6to4relay man page on Solaris

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6to4relay(1M)		System Administration Commands		 6to4relay(1M)

NAME
       6to4relay  -  administer configuration for 6to4 relay router communica‐
       tion

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/sbin/6to4relay

       /usr/sbin/6to4relay [-e] [-a addr]

       /usr/sbin/6to4relay [-d]

       /usr/sbin/6to4relay [-h]

DESCRIPTION
       The 6to4relay command is used to configure 6to4 relay router communica‐
       tion.  Relay  router  communication  support  is enabled by setting the
       value of a variable that stores an IPv4 address within the tun  module.
       This  variable is global to all tunnels and defines the policy for com‐
       munication with relay routers.  By  default,  the  address  is  set  to
       INADDR_ANY  (0.0.0.0),  and the kernel interprets the value to indicate
       that support for relay router  communication  is	 disabled.  Otherwise,
       support	is enabled, and the specified address is used as the IPv4 des‐
       tination address when packets destined for native IPv6 (non-6to4) hosts
       are  sent through the 6to4 tunnel interface. The 6to4relay command uses
       a project private ioctl to set the variable.

       6to4relay used without any options outputs the current, in-kernel, con‐
       figuration  status.  Use	 the  -a  option to send packets to a specific
       relay router's unicast address instead of the default anycast  address.
       The  address  specified	with the -a option does not specify the policy
       for receiving traffic from relay routers. The source relay router on  a
       received	 packet	 is  non-deterministic, since a different relay router
       may be chosen for each sending native IPv6 end-point.

       Configuration changes made by using the 6to4relay  are  not  persistent
       across  reboot.	The  changes will persist in the kernel only until you
       take the tunnel down

OPTIONS
       The 6to4relay command supports the following options:

       -a addr	Use the specified address, addr.

       -e	Enable support for relay router. Use -a addr if it  is	speci‐
		fied. Otherwise, use the default anycast address, 192.88.99.1.

       -d	Disable support for the relay router.

       -h	Help

OPERANDS
       The following operands are supported:

       addr	A specific relay router's unicast address. addr must be speci‐
		fied as a dotted decimal representation of  an	IPv4  address.
		Otherwise, an error will occur, and the command will fail.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1: Printing the In-Kernel Configuration Status

       Use /usr/sbin/6to4relay without any options to print the in-kernel con‐
       figuration status.

       example# /usr/sbin/6to4relay

       If 6to4 relay router communication is disabled, the administrator  will
       see the following message:

       6to4relay: 6to4 Relay Router communication support is disabled.

       If  6to4	 router	 communication is enabled, the user will see this mes‐
       sage:

       6to4relay: 6to4 Relay Router communication support is enabled.
       IPv4 destination address of Relay Router = 192.88.99.1

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0	Successful completion.

       >0	An error occurred.

FILES
       /usr/sbin/6to4relay     The default installation root

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWcsu			   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │Evolving			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       ifconfig(1M), attributes(5)

       Huitema, C. RFC 3068, An Anycast Prefix for 6to4 Relay Routers. Network
       Working Group. June, 2001.

       Carpenter,  B.  and  Moore, K. RFC 3056, Connection of IPv6 Domains via
       IPv4 Clouds. Network Working Group. February, 2001.

DIAGNOSTICS
       The 6to4relay reports the following messages:

       6to4relay: input (0.0.0.0) is not a valid IPv4 unicast address

	  Example:

	     example# 6to4relay -e -a 0.0.0.0

	  Description:
	     The address specified with the -a option must be a valid  unicast
	     address.

       6to4relay: option requires an argument -a
       usage:
	   6to4relay
	   6to4relay -e [-a <addr>]
	   6to4relay -d
	   6to4relay -h

	  Example:

	     example# 6to4relay -e -a

	  Description:
	     The -a option requires an argument.

       usage:
	   6to4relay
	   6to4relay -e [-a <addr>]
	   6to4relay -d
	   6to4relay -h

	  Example:

	     example# 6to4relay -e -d

	  Description:
	     The  options specified are not permitted. A usage message is out‐
	     put to the screen.

       usage:
	   6to4relay
	   6to4relay -e [-a <addr>]
	   6to4relay -d
	   6to4relay -h

	  Example:

	     example# 6to4relay -a 1.2.3.4

	  Description:
	     The -e option is required in conjunction with the	-a  option.  A
	     usage message is output to the screen.

       6to4relay: ioctl (I_STR) : Invalid argument

	  Example:

	     example# 6to4relay -e -a 239.255.255.255

	  Description:
	     The  address  specified  with the -a option must not be a class d
	     addr.

SunOS 5.10			  19 Nov 2002			 6to4relay(1M)
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