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BOOTPTAB(5)							   BOOTPTAB(5)

NAME
       bootptab - Internet Bootstrap Protocol server database

DESCRIPTION
       The  bootptab  file  is the configuration database file for bootpd, the
       Internet Bootstrap Protocol server.  Its format is similar to  that  of
       termcap(5)  in  which two-character case-sensitive tag symbols are used
       to represent host parameters.  These parameter declarations  are	 sepa‐
       rated by colons (:), with a general format of:

	    hostname:tg=value:tg=value:tg=value:

       where  hostname	is  the	 actual	 name  of  a bootp client (or a "dummy
       entry"), and tg is a two-character tag symbol.  Replies are returned to
       clients	only  if  an  entry  with  the client's Ethernet or IP address
       exists in the booptab file.  Dummy entries  have	 an  invalid  hostname
       (one with a "." as the first character) and are used to provide default
       values used by other entries via the tc=.dummy-entry  mechanism.	  Most
       tags  must be followed by an equal sign and a value as above.  Some may
       also appear in a boolean form with no value  (i.e.   :tg:).   The  cur‐
       rently recognized tags are:

	    bf	 Bootfile
	    bs	 Bootfile size in 512-octet blocks
	    cs	 Cookie server address list
	    df	 Merit dump file
	    dn	 Domain name
	    ds	 Domain name server address list
	    ef	 Extension file
	    gw	 Gateway address list
	    ha	 Host hardware address
	    hd	 Bootfile home directory
	    hn	 Send client's hostname to client
	    ht	 Host hardware type (see Assigned Numbers RFC)
	    im	 Impress server address list
	    ip	 Host IP address
	    lg	 Log server address list
	    lp	 LPR server address list
	    ns	 IEN-116 name server address list
	    nt	 NTP (time) Server (RFC 1129)
	    ra	 Reply address override
	    rl	 Resource location protocol server address list
	    rp	 Root path to mount as root
	    sa	 TFTP server address client should use
	    sm	 Host subnet mask
	    sw	 Swap server address
	    tc	 Table continuation (points to similar "template" host entry)
	    td	 TFTP root directory used by "secure" TFTP servers
	    to	 Time offset in seconds from UTC
	    ts	 Time server address list
	    vm	 Vendor magic cookie selector
	    yd	 YP (NIS) domain name
	    ys	 YP (NIS) server address

       There is also a generic tag, Tn, where n is an RFC1084 vendor field tag
       number.	Thus it is possible to immediately take	 advantage  of	future
       extensions  to  RFC1084	without	 being	forced to modify bootpd first.
       Generic data may be represented as either a stream of hexadecimal  num‐
       bers  or	 as  a	quoted	string of ASCII characters.  The length of the
       generic data is automatically determined and inserted into  the	proper
       field(s) of the RFC1084-style bootp reply.

       The  following  tags  take a whitespace-separated list of IP addresses:
       cs, ds, gw, im, lg, lp, ns, nt, ra, rl, and ts.	The ip,	 sa,  sw,  sm,
       and ys tags each take a single IP address.  All IP addresses are speci‐
       fied in standard Internet "dot" notation and may use decimal, octal, or
       hexadecimal  numbers  (octal  numbers begin with 0, hexadecimal numbers
       begin with '0x' or '0X').  Any IP addresses may alternatively be speci‐
       fied  as	 a  hostname, causing bootpd to lookup the IP address for that
       host name using gethostbyname(3).  If the  ip  tag  is  not  specified,
       bootpd  will  determine the IP address using the entry name as the host
       name.  (Dummy entries use an invalid host name to  avoid	 automatic  IP
       lookup.)

       The ht tag specifies the hardware type code as either an unsigned deci‐
       mal, octal, or hexadecimal integer or one  of  the  following  symbolic
       names: ethernet or ether for 10Mb Ethernet, ethernet3 or ether3 for 3Mb
       experimental Ethernet, ieee802, tr, or token-ring  for  IEEE  802  net‐
       works, pronet for Proteon ProNET Token Ring, or chaos, arcnet, or ax.25
       for Chaos, ARCNET, and AX.25 Amateur Radio networks, respectively.  The
       ha  tag	takes a hardware address which may be specified as a host name
       or in numeric form.  Note that the numeric form must  be	 specified  in
       hexadecimal; optional periods and/or a leading '0x' may be included for
       readability.  The ha tag must be preceded by the ht tag (either explic‐
       itly  or	 implicitly;  see  tc  below).	If the hardware address is not
       specified and the type is specified as either "ethernet" or  "ieee802",
       then   bootpd   will  try  to  determine	 the  hardware	address	 using
       ether_hostton(3).

       The hostname, home directory, and bootfile are ASCII strings which  may
       be  optionally  surrounded  by double quotes (").  The client's request
       and the values of the hd and bf symbols determine how the server	 fills
       in the bootfile field of the bootp reply packet.

       If  the	bf  option  is	specified,  its value is copied into the reply
       packet.	Otherwise, the name supplied in the client  request  is	 used.
       If  the hd option is specified, its value is prepended to the boot file
       in the reply packet, otherwise the path supplied in the client  request
       is  used.   The	existence  of  the boot file is NOT verified by bootpd
       because the boot file may be on some other machine.

       The bs option specified the size of the boot file.  It can  be  written
       as bs=auto which causes bootpd to determine the boot file size automat‐
       ically.

       Some newer versions of tftpd provide a security feature to change their
       root directory using the chroot(2) system call.	The td tag may be used
       to inform bootpd of this special root directory used  by	 tftpd.	  (One
       may  alternatively  use	the  bootpd "-c chdir" option.)	 The hd tag is
       actually relative to the root directory specified by the td  tag.   For
       example,	 if  the  real	absolute path to your BOOTP client bootfile is
       /tftpboot/bootfiles/bootimage, and tftpd uses /tftpboot as its "secure"
       directory, then specify the following in bootptab:

	    :td=/tftpboot:hd=/bootfiles:bf=bootimage:

       If your bootfiles are located directly in /tftpboot, use:

	    :td=/tftpboot:hd=/:bf=bootimage:

       The sa tag may be used to specify the IP address of the particular TFTP
       server you wish the client to use.  In the absence of this tag,	bootpd
       will tell the client to perform TFTP to the same machine bootpd is run‐
       ning on.

       The time offset to may be either a signed  decimal  integer  specifying
       the  client's time zone offset in seconds from UTC, or the keyword auto
       which uses the server's time zone offset.  Specifying the to symbol  as
       a boolean has the same effect as specifying auto as its value.

       The  bootfile  size  bs	may be either a decimal, octal, or hexadecimal
       integer specifying the size of the bootfile in 512-octet blocks, or the
       keyword	auto  which  causes  the server to automatically calculate the
       bootfile size at each request.  As with the time offset, specifying the
       bs  symbol  as  a boolean has the same effect as specifying auto as its
       value.

       The vendor magic cookie selector (the vm tag) may take one of the  fol‐
       lowing keywords: auto (indicating that vendor information is determined
       by the client's request), rfc1048 or rfc1084 (which  always  forces  an
       RFC1084-style reply), or cmu (which always forces a CMU-style reply).

       The  hn	tag  is	 strictly  a  boolean  tag; it does not take the usual
       equals-sign and value.	It's  presence	indicates  that	 the  hostname
       should  be sent to RFC1084 clients.  Bootpd attempts to send the entire
       hostname as it is specified in the configuration file; if this will not
       fit into the reply packet, the name is shortened to just the host field
       (up to the first period, if present) and then tried.  In no case is  an
       arbitrarily-truncated  hostname	sent  (if nothing reasonable will fit,
       nothing is sent).

       Often, many host entries share common values for certain tags (such  as
       name  servers,  etc.).  Rather than repeatedly specifying these tags, a
       full specification can be listed for one host entry and shared by  oth‐
       ers  via	 the  tc  (table continuation) mechanism.  Often, the template
       entry is a dummy host which doesn't  actually  exist  and  never	 sends
       bootp  requests.	  This	feature	 is similar to the tc feature of term‐
       cap(5) for similar terminals.  Note that bootpd allows the tc tag  sym‐
       bol to appear anywhere in the host entry, unlike termcap which requires
       it to be the last tag.  Information explicitly  specified  for  a  host
       always  overrides information implied by a tc tag symbol, regardless of
       its location within the entry.  The value of the	 tc  tag  may  be  the
       hostname	 or IP address of any host entry previously listed in the con‐
       figuration file.

       Sometimes it is necessary to delete a specific tag after	 it  has  been
       inferred	 via  tc.   This can be done using the construction tag@ which
       removes the effect of tag as in termcap(5).  For example, to completely
       undo  an IEN-116 name server specification, use ":ns@:" at an appropri‐
       ate place in the configuration entry.  After removal with @, a  tag  is
       eligible to be set again through the tc mechanism.

       Blank  lines and lines beginning with "#" are ignored in the configura‐
       tion file.  Host entries are separated from one another by newlines;  a
       single  host entry may be extended over multiple lines if the lines end
       with a backslash (\).  It is also acceptable for	 lines	to  be	longer
       than  80	 characters.  Tags may appear in any order, with the following
       exceptions:  the hostname must be the very first field in an entry, and
       the hardware type must precede the hardware address.

       An example /etc/bootptab file follows:

	    # Sample bootptab file (domain=andrew.cmu.edu)

	    .default:\
		 :hd=/usr/boot:bf=null:\
		 :ds=netserver, lancaster:\
		 :ns=pcs2, pcs1:\
		 :ts=pcs2, pcs1:\
		 :sm=255.255.255.0:\
		 :gw=gw.cs.cmu.edu:\
		 :hn:to=-18000:

	    carnegie:ht=6:ha=7FF8100000AF:tc=.default:
	    baldwin:ht=1:ha=0800200159C3:tc=.default:
	    wylie:ht=1:ha=00DD00CADF00:tc=.default:
	    arnold:ht=1:ha=0800200102AD:tc=.default:
	    bairdford:ht=1:ha=08002B02A2F9:tc=.default:
	    bakerstown:ht=1:ha=08002B0287C8:tc=.default:

	    # Special domain name server and option tags for next host
	    butlerjct:ha=08002001560D:ds=128.2.13.42:\
		 :T37=0x12345927AD3BCF:\
		 :T99="Special ASCII string":\
		 :tc=.default:

	    gastonville:ht=6:ha=7FFF81000A47:tc=.default:
	    hahntown:ht=6:ha=7FFF81000434:tc=.default:
	    hickman:ht=6:ha=7FFF810001BA:tc=.default:
	    lowber:ht=1:ha=00DD00CAF000:tc=.default:
	    mtoliver:ht=1:ha=00DD00FE1600:tc=.default:

FILES
       /etc/bootptab

SEE ALSO
       bootpd(8), tftpd(8),
       DARPA  Internet Request For Comments RFC951, RFC1048, RFC1084, Assigned
       Numbers

4.3 Berkeley Distribution      October 31, 1991			   BOOTPTAB(5)
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