these was given explicitly, the
698private key tag is shown as
699.RB ` (default) ',
700since there is no fixed tag used under these circumstances.
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701.TP
702.B current-private-key
703The full key tag of the private key currently being used for this
704association. This may change during the life of the association.
bd322830
MW
705.TP
706.B corked
707Either
708.B t
709or
710.B nil
711depending on whether or not (respectively) key-exchange is waiting for
712the peer to initiate.
713.TP
714.B mobile
715Either
716.B t
717or
718.B nil
719depending on whether or not (respectively) the peer is expected to
720change its address unpredictably.
067aa5f0
MW
721.TP
722.B ephemeral
723Either
724.B t
725or
726.B nil
727depending on whether the association with the peer is expected to be
728temporary or persistent (respectively).
060ca767 729.RE
13a55605 730.SP
0ba8de86 731.BI "PING \fR[" options "\fR] " peer
732Send a transport-level ping to the peer. The ping and its response are
733not encrypted or authenticated. This command, possibly in conjunction
734with tracing, is useful for ensuring that UDP packets are actually
735flowing in both directions. See also the
736.B EPING
737command.
738.IP
739An
740.B INFO
741line is printed describing the outcome:
742.RS
743.TP
744.BI "ping-ok " millis
e04c2d50 745A response was received
0ba8de86 746.I millis
747after the ping was sent.
748.TP
749.BI "ping-timeout"
750No response was received within the time allowed.
751.TP
752.BI "ping-peer-died"
753The peer was killed (probably by another admin connection) before a
754response was received.
755.RE
756.IP
757Options recognized for this command are:
758.RS
13a55605 759.\"+opts
0ba8de86 760.TP
de014da6 761.BI "\-background " tag
762Run the command in the background, using the given
763.IR tag .
764.TP
0ba8de86 765.BI "\-timeout " time
766Wait for
767.I time
2acd7cd6
MW
768seconds before giving up on a response. The default is 5 seconds. The
769.I time
770is expressed as a nonnegative integer followed optionally by
771.BR d ,
772.BR h ,
773.BR m ,
774or
775.BR s
776for days, hours, minutes, or seconds respectively; if no suffix is
777given, seconds are assumed.
13a55605 778.\"-opts
0ba8de86 779.RE
13a55605 780.SP
3cdc3f3a 781.B "PORT"
5d06f63e 782.RI [ family ]
3cdc3f3a 783Emits an
784.B INFO
785line containing just the number of the UDP port used by the
786.B tripe
5d06f63e
MW
787server, for the given address
788.I family
789(or one chosen arbitrarily if omitted -- though
790.B tripe
791tries to use the same port number consistently so this is not a likely
792problem in practice). If you've allowed your server to allocate a port
793dynamically, this is how to find out which one it chose.
13a55605 794.SP
de014da6 795.B "RELOAD"
796Instructs the server to recheck its keyring files. The server checks
797these periodically anyway but it may be necessary to force a recheck,
798for example after adding a new peer key.
13a55605 799.SP
3cdc3f3a 800.B "QUIT"
801Instructs the server to exit immediately. A warning is sent.
13a55605 802.SP
060ca767 803.B "SERVINFO"
804Returns information about the server, in the form of key-value pairs.
805The following keys are used.
806.RS
807.TP
808.B implementation
809A keyword naming the implementation of the
810.BR tripe (8)
811server. The current implementation is called
812.BR edgeware-tripe .
813.TP
814.B version
815The server's version number, as reported by
816.BR VERSION .
817.TP
818.B daemon
819Either
820.B t
821or
822.BR nil ,
823if the server has or hasn't (respectively) become a daemon.
824.RE
13a55605 825.SP
64cf2223
MW
826.BI "SETIFNAME " peer " " new-name
827Informs the server that the
828.IR peer 's
829tunnel-interface name has been changed to
830.IR new-name .
831This is useful if firewalling decisions are made based on interface
832names: a setup script for a particular peer can change the name, and
833then update the server's records so that they're accurate.
834.SP
405fc4da
MW
835.BI "STATS " peer
836Emits a number of
837.B INFO
838lines, each containing one or more statistics in the form
839.IB name = value \fR.
840The statistics-gathering is experimental and subject to change.
841.SP
bdc44f5b
MW
842.BI "SVCCLAIM " service " " version
843Attempts to claim the named
844.IR service ,
845offering the given
846.IR version .
847The claim is successful if the service is currently unclaimed, or if
848a version earlier than
849.I version
850is provided; otherwise the command fails with the error
851.BR "service-exists" .
852.SP
853.BI "SVCENSURE " service " \fR[" version \fR]
e04c2d50 854Ensure that
bdc44f5b
MW
855.I service
856is provided, and (if specified) to at least the given
857.IR version .
858An error is reported if these conditions are not met; otherwise the
859command succeeds silently.
860.SP
861.BI "SVCFAIL " jobid " " tokens \fR...
862Send a
863.B FAIL
864(or
865.BR BGFAIL )
866response to the service job with the given
867.IR jobid ,
e04c2d50 868passing the
bdc44f5b
MW
869.I tokens
870as the reason for failure. The job is closed.
871.SP
872.BI "SVCINFO " jobid " " tokens \fR...
873Send an
874.B INFO
875(or
876.BR BGINFO )
877response to the service job with the given
878.IR jobid ,
879passing the
880.I tokens
881as the info message. The job remains open.
882.SP
883.B "SVCLIST"
884Output a line of the form
885.RS
886.IP
887.B INFO
888.I service
889.I version
890.PP
891for each service currently provided.
892.RE
893.SP
894.BI "SVCOK " jobid
895Send an
896.B OK
897(or
898.BR BGINFO )
899response to the service job with the given
900.IR jobid .
901The job is closed.
902.SP
903.BI "SVCQUERY " service
904Emits a number of
905.B info
906lines in key-value format, describing the named
907.IR service.
908The following keys are used.
909.RS
910.TP
911.B name
912The service's name.
913.TP
914.B version
915The service's version string.
916.RE
917.SP
918.BI "SVCRELEASE " service
919Announce that the client no longer wishes to provide the named
920.IR service .
921.SP
922.BI "SVCSUBMIT \fR[" options "\fR] " service " " command " " arguments \fR...
923Submit a job to the provider of the given
924.IR service ,
925passing it the named
926.I command
927and the given
928.IR arguments .
929The following options are accepted.
930.RS
931.\"+opts
932.TP
933.BI "\-background " tag
934Run the command in the background, using the given
935.IR tag .
936.TP
937.BI "\-version " version
938Ensure that at least the given
939.I version
940of the service is available before submitting the job.
941.RE
942.\"-opts
943.SP
d6623498 944.BR "TRACE " [\fIoptions\fP]
060ca767 945Selects trace outputs: see
e04c2d50 946.B "Trace lists"
060ca767 947above. Message types provided are:
d6623498 948.RS
2d752320 949.PP
d6623498 950Currently, the following tracing options are supported:
951.TP
952.B t
953Tunnel events: reception of packets to be encrypted, and injection of
954successfully-decrypted packets.
955.TP
956.B r
957Peer management events: creation and destruction of peer attachments,
958and arrival of messages.
959.TP
960.B a
961Administration interface: acceptance of new connections, and handling of
962the backgroud name-resolution required by the
963.B ADD
964command.
965.TP
d6623498 966.B s
967Handling of symmetric keysets: creation and expiry of keysets, and
968encryption and decryption of messages.
969.TP
970.B x
971Key exchange: reception, parsing and emission of key exchange messages.
972.TP
973.B m
974Key management: loading keys and checking for file modifications.
37941236 975.TP
976.B l
977Display information about challenge issuing and verification.
978.TP
979.B p
980Display contents of packets sent and received by the tunnel and/or peer
981modules.
982.TP
983.B c
984Display inputs, outputs and intermediate results of cryptographic
985operations. This includes plaintext and key material. Use with
986caution.
987.TP
988.B A
989All of the above.
d6623498 990.PP
991Note that the
992.B p
993(packet contents)
994and
995.B c
996(crypto details)
997outputs provide extra detail for other outputs. Specifying
998.B p
999without
37941236 1000.BR r
d6623498 1001or
1002.B t
1003isn't useful; neither is specifying
1004.B c
1005without one of
1006.BR s ,
37941236 1007.BR l ,
d6623498 1008.B x
1009or
1010.BR m .
1011.RE
13a55605 1012.SP
060ca767 1013.B "TUNNELS"
1014For each available tunnel driver, an
1015.B INFO
1016line is printed giving its name.
13a55605 1017.SP
060ca767 1018.B "VERSION"
1019Causes the server to emit an
1020.B INFO
83487ded 1021line stating its software version, as two tokens: the server name, and
060ca767 1022its version string. The server name
1023.B tripe
1024is reserved to the Straylight/Edgeware implementation.
13a55605 1025.SP
3cdc3f3a 1026.BR "WATCH " [\fIoptions\fP]
bdc44f5b 1027Enables or disables asynchronous broadcasts
3cdc3f3a 1028.IR "for the current connection only" .
060ca767 1029See
e04c2d50 1030.B "Trace lists"
3cdc3f3a 1031above. The default watch state for the connection the server opens
1032automatically on stdin/stdout is to show warnings and trace messages;
bdc44f5b
MW
1033other connections show no asynchronous broadcast messages. (This is
1034done in order to guarantee that a program reading the server's stdout
1035does not miss any warnings.)
3cdc3f3a 1036.RS
1037.PP
060ca767 1038Message types provided are:
3cdc3f3a 1039.TP
1040.B t
1041.B TRACE
1042messages.
1043.TP
1044.B n
1045.B NOTE
1046messages.
1047.TP
1048.B w
1049.B WARN
1050messages.
1051.TP
37941236 1052.B A
3cdc3f3a 1053All of the above.
1054.RE
13a55605 1055.SP
bd58d532 1056.BI "WARN " tokens\fR...
e04c2d50 1057Issues a
bd58d532 1058.B USER
1059warning to all interested administration clients.
fc916a09
MW
1060.
1061.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
3cdc3f3a 1062.SH "ERROR MESSAGES"
fc916a09 1063.
13a55605 1064.\"* 20 Error messages (FAIL codes)
3cdc3f3a 1065The following
1066.B FAIL
de014da6 1067(or
1068.BR BGFAIL )
3cdc3f3a 1069messages are sent to clients as a result of errors during command
1070processing.
13a55605 1071.SP
3cdc3f3a 1072.BI "already-daemon"
1073(For
1074.BR DAEMON .)
1075The
1076.B tripe
1077server is already running as a daemon.
13a55605 1078.SP
f43df819 1079.BI "bad-addr-syntax " message
37941236 1080(For commands accepting socket addresses.) The address couldn't be
1081understood.
13a55605 1082.SP
37d4c59e
MW
1083.BI "bad-base64 " message
1084(For commands accepting Base64-encoded input.) The Base64-encoded
1085string was invalid.
1086.SP
f43df819 1087.BI "bad-syntax " cmd " " message
3cdc3f3a 1088(For any command.) The command couldn't be understood: e.g., the number
1089of arguments was wrong.
13a55605 1090.SP
83487ded 1091.BI "bad-time-spec " token
4af497ac
MW
1092(For commands accepting a
1093.I time
1094argument.) The
83487ded 1095.I token
0ba8de86 1096is not a valid time interval specification. Acceptable time
e04c2d50 1097specifications are nonnegative integers followed optionally by
0ba8de86 1098.BR d ,
1099.BR h ,
1100.BR m ,
1101or
1102.BR s ,
1103for days, hours, minutes, or seconds, respectively.
13a55605 1104.SP
3cdc3f3a 1105.BI "bad-trace-option " char
1106(For
1107.BR TRACE .)
1108An unknown trace option was requested.
13a55605 1109.SP
3cdc3f3a 1110.BI "bad-watch-option " char
1111(For
1112.BR WATCH .)
1113An unknown watch option was requested.
13a55605 1114.SP
f43df819 1115.BI "daemon-error " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1116(For
1117.BR DAEMON .)
1118An error occurred during the attempt to become a daemon, as reported by
1119.IR message .
846e2f6f
MW
1120See
1121.B WARNINGS
1122below for the meanings of
1123.I ecode
1124and
1125.IR message .
13a55605 1126.SP
47828bd9
MW
1127.BI "disabled-address-family " afam
1128(For
1129.B ADD
1130and
1131.BR PORT .)
1132The address family
1133.I afam
1134is supported, but was disabled using command-line arguments.
1135.SP
3cdc3f3a 1136.BI "invalid-port " number
1137(For
1138.BR ADD .)
1139The given port number is out of range.
13a55605 1140.SP
bdc44f5b 1141.BI "not-service-provider " service
e04c2d50 1142(For
bdc44f5b
MW
1143.BR SVCRELEASE .)
1144The invoking client is not the current provider of the named
1145.IR service ,
1146and is therefore not allowed to release it.
1147.SP
3cdc3f3a 1148.BI "peer-create-fail " peer
1149(For
1150.BR ADD .)
1151Adding
1152.I peer
1153failed for some reason. A warning should have been emitted explaining
1154why.
13a55605 1155.SP
c8e02c8a
MW
1156.BI "peer-addr-exists " address\fR...
1157(For
1158.BR ADD .)
1159There is already a peer with the given
1160.IR address .
1161.SP
3cdc3f3a 1162.BI "peer-exists " peer
1163(For
1164.BR ADD .)
1165There is already a peer named
d6623498 1166.IR peer .
13a55605 1167.SP
0ba8de86 1168.B "ping-send-failed"
4af497ac
MW
1169(For
1170.BR EPING .)
0ba8de86 1171The attempt to send a ping packet failed, probably due to lack of
1172encryption keys.
13a55605 1173.SP
75566d17
MW
1174.B "provider-failed"
1175(For
1176.BR SVCSUBMIT .)
1177The service provider disconnected without sending back a final reply to
1178the job.
1179.SP
1180.B "provider-overloaded"
1181(For
1182.BR SVCSUBMIT .)
1183The service provider has too many jobs queued up for it already.
1184.SP
3cdc3f3a 1185.BI "resolve-error " hostname
1186(For
1187.BR ADD .)
1188The DNS name
1189.I hostname
1190could not be resolved.
13a55605 1191.SP
3cdc3f3a 1192.BI "resolver-timeout " hostname
1193(For
1194.BR ADD .)
1195The DNS name
1196.I hostname
1197took too long to resolve.
13a55605 1198.SP
bdc44f5b
MW
1199.BI "service-exists " service " " version
1200(For
1201.BR SVCCLAIM .)
1202Another client is already providing the stated
1203.I version
1204of the
1205.IR service .
1206.SP
1207.BI "service-too-old " service " " version
1208(For
1209.B SVCENSURE
1210and
1211.BR SVCSUBMIT .)
1212Only the given
1213.I version
1214of the requested
1215.I service
1216is available, which does not meet the stated requirements.
1217.SP
ff92ffd3
MW
1218.BI "tag-exists " tag
1219(For long-running commands.) The named
1220.I tag
1221is already the tag of an outstanding job.
1222.SP
5d06f63e
MW
1223.BI "unknown-address-family " afam
1224(For
1225.BR PORT .)
1226The address family
1227.I afam
1228is unrecognized.
1229.SP
3cdc3f3a 1230.BI "unknown-command " token
1231The command
9df937a3 1232.I token
78dcf842 1233was not recognized.
13a55605 1234.SP
72482dfa
MW
1235.BI "unknown-jobid " jobid
1236(For
1237.BR SVCOK ,
1238.BR SVCFAIL ,
1239and
1240.BR SVCINFO .)
1241The token
1242.I jobid
1243is not recognized as identifying an outstanding job. It may have just
1244been cancelled.
1245.SP
3cdc3f3a 1246.BI "unknown-peer " name
1247(For
1248.BR ADDR ,
1249.BR IFNAME ,
1250.BR KILL ,
64cf2223 1251.BR SETIFNAME ,
3cdc3f3a 1252and
1253.BR STATS .)
1254There is no peer called
1255.IR name .
13a55605 1256.SP
fd68efa9 1257.BI "unknown-port " port
3cdc3f3a 1258(For
1259.BR ADD .)
fd68efa9
MW
1260The port name
1261.I port
e04c2d50 1262couldn't be found in
3cdc3f3a 1263.BR /etc/services .
dad7eebc 1264.SP
bdc44f5b
MW
1265.BI "unknown-service " service
1266(For
1267.BR SVCENSURE ,
1268.BR SVCQUERY ,
1269.BR SVCRELEASE ,
1270and
1271.BR SVCSUBMIT .)
1272The token
1273.I service
1274is not recognized as the name of a client-provided service.
dad7eebc 1275.SP
ff92ffd3
MW
1276.BI "unknown-tag " tag
1277(For
1278.BR BGCANCEL .)
1279The given
1280.I tag
1281is not the tag for any outstanding background job. It may have just
1282finished.
75566d17
MW
1283.SP
1284.BI "unknown-tunnel " tun
1285(For
1286.BR ADD .)
1287The given
1288.I tun
1289is not the name of any known tunnel driver.
fc916a09
MW
1290.
1291.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
3cdc3f3a 1292.SH "NOTIFICATIONS"
fc916a09 1293.
13a55605 1294.\"* 30 Notification broadcasts (NOTE codes)
3cdc3f3a 1295The following notifications are sent to clients who request them.
13a55605 1296.SP
42da2a58 1297.BI "ADD " peer " " ifname " " address \fR...
3cdc3f3a 1298A new peer has been added. The peer's name is
42da2a58 1299.IR peer ,
1300its tunnel is network interface
1301.IR ifname ,
3cdc3f3a 1302and its network address is
1303.IR address .
13a55605 1304.SP
3cdc3f3a 1305.BI "DAEMON"
1306The server has forked off into the sunset and become a daemon.
13a55605 1307.SP
37941236 1308.BI "GREET " challenge " " address \fR...
1309A valid greeting was received, with the given challenge (exactly as it
1310was returned by
1311.B GETCHAL
1312earlier).
13a55605 1313.SP
d6623498 1314.BI "KILL " peer
3cdc3f3a 1315The peer
1316.I peer
1317has been killed.
13a55605 1318.SP
8362ac1c
MW
1319.BI "KNOCK " peer " " address
1320The currently unknown
1321.I peer
1322is attempting to connect from
1323.IR address .
1324.SP
3cdc3f3a 1325.BI "KXDONE " peer
1326Key exchange with
1327.I peer
1328finished successfully.
13a55605 1329.SP
3cdc3f3a 1330.BI "KXSTART " peer
1331Key exchange with
1332.I peer
1333has begun or restarted. If key exchange keeps failing, this message
1334will be repeated periodically.
13a55605 1335.SP
6411163d
MW
1336.BI "NEWADDR " peer " " address
1337The given mobile
1338.IR peer 's
1339IP address has been changed to
1340.IR address .
1341.SP
64cf2223
MW
1342.BI "NEWIFNAME " peer " " old-name " " new-name
1343The given
1344.IR peer 's
1345tunnel interface name has been changed from
1346.I old-name
1347to
1348.IR new-name ,
1349as a result of a
1350.B SETIFNAME
1351command.
1352.SP
bdc44f5b
MW
1353.BI "SVCCLAIM " service " " version
1354The named
1355.I service
1356is now available, at the stated
1357.IR version .
1358.SP
1359.BI "SVCRELEASE " service
1360The named
1361.I service
1362is no longer available.
1363.SP
bd58d532 1364.BI "USER " tokens\fR...
1365An administration client issued a notification using the
1366.B NOTIFY
1367command.
693588c0
MW
1368.SP
1369.BI "WGT " peer
1370A who-goes-there message was received from an ephemeral
1371.IR peer ,
1372implying that it has forgotten about us. If a service knows how to
1373inform the peer of our existence, it should do so. This notification is
1374not sent for peers which have a
1375.B knock
1376string configured, because the server automatically tries knocking again
1377in this case.
fc916a09
MW
1378.
1379.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
3cdc3f3a 1380.SH "WARNINGS"
fc916a09 1381.
13a55605
MW
1382.\"* 40 Warning broadcasts (WARN codes)
1383.\"+sep
3cdc3f3a 1384There are many possible warnings. They are categorized according to
1385their first tokens.
f43df819
MW
1386.PP
1387Many of these warnings report system errors. These are reported as a
1388pair of tokens, described below as
1389.I ecode
1390and
1391.IR message .
1392The
1393.I ecode
1394is a string of the form
1395.BI E number
1396giving the
1397.BR errno (3)
1398value of the error; the
1399.I message
1400is the `human-readable' form of the message, as reported by
1401.BR strerror (3).
3cdc3f3a 1402.SS "ABORT warnings"
1403These all indicate that the
d6623498 1404.B tripe
3cdc3f3a 1405server has become unable to continue. If enabled, the server will dump
1406core in its configuration directory.
13a55605 1407.SP
3cdc3f3a 1408.BI "ABORT repeated-select-errors"
1409The main event loop is repeatedly failing. If the server doesn't quit,
1410it will probably waste all available CPU doing nothing.
ac3a27f5
MW
1411.SP
1412.BI "ABORT hash-size-too-large hash " name " size " sz " limit " max
1413An internal inconsistency: the hash function
1414.I name
1415produces a
1416.IR sz -byte
1417hash, but the server has been compiled to assume that no hash function
1418returns more than
1419.I max
1420bytes.
3cdc3f3a 1421.SS "ADMIN warnings"
1422These indicate a problem with the administration socket interface.
13a55605 1423.SP
f43df819 1424.BI "ADMIN accept-error " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1425There was an error while attempting to accept a connection from a new
1426client.
13a55605 1427.SP
f43df819 1428.BI "ADMIN client-write-error " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1429There was an error sending data to a client. The connection to the
1430client has been closed.
5ae728a6
MW
1431.SP
1432.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " already-in-use"
1433The server failed to create the Unix-domain socket object in the
1434filesystem, because there's already a socket there, and some other
1435process is actively listening for incoming connections.
1436.SP
1437.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " bind-failed " ecode " " message
1438The server failed to create the Unix-domain socket object in the
1439filesystem for an unusual reason. (The usual reason is
1440.BR EADDRINUSE ,
1441but this is handled specially.)
1442.SP
1443.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " chmod-failed " ecode " " message
1444The server failed to set the correct permissions of the Unix-domain
1445socket object.
1446.SP
1447.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " chown-failed " ecode " " message
1448The server failed to set the correct ownership of the Unix-domain socket
1449object.
1450.SP
1451.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " create-failed " ecode " " message
1452The server failed to create its administration socket. This is usually
1453because some system resource is unavailable.
1454.SP
1455.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " listen-failed " ecode " " message
1456The server failed to arrange to receive incoming connections on its
1457Unix-domain socket.
1458.SP
1459.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " name-too-long"
1460The server can't create its administration socket, because the chosen
1461pathname
1462.I path
1463is too long. There is, for historical reasons, a rather tight limit on
1464the length of name permitted for Unix-domain sockets, usually around 108
1465bytes.
1466.SP
1467.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " stat-failed " ecode " " message
1468The server failed to create the Unix-domain socket object in the
1469filesystem, because there's already something there, but the server
1470couldn't discover what.
1471.SP
1472.BI "ADMIN admin-socket " path " too-many-retries"
1473The server failed to create the Unix-domain socket object in the
1474filesystem. This error indicates that another process is also
1475repeatedly trying to create a Unix-domain socket at the same
1476.IR path ,
1477and then failing to actually listen for connections on it, but the
1478server always loses the applicable race for some reason. This situation
1479merits investigation.
1480.SP
1481.BI "ADMIN adns-init-failed " ecode " " message
1482The server failed to initialize the ADNS asynchronous DNS-resolution
1483library.
37941236 1484.SS "CHAL warnings"
1485These indicate errors in challenges, either in the
1486.B CHECKCHAL
1487command or in greeting packets.
13a55605 1488.SP
37941236 1489.B "CHAL impossible-challenge"
1490The server hasn't issued any challenges yet. Quite how anyone else
6e66e050 1491thought they could make one up is hard to imagine.
13a55605 1492.SP
37941236 1493.B "CHAL incorrect-tag"
1494Challenge received contained the wrong authentication data. It might be
1495very stale, or a forgery.
13a55605 1496.SP
37941236 1497.B "CHAL invalid-challenge"
1498Challenge received was the wrong length. We might have changed MAC
1499algorithms since the challenge was issued, or it might just be rubbish.
13a55605 1500.SP
37941236 1501.B "CHAL replay duplicated-sequence"
1502Challenge received was a definite replay of an old challenge. Someone's
1503up to something!
13a55605 1504.SP
37941236 1505.B "CHAL replay old-sequence"
1506Challenge received was old, but maybe not actually a replay. Try again.
3cdc3f3a 1507.SS "KEYMGMT warnings"
1508These indicate a problem with the keyring files, or the keys stored in
4d36660a
MW
1509them. The first token is either
1510.B private-keyring
1511or
1512.B public-keyring
1513(notated
1514.IB which -keyring
1515in the descriptions below) indicating which keyring file is problematic,
1516and the second token is the filename of the keyring. Frequently a key
1517tag may be given next, preceded by the token
1518.BR key .
1519.SP
1520.BI "KEYMGMT public-keyring " file " key " tag " algorithm-mismatch"
1521A peer's public key doesn't request the same algorithms as our private
1522key.
1523.SP
1524.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " bad-tag-length " len
1525The key attributes specify the length of MAC tag as
1526.I len
1527but this is an invalid value \(en either too large or not a multiple of
1528eight.
1529.SP
1530.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " bad-tag-length-string " str
1531The key attributes contain
1532.I str
1533where a MAC tag length was expected. The key was generated wrongly.
1534.SP
424de4ea
MW
1535.BI "KEYMGMT private-keyring " file " key " tag " incorrect-public-key"
1536The private key doesn't record the correct corresponding public key.
1537.SP
1538.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " io-error " ecode " " message
1539A system error occurred while opening or reading the keyring file.
1540.SP
4d36660a
MW
1541.BI "KEYMGMT private-keyring " file " key " tag " changed-group"
1542The private keyring has been changed, but the new private key can't be
1543used because it uses a different group for Diffie\(enHellman key
1544exchange.
1545.SP
424de4ea
MW
1546.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " no-hmac-for-hash " hash
1547No message authentication code was given explicitly, and there's no
1548implementation of HMAC for the selected hash function
1549.IR hash .
4d36660a 1550.SP
a93aacce
MW
1551.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unknown-bulk-transform " bulk
1552The key specifies the use of an unknown bulk-crypto transform
1553.IR bulk .
da291076
MW
1554Maybe the key was generated wrongly, or maybe the version of
1555.BR tripe (8)
1556is too old.
a93aacce 1557.SP
4d36660a
MW
1558.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unknown-cipher " cipher
1559The key specifies the use of an unknown symmetric encryption algorithm
1560.IR cipher .
1561Maybe the key was generated wrongly, or maybe the version of
1562Catacomb installed is too old.
1563.SP
1564.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unknown-group-type " type
1565The key specifies the use of a Diffie\(enHellman group of an unknown
1566.IR type .
1567Maybe the key was generated wrongly, or maybe the version of
1568.BR tripe (8)
1569is too old.
1570.SP
1571.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unknown-hash " hash
1572The key specifies the use of an unknown hash function
1573.IR hash .
1574Maybe the key was generated wrongly, or maybe the version of Catacomb
1575installed is too old.
1576.SP
1577.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unknown-mac " mac
1578The key specifies the use of an unknown message authentication code
1579.IR mac .
1580Maybe the key was generated wrongly, or maybe the version of Catacomb
1581installed is too old.
1582.SP
1583.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unknown-mgf-cipher " mgf
1584The key specifies the use of an unknown symmetric encryption function
1585.I mgf
1586for mask generation. Maybe the key was generated wrongly, or maybe the
1587version of Catacomb installed is too old.
1588.SP
07bdda1f
MW
1589.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unknown-serialization-format " ser
1590The key specifies the use of an unknown serialization format
1591.I ser
1592for hashing group elements. Maybe the key was generated wrongly, or
da291076
MW
1593maybe the version of
1594.BR tripe (8)
1595is too old.
07bdda1f 1596.SP
32b550bd
MW
1597.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unsuitable-aead-cipher " cipher "no-aad"
1598The key specifies the use of an authenticated encryption scheme
1599.I cipher
1600which does not support the processing of additional authenticated data.
1601The most prominent examples of such schemes are the
1602.IB cipher -naclbox
1603collection, where
1604.I cipher
1605is
1606.BR salsa20 ,
1607.BR salsa20/12 ,
1608.BR salsa20/8 ,
1609.BR chacha20 ,
1610.BR chacha12 ,
1611or
1612.BR chacha8 ;
1613use the
1614.B naclbox
1615bulk transform rather than
1616.B aead
5a9dea88 1617for these, or switch to one of the IETF
32b550bd 1618.IB cipher -poly1305
5a9dea88 1619schemes instead.
32b550bd
MW
1620.SP
1621.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unsuitable-aead-cipher " cipher "nonce-too-small"
1622The key specifies the use of an authenticated encryption scheme
1623.I cipher
1624which doesn't even allow a 5-byte (40-bit) nonce. Catacomb doesn't
1625implement any such limited AE schemes: you must be doing something
1626strange.
1627.SP
1628.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unsuitable-aead-cipher " cipher "nonce-too-large"
1629The key specifies the use of an authenticated encryption scheme
1630.I cipher
1631which doesn't support any nonce size smaller than 64 bytes (512 bits).
1632Catacomb doesn't implement any such extravagant AE schemes: you must be
1633doing something strange.
1634.SP
1635.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " unsuitable-aead-cipher " cipher "nonempty-ciphertext-for-empty-message"
1636The key specifies the use of an authenticated encryption scheme
1637.I cipher
1638which produces ciphertext output even when given a completely empty
1639message. Catacomb doesn't implement any such unhelpful AE schemes: you
1640must be doing something strange.
4d36660a
MW
1641.SP
1642.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " " alg " " name " no-key-size " hashsz
1643The
1644.I alg
1645token is either
1646.B cipher
1647or
1648.BR mac .
1649The named algorithm requires more key material than the hash function
1650can provide. You must change either the hash function, or the cipher or
1651MAC.
13a55605 1652.SP
4d36660a
MW
1653.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key " tag " mgf " mgf " restrictive-key-schedule"
1654The cipher selected for mask-generation is unsuitable because it can't
1655accept arbitrary-sized keys.
13a55605 1656.SP
4d36660a
MW
1657.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " key-not-found " tag
1658A key named
3cdc3f3a 1659.I tag
4d36660a 1660couldn't be found in the keyring.
13a55605 1661.SP
fb6a9f13
MW
1662.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " unknown-key-id 0x" keyid
1663A key with the given
1664.I keyid
1665(in hex) was requested but not found.
1666.SP
4d36660a
MW
1667.BI "KEYMGMT " which "-keyring " file " line " line " " message
1668The contents of the keyring file are invalid. There may well be a bug
1669in the
1670.BR key (1)
1671program.
3cdc3f3a 1672.SS "KX warnings"
1673These indicate problems during key-exchange. Many indicate either a bug
1674in the server (either yours or the remote one), or some kind of attack
1675in progress. All name a
1676.I peer
1677as the second token: this is the peer the packet is apparently from,
1678though it may have been sent by an attacker instead.
1679.PP
1680In the descriptions below,
1681.I msgtoken
1682is one of the tokens
1683.BR pre-challenge ,
1684.BR cookie ,
1685.BR challenge ,
1686.BR reply ,
1687.BR switch-rq ,
3cdc3f3a 1688.BR switch-ok .
8362ac1c
MW
1689.BR token-rq ,
1690.BR token ,
1691or
1692.BR knock .
13a55605 1693.SP
35c8b547
MW
1694.BI "KX " peer " algorithms-mismatch local-private-key " privtag " peer-public-key " pubtag
1695The algorithms specified in the peer's public key
1696.I pubtag
1697don't match the ones described in the private key
1698.IR privtag .
1699.SP
3cdc3f3a 1700.BI "KX " peer " bad-expected-reply-log"
1701The challenges
1702.B tripe
1703uses in its protocol contain a check value which proves that the
1704challenge is honest. This message indicates that the check value
1705supplied is wrong: someone is attempting to use bogus challenges to
1706persuade your
1707.B tripe
1708server to leak private key information. No chance!
13a55605 1709.SP
bd58d532 1710.BI "KX " peer " decrypt-failed reply\fR|\fBswitch-ok"
3cdc3f3a 1711A symmetrically-encrypted portion of a key-exchange message failed to
1712decrypt.
13a55605 1713.SP
3cdc3f3a 1714.BI "KX " peer " invalid " msgtoken
1715A key-exchange message was malformed. This almost certainly indicates a
1716bug somewhere.
13a55605 1717.SP
bd58d532 1718.BI "KX " peer " incorrect cookie\fR|\fBswitch-rq\fR|\fBswitch-ok"
3cdc3f3a 1719A message didn't contain the right magic data. This may be a replay of
1720some old exchange, or random packets being sent in an attempt to waste
1721CPU.
13a55605 1722.SP
35c8b547
MW
1723.BI "KX " peer " " which "-key-expired"
1724The local private key or the peer's public key (distinguished by
1725.IR which )
1726has expired. Either you or the peer's maintainer should have arranged
1727for a replacement before now.
13a55605 1728.SP
3cdc3f3a 1729.BI "KX " peer " sending-cookie"
1730We've received too many bogus pre-challenge messages. Someone is trying
1731to flood us with key-exchange messages and make us waste CPU on doing
1732hard asymmetric crypto sums.
13a55605 1733.SP
3cdc3f3a 1734.BI "KX " peer " unexpected " msgtoken
1735The message received wasn't appropriate for this stage of the key
1736exchange process. This may mean that one of our previous packets got
e04c2d50 1737lost. For
3cdc3f3a 1738.BR pre-challenge ,
1739it may simply mean that the peer has recently restarted.
13a55605 1740.SP
3cdc3f3a 1741.BI "KX " peer " unknown-challenge"
1742The peer is asking for an answer to a challenge which we don't know
1743about. This may mean that we've been inundated with challenges from
1744some malicious source
1745.I who can read our messages
1746and discarded the valid one.
13a55605 1747.SP
3cdc3f3a 1748.BI "KX " peer " unknown-message 0x" nn
1749An unknown key-exchange message arrived.
1750.SS "PEER warnings"
1751These are largely concerned with management of peers and the low-level
83487ded 1752details of the network protocol. The second token is usually the name of
e04c2d50 1753a peer, or
3cdc3f3a 1754.RB ` \- '
1755if none is relevant.
13a55605 1756.SP
3cdc3f3a 1757.BI "PEER " peer " bad-packet no-type"
1758An empty packet arrived. This is very strange.
13a55605 1759.SP
3cdc3f3a 1760.BI "PEER " peer " bad-packet unknown-category 0x" nn
1761The message category
1762.I nn
1763(in hex) isn't understood. Probably a strange random packet from
1764somewhere; could be an unlikely bug.
13a55605 1765.SP
3cdc3f3a 1766.BI "PEER " peer " bad-packet unknown-type 0x" nn
1767The message type
1768.I nn
1769(in hex) isn't understood. Probably a strange random packet from
1770somewhere; could be an unlikely bug.
13a55605 1771.SP
0ba8de86 1772.BI "PEER " peer " corrupt-encrypted-ping"
1773The peer sent a ping response which matches an outstanding ping, but its
1774payload is wrong. There's definitely a bug somewhere.
13a55605 1775.SP
0ba8de86 1776.BI "PEER " peer " corrupt-transport-ping"
1777The peer (apparently) sent a ping response which matches an outstanding
1778ping, but its payload is wrong. Either there's a bug, or the bad guys
1779are playing tricks on you.
13a55605 1780.SP
3cdc3f3a 1781.BI "PEER " peer " decrypt-failed"
1782An encrypted IP packet failed to decrypt. It may have been mangled in
1783transit, or may be a very old packet from an expired previous session
1784key. There is usually a considerable overlap in the validity periods of
1785successive session keys, so this shouldn't occur unless the key exchange
1786takes ages or fails.
13a55605 1787.SP
0ba8de86 1788.BI "PEER " peer " malformed-encrypted-ping"
1789The peer sent a ping response which is hopelessly invalid. There's
1790definitely a bug somewhere.
13a55605 1791.SP
0ba8de86 1792.BI "PEER " peer " malformed-transport-ping"
1793The peer (apparently) sent a ping response which is hopelessly invalid.
1794Either there's a bug, or the bad guys are playing tricks on you.
13a55605 1795.SP
3cdc3f3a 1796.BI "PEER " peer " packet-build-failed"
1797There wasn't enough space in our buffer to put the packet we wanted to
1798send. Shouldn't happen.
13a55605 1799.SP
f43df819 1800.BI "PEER \- socket-read-error " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1801An error occurred trying to read an incoming packet.
13a55605 1802.SP
f43df819 1803.BI "PEER " peer " socket-write-error " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1804An error occurred attempting to send a network packet. We lost that
1805one.
13a55605 1806.SP
56c76774
MW
1807.BI "PEER " address\fR... " disabled-address-family"
1808An attempt was made to send a packet to an address for which support was
1809switched off by command-line options.
1810.SP
8362ac1c
MW
1811.BI "PEER " address\fR... " socket-write-error " ecode " " message
1812An error occurred attempting to send a network packet. We lost that
1813one.
1814.SP
5ae728a6
MW
1815.BI "PEER \- udp-socket " address-family " bind-failed " ecode " " message
1816The server failed to associate a UDP socket with a local address.
1817.SP
1818.BI "PEER \- udp-socket " address-family " create-failed " ecode " " message
1819The server failed to create a UDP socket for the
1820.IR address-family .
1821.SP
1822.BI "PEER \- udp-socket " address-family " read-local-address-failed " ecode " " message
1823The server failed to discover the local address for one of its own UDP
1824sockets.
1825.SP
1826.BI "PEER \- udp-socket " address-family " set-buffers-failed " ecode " " message
1827The server failed to configure appropriate buffer sizes on a UDP socket.
1828.SP
1829.BI "PEER \- udp-socket INET6 set-v6only-failed " ecode " " message
1830The server failed to configure an IPv6 socket not to try to collect IPv4
1831traffic too.
1832.SP
0ba8de86 1833.BI "PEER " peer " unexpected-encrypted-ping 0x" id
1834The peer sent an encrypted ping response whose id doesn't match any
1835outstanding ping. Maybe it was delayed for longer than the server was
1836willing to wait, or maybe the peer has gone mad.
13a55605 1837.SP
0ba8de86 1838.BI "PEER \- unexpected-source " address\fR...
1839A packet arrived from
1840.I address
1841(a network address \(en see above), but no peer is known at that
1842address. This may indicate a misconfiguration, or simply be a result of
1843one end of a connection being set up before the other.
13a55605 1844.SP
0ba8de86 1845.BI "PEER " peer " unexpected-transport-ping 0x" id
1846The peer (apparently) sent a transport ping response whose id doesn't
1847match any outstanding ping. Maybe it was delayed for longer than the
1848server was willing to wait, or maybe the peer has gone mad; or maybe
1849there are bad people trying to confuse you.
693588c0
MW
1850.SP
1851.BI "PEER " peer " unexpected-wgt"
1852A `who-goes-there' message from received from
1853.IR peer ,
1854but the peer isn't ephemeral.
1855.SP
1856.BI "PEER " peer " unrecognized-wgt"
1857A `who-goes-there' message from received from
1858.IR peer ,
1859but it doesn't quote the start of a message which we recently sent to
1860it.
e8ea4061
MW
1861.SS "PRIVSEP warnings"
1862These indicate problems with the privilege-separation helper process.
1863(The server tries to drop its privileges when it starts up, leaving a
1864privileged helper process behind which will create and hand over tunnel
1865descriptors on request, but hopefully not do anything else especially
1866dangerous. Tunnel descriptors are not completely safe, but this is
1867probably better than nothing.)
1868.SP
1869.BI "PRIVSEP child-exited " rc
1870The helper process exited normally with status
1871.IR rc .
1872Status 0 means that it thought the server didn't want it any more; 1
1873means that it was invoked incorrectly; 127 means that some system call
1874failed.
1875.SP
1876.BI "PRIVSEP child-killed " sig
1877The helper process was killed by signal number
1878.IR sig .
1879.SP
1880.BI "PRIVSEP child-died " status
1881The helper process died in some unexpected way;
1882.I status is the raw status code returned by
1883.BR waitpid (2),
1884because the server didn't understand how to decode it.
1885.SP
1886.BI "PRIVSEP helper-died"
1887A tunnel driver requires a tunnel descriptor from the helper, but the
1888helper isn't running so this won't work.
1889.SP
1890.BI "PRIVSEP helper-read-error " ecode " " message
1891The server failed to read a response from the helper process.
1892.SP
1893.BI "PRIVSEP helper-short-read"
1894The helper process didn't send back enough data, and has likely crashed.
1895.SP
1896.BI "PRIVSEP helper-write-error " ecode " " message
1897The server failed to send a message to the helper process.
1898.SP
1899.BI "PRIVSEP no-fd-from-helper"
1900The helper process sent back a positive response, but didn't include the
1901requested tunnel descriptor.
1902.SP
5ae728a6
MW
1903.BI "PRIVSEP socketpair-create-failed " ecode " " message
1904The server couldn't create the socketpair it's supposed to use to
1905communicate with the helper process.
1906.SP
e8ea4061
MW
1907.BI "PRIVSEP unknown-response-code"
1908The helper process sent back an incomprehensible reply. It's probably
1909very confused and may crash.
3cdc3f3a 1910.SS "SERVER warnings"
1911These indicate problems concerning the server process as a whole.
13a55605 1912.SP
3cdc3f3a 1913.BI "SERVER ignore signal " name
1914A signal arrived, but the server ignored it. Currently this happens for
1915.B SIGHUP
1916because that's a popular way of telling daemons to re-read their
1917configuration files. Since
1918.B tripe
1919re-reads its keyrings automatically and has no other configuration
1920files, it's not relevant, but it seemed better to ignore the signal than
1921let the server die.
13a55605 1922.SP
3cdc3f3a 1923.BI "SERVER quit signal " \fR[\fInn\fR|\fIname\fR]
1924A signal arrived and
1925.B tripe
1926is going to quit.
13a55605 1927.SP
3cdc3f3a 1928.BI "SERVER quit admin-request"
1929A client of the administration interface issued a
1930.B QUIT
1931command.
13a55605 1932.SP
5ae728a6
MW
1933.BI "SERVER daemon-error " ecode " " message
1934The server failed to become a daemon during initialization.
1935.SP
46dde080
MW
1936.BI "SERVER quit foreground-eof"
1937The server is running in foreground mode (the
1938.B \-F
1939option), and encountered end-of-file on standard input.
1940.SP
f43df819 1941.BI "SERVER select-error " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1942An error occurred in the server's main event loop. This is bad: if it
1943happens too many times, the server will abort.
e8ea4061
MW
1944.SP
1945.BI "SERVER waitpid-error " ecode " " message
1946The server was informed that one of its child processes had exited, but
1947couldn't retrieve the child's status.
3cdc3f3a 1948.SS "SYMM warnings"
1949These are concerned with the symmetric encryption and decryption
1950process.
13a55605 1951.SP
3cdc3f3a 1952.BI "SYMM replay old-sequence"
1953A packet was received with an old sequence number. It may just have
1954been delayed or duplicated, or it may have been an attempt at a replay
1955attack.
13a55605 1956.SP
3cdc3f3a 1957.BI "SYMM replay duplicated-sequence"
1958A packet was received with a sequence number we've definitely seen
1959before. It may be an accidental duplication because the 'net is like
1960that, or a deliberate attempt at a replay.
1961.SS "TUN warnings"
1962These concern the workings of the system-specific tunnel driver. The
83487ded 1963second token is the name of the tunnel interface in question, or
3cdc3f3a 1964.RB ` \- '
1965if none.
13a55605 1966.SP
3cdc3f3a 1967.BI "TUN \- bsd no-tunnel-devices"
1968The driver couldn't find an available tunnel device. Maybe if you
e04c2d50 1969create some more
3cdc3f3a 1970.BI /dev/tun nn
1971files, it will work.
13a55605 1972.SP
72917fe7 1973.BI "TUN \- " tun-name " open-error " device " " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1974An attempt to open the tunnel device file
1975.I device
1976failed.
13a55605 1977.SP
f43df819 1978.BI "TUN \- linux config-error " ecode " " message
3cdc3f3a 1979Configuring the Linux TUN/TAP interface failed.
13a55605 1980.SP
f43df819 1981.BI "TUN " ifname " " tun-name " read-error " ecode " " message
42da2a58 1982Reading from the tunnel device failed.
13a55605 1983.SP
898975ee
MW
1984.BI "TUN " ifname " " tun-name " write-error " ecode " " message
1985Writing from the tunnel device failed.
1986.SP
42da2a58 1987.BI "TUN " ifname " slip bad-escape"
1988The SLIP driver encountered a escaped byte it wasn't expecting to see.
1989The erroneous packet will be ignored.
13a55605 1990.SP
5ae728a6
MW
1991.BI "TUN \- slip bad-interface-list"
1992The interface list, in the
1993.B TRIPE_SLIPIF
1994environment variable, is malformed.
1995.SP
b9066fbb 1996.BI "TUN " ifname " slip eof"
1997The SLIP driver encountered end-of-file on its input descriptor.
1998Pending data is discarded, and no attempt is made to read any more data
1999from that interface ever.
13a55605 2000.SP
b9066fbb 2001.BI "TUN " ifname " slip escape-end"
2002The SLIP driver encountered an escaped `end' marker. This probably
2003means that someone's been sending it junk. The erroneous packet is
2004discarded, and we hope that we've rediscovered synchronization.
13a55605 2005.SP
f43df819 2006.BI "TUN \- slip fork-error " ecode " " message
42da2a58 2007The SLIP driver encountered an error forking a child process while
2008allocating a new dynamic interface.
13a55605 2009.SP
42da2a58 2010.BI "TUN \- slip no-slip-interfaces"
2011The driver ran out of static SLIP interfaces. Either preallocate more,
2012or use dynamic SLIP interface allocation.
13a55605 2013.SP
b9066fbb 2014.BI "TUN " ifname " slip overflow"
2015The SLIP driver gave up reading a packet because it got too large.
13a55605 2016.SP
f43df819 2017.BI "TUN \- slip pipe-error " ecode " " message
42da2a58 2018The SLIP driver encountered an error creating pipes while allocating a
2019new dynamic interface.
13a55605 2020.SP
f43df819 2021.BI "TUN \- slip read-ifname-failed " ecode " " message
42da2a58 2022The SLIP driver encountered an error reading the name of a dynamically
2023allocated interface. Maybe the allocation script is broken.
13a55605 2024.SP
f43df819 2025.BI "TUN \- unet config-error " ecode " " message
42da2a58 2026Configuring the Linux Unet interface failed. Unet is obsolete and
2027shouldn't be used any more.
13a55605 2028.SP
f43df819 2029.BI "TUN \- unet getinfo-error " ecode " " message
42da2a58 2030Reading information about the Unet interface failed. Unet is obsolete
2031and shouldn't be used any more.
bd58d532 2032.SS "USER warnings"
2033These are issued by administration clients using the
2034.B WARN
2035command.
13a55605 2036.SP
bd58d532 2037.BI "USER " tokens\fR...
2038An administration client issued a warning.
13a55605 2039.\"-sep
fc916a09
MW
2040.
2041.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
13a55605 2042.SH "SUMMARY"
fc916a09 2043.
13a55605
MW
2044.SS "Command responses"
2045.nf
2acd7cd6 2046.BI "BGDETACH " tag
13a55605
MW
2047.BI "BGFAIL " tag " " tokens \fR...
2048.BI "BGINFO " tag " " tokens \fR...
2049.BI "BGOK " tag
2050.BI "FAIL " tokens \fR...
2051.BI "INFO " tokens \fR...
2052.B OK
2053.fi
2054.\"= summary
fc916a09
MW
2055.
2056.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
d6623498 2057.SH "SEE ALSO"
fc916a09 2058.
d6623498 2059.BR tripectl (1),
2060.BR tripe (8).
2061.PP
3cdc3f3a 2062.IR "The Trivial IP Encryption Protocol" .
fc916a09
MW
2063.
2064.\"--------------------------------------------------------------------------
d6623498 2065.SH "AUTHOR"
fc916a09 2066.
d36eda2a 2067Mark Wooding, <mdw@distorted.org.uk>
fc916a09
MW
2068.
2069.\"----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------