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author | David Kaspar [Dee'Kej] <dkaspar@redhat.com> | 2018-05-17 16:18:04 +0200 |
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committer | David Kaspar [Dee'Kej] <dkaspar@redhat.com> | 2018-05-30 14:33:03 +0200 |
commit | bc40e4a1ef98b16661d79ce9c3b612481b963913 (patch) | |
tree | 120137699343dc1c70f9c077a9186c92fbec2a7e | |
parent | 1437f3fab20b669fa27069cf772e4551ee6078d5 (diff) | |
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Outdated files from doc/ folder removed
Most of these files were more than 15 years old, making them no
longer valid or just simply outdated... Files removed:
* changes.ipv6
* ipv6-*.howto
* sysvinitfiles
Regarding the 'sysvinitfiles' -- the 'initscripts' package is nowadays
intended for keeping the support for old init scripts still used
somewhere. However, for creating new services people should use
systemd now...
-rw-r--r-- | doc/changes.ipv6 | 61 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ipv6-6to4.howto | 173 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ipv6-tunnel.howto | 100 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/sysvinitfiles | 212 |
4 files changed, 0 insertions, 546 deletions
diff --git a/doc/changes.ipv6 b/doc/changes.ipv6 deleted file mode 100644 index 1970e98e..00000000 --- a/doc/changes.ipv6 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,61 +0,0 @@ -v1.6 2nd Sep 2003, Pekka Savola <pekkas@netcore.fi> - -IPv6 CHANGES -============ - -This mentions the most important changes (visible to the administrator) -in IPv6 initscripts. - -RHL9 -> CURRENT ---------------- - - - no major functional changes, only bugfixes and cleanups - -RHL80 -> RHL9 -------------- - - - 6to4 device MTU is calculated explicitly, IPV6TO4_MTU support added - - add route6-<device> static route support - - secondary IPv6 addresses are configurable on tunnel interfaces too - -RHL73 -> RHL80 --------------- - - - no major functional changes - -RHL72 -> RHL73 --------------- - - - 6to4 device changed from sit0 to tun6to4 - - 6to4 assumes the anycast (closest) 6to4 server is used (192.88.99.1) - unless specified with IPV6TO4_RELAY. - - 6to4 does not support automatic tunneling *at all* anymore; use - IPV6_AUTOTUNNEL if you want to use it. - - All support from NBMA tunnels as well as 6to4 using sit0 was removed - - IPV6TO4_CONTROL_RADVD and IPV6TO4_RADVD_PIDFILE was changed to - IPV6_*, respectively. - - IPV6_DEFAULTGW and IPV6_DEFAULTDEV support was introduced; - /etc/sysconfig/static-routes-ipv6 must not be used for them anymore. - -Rough guide to migration: - - Rename IPV6TO4_CONTROL_RADVD to IPV6_CONTROL_RADVD if exists - - Rename IPV6TO4_RADVD_PIDFILE to IPV6_RADVD_PIDFILE if exists - - Remove "default" route from /etc/sysconfig/static-routes-ipv6 and replace - it with something like IPV6_DEFAULTDEV=tun6to4 in /etc/sysconfig/network - - If you need autotunneling, use IPV6_AUTOTUNNEL in /etc/sysconfig/network - -RHL71 -> RHL72 --------------- - - - 6to4 tunneling support was added using device sit0 - - Tunneling method was changed from NBMA (now obsolete) to dedicated - - Automatic tunneling configured was moved from ifcfg-sit0 to - IPV6_AUTOTUNNEL at /etc/sysconfig/network - - - -Some more information ---------------------- - -http://www.bieringer.de/linux/IPv6/IPv6-HOWTO/scripts/current/ ,in particular: -http://www.bieringer.de/linux/IPv6/IPv6-HOWTO/scripts/current/index.html#migration diff --git a/doc/ipv6-6to4.howto b/doc/ipv6-6to4.howto deleted file mode 100644 index 131f4ce4..00000000 --- a/doc/ipv6-6to4.howto +++ /dev/null @@ -1,173 +0,0 @@ -v1.5 1st Sep 2003, Pekka Savola <pekkas@netcore.fi> - -HOW TO SET UP IPV6 WITH 6TO4 ----------------------------- - -6TO4 IN SHORT -------------- - -6to4 is a method of creating automatic IPv6 tunnels. You can connect to -IPv6 Internet very easily without a need for a manually configured tunnel. - -For every globally unique IPv4 address, there exists a mapping for a -subnettable /48 network (2^16 for subnetting, 2^64 bits for hosts). - -Return route can sometimes be non-optimal, leading to higher round-trip times. - -See below for references and more information. - -ASSUMPTIONS ------------ - -1. You're running Red Hat Linux 7.1 or later. - - This is required for correct IPv6 by default settings, and IPv6 being - enabled as a kernel module by default. - -2. Your initscripts >= 6.02, for 6to4 support. - -3. You have a static, globally unique IPv4 address. This is not an absolute - requirement, but the only scenario discussed here. - -4. Protocol 41 (IPv6-in-IPv4) is not being filtered in any IPv4 firewall. - -5. 'iproute' package is installed. This is used by default for a lot - more powerful tunneling capabilities. - -Note: even though 6to4 was supported with earlier releases of Red Hat Linux, -below it is assumed that the initscripts package version this -document comes with is used. - -INFORMATION NEEDED ------------------- - -Nothing :-). - -If you want to select a specific relay (rather than automatically -selecting the closest one), you can define it with IPV6TO4_RELAY -using the list below: - -http://www.kfu.com/~nsayer/6to4/ - -SETTING UP THE 6TO4 CONFIGURATION ---------------------------------- - -Now, set up the configuration as follows: - -1. Enable IPv6 and set 6to4 pseudo-interface as default gateway in - /etc/sysconfig/network: - - echo "IPV6_DEFAULTDEV=tun6to4">> /etc/sysconfig/network - -2. Edit your outbound (Internet) interface configuration. This can be - e.g. ippp0, ppp0, eth0, or the like. Here, eth1 is used. - - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0: ---- -DEVICE=eth0 -BOOTPROTO=none -ONBOOT=yes -IPADDR=xx.yy.zz.ww [Globally unique IPv4 address] -NETMASK=aa.bb.cc.dd [IPv4 settings up to this point] - -IPV6INIT=yes -IPV6TO4INIT=yes ---- - - Note: [i]ppp - interfaces need to be called in /etc/ppp/ip-up|down.local; - if you are not using local files by yourself, this can easily be done with: - - cd /etc/ppp - ln -s ip-up.ipv6to4 ip-up.local - ln -s ip-down.ipv6to4 ip-down.local - - -USING 6TO4 ----------- - -6to4 automatic tunneling is brought up when the interface is brought up. - -You will see your 6to4 address prefix in device tun6to4 when done: - - inet6 addr: 2002:c15e:a001::1/16 Scope:Global - -Note that 'c15e:a001' is the hexadecimal representation of dotted-quad IPv4 -address (IPADDR= above), here '193.94.160.1'. - -NOTE: iproute tools give more reliable data, try e.g. '/sbin/ip addr ls'. - -PROVIDING IPV6 TO YOUR LAN --------------------------- - -If you want to provide IPv6 for your LAN (e.g. connected on eth1) -using your Linux system as a router, this can be done rather easily with 6to4. - -You will need to enable IPv6 forwarding (IPV6FORWARDING=yes in -/etc/sysconfig/network) and install a router advertisement daemon. One such, -'radvd' is available in the distribution. - -You must configure the prefix your IPv4 maps to (see tun6to4 above) in -/etc/radvd.conf or use certain automatic hooks. This is not covered here -in detail; see radvd.conf(5) and /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-ipv6 -for details. - -Usually the following is enough: - -1. Make sure that radvd package is installed. - -2. Configure radvd as outlined in radvd.conf(5); the file could - be something like: - - interface eth1 - { - AdvSendAdvert on; - MinRtrAdvInterval 3; - MaxRtrAdvInterval 10; - prefix 0:0:0:1::/64 - { - Base6to4Interface eth0; - AdvPreferredLifetime 120; - AdvValidLifetime 300; - }; - }; - -3. Make sure radvd starts at boot and start it now: - - /sbin/chkconfig radvd on - /sbin/service radvd start - -4. Make the initscripts signal radvd to recalculate the prefix when it - changes: - - /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0: - - IPV6_CONTROL_RADVD=yes - -5. Configure the associated routes to other 6to4 subnets to point at - your LAN interfaces; this can be done automatically with - IPV6TO4_ROUTING variable; please refer sysconfig.txt for details. - In the particular example, above, this would be like: - - /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0: - - IPV6TO4_ROUTING="eth1-:1::0/64" - - However, please note that no global address is configured on the - interface, just a route! - -MORE INFORMATION ----------------- - -http://www.bieringer.de/linux/IPv6/IPv6-HOWTO/IPv6-HOWTO.html is a good -source of IPv6 related Linux-information. - -ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc3056.txt ("Connection of IPv6 Domains via IPv4 -Clouds") is the RFC about 6to4. - -ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc3068.txt ("An Anycast Prefix for 6to4 Relay -Routers") is the RFC about finding a close 6to4 relay automatically. - -http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-savola-v6ops-6to4-security-02.txt -("Security Considerations and Enhancements for 6to4") explains some -security considerations in 6to4. diff --git a/doc/ipv6-tunnel.howto b/doc/ipv6-tunnel.howto deleted file mode 100644 index ac5de0dc..00000000 --- a/doc/ipv6-tunnel.howto +++ /dev/null @@ -1,100 +0,0 @@ -v1.4 10th Jan 2002, Pekka Savola <pekkas@netcore.fi> - -HOW TO SET UP AN IPV6 TUNNEL ----------------------------- - -ASSUMPTIONS ------------ - -1. You're running Red Hat Linux 7.1 or later. - - This is required for correct IPv6 by default settings, and IPv6 being - enabled as a kernel module by default. You also need recent enough - initscripts, provided in RHL71. - -2. You have a static, globally unique IPv4 address. - -3. Protocol 41 (IPv6-in-IPv4) is not being filtered in any IPv4 firewall. - -4. 'iproute' package is installed. This is used by default for a lot - more powerful tunneling capabilities. - -INFORMATION NEEDED ------------------- - -You need to know: - -1. The IPv4 address of your tunnel end point -2. The IPv6 address used in your tunnel - -The other end needs to know the same things about your setup. - -NOTE: It is also possible to set up unnumbered tunnels (no global IPv6 -addresses). - -You must get these from a party (tunnel broker) who's assigning IPv6 tunnels. See: -http://www.bieringer.de/linux/IPv6/IPv6-HOWTO/IPv6-HOWTO-1.html#joinIPv6backbone - -Example from http://old.freenet6.net: ---- -This script will create a tunnel between this computer -and the Freenet6 server (tunnels server) -Your IPv6 address (your tunnel end point) is -3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:7f5 -We establish a tunnel to the Freenet6 server at -3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:7f4 -Your IPv4 address is : 193.xxx.yyy.zzz -The IPv4 address of the Freenet6 server is : 206.123.31.102 ---- - -With this information, a tunnel can be set up: - -SETTING UP THE TUNNEL CONFIGURATION ------------------------------------ - -Now, set up the configuration as follows: - -1. Enable IPv6 and set tunnel as default gateway in /etc/sysconfig/network: - - echo "IPV6_DEFAULTDEV=sit1">> /etc/sysconfig/network - -2. Create /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-sit1, with the following: - ---- -DEVICE=sit1 -BOOTPROTO=none -ONBOOT=yes -IPV6INIT=yes -IPV6TUNNELIPV4=206.123.31.102 -IPV6ADDR=3ffe:b00:c18:1fff:0:0:0:7f5/128 ---- - -NOTE: You must use _sit1_ (or sit2,...). sit0 cannot be used, this is a -special device. - -NOTE: Some tunnel endpoints might require a different kind of prefix length; -for example, Cisco's usually favour /126. Using /0 creates a default route -through that interface. - -NOTE: If you're not directly connected to the Internet, you may want to use -ONBOOT=no instead. - -TUNNELING ---------- - -Tunnel can be brought up and down with: - - ifup sit1 - ifdown sit1 - -NOTE: In initscripts < 6.02 (ie. IPV6_TUNNELMODE=NBMA), even though sit1 is used, -'ip' sees the tunnel as sit0. This is due to an "interesting" implementation -of tunneling -- else multiple tunnels couldn't be used extensibly. - -NOTE: iproute tools give more reliable data, try e.g. '/sbin/ip addr ls'. - -MORE INFORMATION ----------------- - -http://www.bieringer.de/linux/IPv6/IPv6-HOWTO/IPv6-HOWTO.html is a good -source of IPv6 related Linux-information. diff --git a/doc/sysvinitfiles b/doc/sysvinitfiles deleted file mode 100644 index fcc90b5e..00000000 --- a/doc/sysvinitfiles +++ /dev/null @@ -1,212 +0,0 @@ -Writing System V init scripts for Red Hat Linux -=============================================== - -All System V init scripts are named /etc/rc.d/init.d/<servicename> -where <servicename> is the name of the service. There must be no -".init" suffix. - -This path will very likely be moved to /etc/init.d in the future. -Once Red Hat Linux 7.0 is installed, you can access scripts as -/etc/init.d/<servicename>, via symlinks. - -Sample Script -============= - -#!/bin/bash -# -# /etc/rc.d/init.d/<servicename> -# -# <description of the *service*> -# <any general comments about this init script> -# -# <tags -- see below for tag definitions. *Every line* from the top -# of the file to the end of the tags section must begin with a # -# character. After the tags section, there should be a blank line. -# This keeps normal comments in the rest of the file from being -# mistaken for tags, should they happen to fit the pattern.> - -# Source function library. -. /etc/init.d/functions - -<define any local shell functions used by the code that follows> - -start() { - echo -n "Starting <servicename>: " - <start daemons, perhaps with the daemon function> - touch /var/lock/subsys/<servicename> - return <return code of starting daemon> -} - -stop() { - echo -n "Shutting down <servicename>: " - <stop daemons, perhaps with the killproc function> - rm -f /var/lock/subsys/<servicename> - return <return code of stopping daemon> -} - -case "$1" in - start) - start - ;; - stop) - stop - ;; - status) - <report the status of the daemons in free-form format, - perhaps with the status function> - ;; - restart) - stop - start - ;; - reload) - <cause the service configuration to be reread, either with - kill -HUP or by restarting the daemons, in a manner similar - to restart above> - ;; - condrestart) - <Restarts the servce if it is already running. For example:> - [ -f /var/lock/subsys/<service> ] && restart || : - probe) - <optional. If it exists, then it should determine whether - or not the service needs to be restarted or reloaded (or - whatever) in order to activate any changes in the configuration - scripts. It should print out a list of commands to give to - $0; see the description under the probe tag below.> - ;; - *) - echo "Usage: <servicename> {start|stop|status|reload|restart[|probe]" - exit 1 - ;; -esac -exit $? - -Notes: - -- The restart and reload functions may be (and commonly are) - combined into one test, vis: - restart|reload) -- You are not prohibited from adding other commands; list all commands - which you intend to be used interactively to the usage message. -- Notice the change in that stop() and start() are now shell functions. - This means that restart can be implemented as - stop - start - instead of - $0 stop - $0 start - This saves a few shell invocations. - -Functions in /etc/init.d/functions -======================================= - -daemon [ --check <name> ] [ --user <username>] - [+/-nicelevel] program [arguments] [&] - - Starts a daemon, if it is not already running. Does - other useful things like keeping the daemon from dumping - core if it terminates unexpectedly. - - --check <name>: - Check that <name> is running, as opposed to simply the - first argument passed to daemon(). - --user <username>: - Run command as user <username> - -killproc program [signal] - - Sends a signal to the program; by default it sends a SIGTERM, - and if the process doesn't die, it sends a SIGKILL a few - seconds later. - - It also tries to remove the pidfile, if it finds one. - -pidofproc program - - Tries to find the pid of a program; checking likely pidfiles, - and using the pidof program. Used mainly from within other - functions in this file, but also available to scripts. - -status program - - Prints status information. Assumes that the program name is - the same as the servicename. - - -Tags -==== - -# chkconfig: <startlevellist> <startpriority> <endpriority> - - Required. <startlevellist> is a list of levels in which - the service should be started by default. <startpriority> - and <endpriority> are priority numbers. For example: - # chkconfig: 2345 20 80 - Read 'man chkconfig' for more information. - - Unless there is a VERY GOOD, EXPLICIT reason to the - contrary, the <endpriority> should be equal to - 100 - <startpriority> - -# description: <multi-line description of service> - - Required. Several lines of description, continued with '\' - characters. The initial comment and following whitespace - on the following lines is ignored. - -# description[ln]: <multi-line description of service in the language \ -# ln, whatever that is> - - Optional. Should be the description translated into the - specified language. - -# processname: - - Optional, multiple entries allowed. For each process name - started by the script, there should be a processname entry. - For example, the samba service starts two daemons: - # processname: smdb - # processname: nmdb - -# config: - - Optional, multiple entries allowed. For each static config - file used by the daemon, use a single entry. For example: - # config: /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf - # config: /etc/httpd/conf/srm.conf - - Optionally, if the server will automatically reload the config - file if it is changed, you can append the word "autoreload" to - the line: - # config: /etc/foobar.conf autoreload - -# pidfile: - - Optional, multiple entries allowed. Use just like the config - entry, except that it points at pidfiles. It is assumed that - the pidfiles are only updated at process creation time, and - not later. The first line of this file should be the ASCII - representation of the PID; a terminating newline is optional. - Any lines other than the first line are not examined. - -# probe: true - - Optional, used IN PLACE of processname, config, and pidfile. - If it exists, then a proper reload-if-necessary cycle may be - achieved by running these commands: - - command=$(/etc/rc.d/init.d/SCRIPT probe) - [ -n "$command" ] && /etc/rc.d/init.d/SCRIPT $command - - where SCRIPT is the name of the service's sysv init script. - - Scripts that need to do complex processing could, as an - example, return "run /var/tmp/<servicename.probe.$$" - and implement a "run" command which would execute the - named script and then remove it. - - Note that the probe command should simply "exit 0" if nothing - needs to be done to bring the service into sync with its - configuration files. - -Copyright (c) 2000 Red Hat Software, Inc. |