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ROUTEADM(1M)							  ROUTEADM(1M)

NAME
       routeadm - IP forwarding and routing configuration

SYNOPSIS
       routeadm	 [-p  [option]]

       routeadm	 [-R root-dir] [-e option ...] [-d option...]
	[-r option...] [-s var=value]

       routeadm	 [-l fmri]

       routeadm	 [-m fmri key=value [key=value]...]

       routeadm	 [-u]

DESCRIPTION
       The  routeadm  command  is used to administer system-wide configuration
       for IP forwarding and routing. IP forwarding is the passing of IP pack‐
       ets  from  one  network	to another; IP routing is the use of a routing
       protocol to determine routes.

       IP forwarding and routing functions are also  represented  as  services
       within  the  service management facility (SMF), and can be administered
       by means of svcadm(1M)  also,  using  the  following  fault  management
       resource identifiers (FMRIs):

	 svc:/network/ipv4-forwarding:default
	 svc:/network/ipv6-forwarding:default
	 svc:/network/routing/route:default
	 svc:/network/routing/ripng:default

       See EXAMPLES for relevant examples.

       In  addition to enabling and disabling routing and forwarding, routeadm
       is used to interact with SMF-based  routing  daemon  services.  Routing
       daemon  services	 are identified by the presence of a routeadm applica‐
       tion property group, which routeadm uses	 in  administering  the	 given
       service.	  Routing daemon services can also specify properties relating
       to their operation in the routing application property group; these can
       be  modified  by means of routeadm -m. If an FMRI for a service without
       such a property group is specified, an error is issued and  the	opera‐
       tion  is not carried out. If a routing daemon has not been converted to
       SMF, the ipv4[or 6]-routing-daemon, ipv4[or 6]-routing-daemon-args, and
       ipv4[or 6]-routing-stop-cmd variables can be used to specify the appro‐
       priate daemon for IPv4 or IPv6 routing. routeadm	 will  then  run  that
       daemon using the svc:/network/routing/legacy-routing:ipv4[or 6] service
       as appropriate. This conversion process occurs when you issue an enable
       (-e), disable (-d) or an update (-u) command.

       The  first usage, in the SYNOPSIS above, reports the current configura‐
       tion.

OPTIONS
       The following command-line options are supported:

       -p [option]

	   Print the configuration in parseable format. If  option  is	speci‐
	   fied,  only	the configuration for the specified option or variable
	   is displayed.

       -R root-dir

	   Specify an alternate root directory where routeadm applies changes.
	   This	 can  be  useful from within JumpStart scripts, where the root
	   directory of the system being modified is mounted elsewhere.

	   Note -

	     The root file system of any non-global zones must not  be	refer‐
	     enced with the -R option. Doing so might damage the global zone's
	     file system, might compromise the security of  the	 global	 zone,
	     and might damage the non-global zone's file system. See zones(5).

       -e option...

	   Enable  the	specified option. The effect is to prepare the associ‐
	   ated services (svc:/network/ipv4-forwarding:default in the case  of
	   ipv4-forwarding)  for  enabling. By means of the routing-svcs vari‐
	   able, the routing daemons are specified to be enabled on subsequent
	   boot or when routeadm -u is run.

       -d option...

	   Disable  the specified option. The effect is to prepare the associ‐
	   ated services (svc:/network/ipv4-forwarding:default in the case  of
	   ipv4-forwarding)  for  enabling. By means of the routing-svcs vari‐
	   able, the routing daemons are specified to be  disabled  on	subse‐
	   quent boot or when routeadm -u is run.

       -l fmri

	   List	 all  properties in the routing application property group for
	   the SMF routing daemon service.

       -m fmri key=value

	   Change property value of property key to value in routing  applica‐
	   tion	 property group for the SMF routing daemon service. For multi-
	   valued properties, the  property name can be used multiple times in
	   the modify operation, and each associated value will be added.

       -r option...

	   Revert  the	specified  option  to  the  system default. The system
	   defaults are specified in the description of each option.

       -u

	   Apply the currently configured options to the running system. These
	   options  might  include  enabling  or  disabling  IP forwarding and
	   launching or killing routing daemons, if any are specified. It does
	   not alter the state of the system for those settings that have been
	   set to default. This option is meant to be used  by	administrators
	   who	do  not	 want  to reboot to apply their changes.  In addition,
	   this option upgrades non-SMF configurations from the invocations of
	   daemon  stop commands, which might include a set of arguments, to a
	   simple enabling of the appropriate service.

       -s key=value

	   Specify string values for specific variables in  a  comma-separated
	   list	 with no intervening spaces. If invalid options are specified,
	   a warning message is displayed and the program exits. The following
	   variables can be specified:

	   routing-svcs=fmrilist

	       Specifies  the  routing	daemon services to be enabled. Routing
	       daemon services are determined to  be  IPv4  or	IPv6  (and  so
	       enabled or disabled when routeadm -e/-d ipv4(6)-routing is run)
	       on the basis of property values	in  the	 routeadm  application
	       property group.	Default: route:default ripng:default

	   ipv4-routing-daemon=<full_path_to_routing_daemon>

	       Specifies the routing daemon to be started when ipv4-routing is
	       enabled.	 The routing daemon specified must  be	an  executable
	       binary or shell-script. If the specified program maps to an SMF
	       service, the service will be used, and daemon arguments to  the
	       program will be transferred to the properties of the service at
	       enable time. Default: ""

	   ipv4-routing-daemon-args=<args>

	       Specifies the startup arguments to be passed to the  ipv4-rout‐
	       ing-daemon when ipv4-routing is enabled. Default: no arguments

	   ipv4-routing-stop-cmd=<command>

	       Specifies the command to be executed to stop the routing daemon
	       when ipv4-routing is disabled. <command> can be	an  executable
	       binary  or shell-script, or a string that can be parsed by sys‐
	       tem(3C). Default: ""

	   ipv6-routing-daemon=<full_path_to_routing_daemon>

	       Specifies the routing daemon to be started when ipv6-routing is
	       enabled.	  The  routing	daemon specified must be an executable
	       binary or shell-script. If the specified program maps to an SMF
	       service,	 the service will be used, and daemon arguments to the
	       program will be transferred to the properties of the service at
	       enable time. Default: ""

	   ipv6-routing-daemon-args=<args>

	       Specifies  the startup arguments to be passed to the ipv6-rout‐
	       ing-daemon when ipv6-routing is enabled. Default: ""

	   ipv6-routing-stop-cmd=<command>

	       Specifies the command to be executed to stop the routing daemon
	       when  ipv6-routing  is disabled. <command> can be an executable
	       binary or shell-script, or a string that can be parsed by  sys‐
	       tem(3C). Default: ""

       Multiple	 -e,  -d, and -r options can be specified on the command line.
       Changes made by -e, -d, and -r are persistent, but are not  applied  to
       the running system unless routeadm is called later with the -u option.

       Use  the	 following  options as arguments to the -e, -d, and -r options
       (shown above as option...).

       ipv4-forwarding

	   Controls the global forwarding configuration for  all  IPv4	inter‐
	   faces.  The system default is disabled. If enabled, IP will forward
	   IPv4 packets to and from interfaces when appropriate. If  disabled,
	   IP will not forward IPv4 packets to and from interfaces when appro‐
	   priate. The SMF service associated with this configuration variable
	   is  svc:/network/routing/ipv4-forwarding.   This  service  will  be
	   enabled or disabled as appropriate when routeadm is called with the
	   u  option. As an alternative, you can use svcadm(1M). Services that
	   require ipv4-forwarding to be enabled should specify	 a  dependency
	   on this service.

       ipv4-routing

	   Determines  whether	an  IPv4  routing  daemon  is  run. The system
	   default is enabled unless the /etc/defaultrouter file  exists  (see
	   defaultrouter(4)), in which case the default is disabled. The value
	   of this option reflects the state of	 all  IPv4  routing  services,
	   such	 that  if any IPv4 routing service is enabled, ipv4-routing is
	   enabled. This allows users to interact with routing services	 using
	   svcadm(1M),	as  well  as  through routeadm. IPv4 routing services,
	   specified by means of the routing-svcs variable, will  be  prepared
	   for enable on next boot when the user explicitly enables ipv4-rout‐
	   ing. The  SMF  routing  daemon  service  for	 in.routed  (svc:/net‐
	   work/routing/route:default) is specified by default.

       ipv6-forwarding

	   Controls  the  global  forwarding configuration for all IPv6 inter‐
	   faces. The system default is disabled. If enabled, IP will  forward
	   IPv6	 packets to and from interfaces when appropriate. If disabled,
	   IP will not forward IPv6 packets to and from interfaces when appro‐
	   priate. The SMF service associated with this configuration variable
	   is  svc:/network/routing/ipv6-forwarding.   This  service  will  be
	   enabled or disabled as appropriate when routeadm is called with the
	   -u option, or svcadm(1M) is used. Services that  require  ipv6-for‐
	   warding to be enabled should specify a dependency on this service.

       ipv6-routing

	   Determines  whether	an  IPv6  routing  daemon  is  run. The system
	   default is disabled. The value of this option reflects the state of
	   all	IPv6  routing services, such that, if any IPv6 routing service
	   is enabled, ipv6-routing is enabled. This allows users to  interact
	   with	 routing  services via svcadm(1M) as well as through routeadm.
	   IPv6 routing services, specified by means of the routing-svcs vari‐
	   able,  will	be  prepared  for  enable  on  next boot when the user
	   explicitly enables ipv6-routing. The SMF routing daemon service for
	   in.ripngd   (svc:/network/routing/ripng:default)  is	 specified  by
	   default.

       The forwarding and routing settings are related but not mutually depen‐
       dent.  For  example,  a router typically forwards IP packets and uses a
       routing protocol, but nothing would prevent an administrator from  con‐
       figuring a router that forwards packets and does not use a routing pro‐
       tocol. In that case, the administrator would enable forwarding, disable
       routing, and populate the router's routing table with static routes.

       The forwarding settings are global settings. Each interface also has an
       IFF_ROUTER forwarding flag that determines whether packets can be  for‐
       warded  to  or  from  a particular interface. That flag can be indepen‐
       dently controlled by means of ifconfig(1M)'s router  option.  When  the
       global  forwarding  setting is changed (that is, -u is issued to change
       the value from enabled to disabled or vice-versa), all interface	 flags
       in the system are changed simultaneously to reflect the new global pol‐
       icy. Interfaces configured by means of DHCP  automatically  have	 their
       interface-specific IFF_ROUTER flag cleared.

       When  a new interface is plumbed by means of ifconfig, the value of the
       interface-specific forwarding flag is  set  according  to  the  current
       global forwarding value. Thus, the forwarding value forms the "default"
       for all new interfaces.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Enabling IPv4 Forwarding

       IPv4 forwarding is disabled by default. The following  command  enables
       IPv4 forwarding:

	 example# routeadm -e ipv4-forwarding

       Example 2 Apply Configured Settings to the Running System

       In  the	previous  example,  a system setting was changed, but will not
       take effect until the next reboot unless a command such as the  follow‐
       ing is used:

	 example# routeadm -u

       An  alternative	to the above two steps is to simply enable the equiva‐
       lent SMF service:

	 example# svcadm enable svc:/network/ipv4-forwarding

       ...or, using the abbreviated FMRI:

	 example# svcadm enable ipv4-forwarding

       Example 3 Making a Setting Revert to its Default

       To make the setting changed in the first example revert to its default,
       enter the following:

	 example# routeadm -r ipv4-forwarding
	 example# routeadm -u

       Example 4 Starting in.routed with the -q Flag

       Setting	the  -q	 flag is represented in the SMF service by setting the
       quiet_mode property to true. The following sequence of commands	starts
       in.routed with the -q flag:

	 example# routeadm -m route:default quiet_mode=true
	 example# routeadm -e ipv4-routing -u

       See  in.routed(1M) for details of property names and how they relate to
       daemon behavior.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0
	      Successful completion.

       !=0
	      An error occurred while obtaining or modifying the  system  con‐
	      figuration.

FILES
       /etc/inet/routing.conf
				 Parameters  for  IP  forwarding  and routing.
				 (Not to be edited.)

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

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

SEE ALSO
       ifconfig(1M), in.routed(1M),  svcadm(1M),  gateways(4),	attributes(5),
       smf(5)

				 Jul 18, 2007			  ROUTEADM(1M)
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