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a/e2fsprogs-1.46.2-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. a/etc-15.0-x86_64-14.txz: Rebuilt. /etc/hosts: added IPv6 loopback addresses. a/hwdata-0.345-noarch-1.txz: Upgraded. ap/hplip-3.20.6-x86_64-7.txz: Rebuilt. Fixed desktop file to show category and icon properly. Thanks to upnort and ArTourter. d/git-2.30.1-x86_64-3.txz: Rebuilt. Make sure the bash-completion file is installed in the proper location. Thanks to Robby Workman. d/python-setuptools-54.0.0-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. d/vala-0.50.4-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. l/imagemagick-7.0.11_2-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. l/python-pillow-8.1.1-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded. n/network-scripts-15.0-noarch-13.txz: Rebuilt. Well, apparently there was a newer branch of this than the one that was sitting in my usual pending queue, so here it is. This also includes some additional documentation on the new features. NOTE: In order to use SLAAC to configure IPv6, you'll need to have USE_SLAAC[x]="yes" for the interface in rc.inet1.conf. This is to ensure that nobody is surprised to find their machine fully exposed to the internet - better safe than sorry. Thanks to Darren "Tadgy" Austin and Robby Workman. n/wireless_tools-30.pre9-x86_64-4.txz: Rebuilt. This package contains some updates to rc.wireless and rc.wireless.conf. Thanks to Darren "Tadgy" Austin. xfce/mousepad-0.5.3-x86_64-1.txz: Upgraded.
388 lines
12 KiB
Groff
388 lines
12 KiB
Groff
.\" -*- nroff -*-
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.ds g \" empty
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.ds G \" empty
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.\" Like TP, but if specified indent is more than half
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.\" the current line-length - indent, use the default indent.
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.de Tp
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.ie \\n(.$=0:((0\\$1)*2u>(\\n(.lu-\\n(.iu)) .TP
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.el .TP "\\$1"
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..
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.TH RC.INET1.CONF 5 "16 Nov 2019" "Slackware Version 15.0"
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.SH NAME
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rc.inet1.conf \- Slackware network configuration file.
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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This file contains the configuration settings for network interfaces.
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It consists of a series of shell variable array definitions. The
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convention in this man page is to refer to these shell variable array
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definitions as "parameters".
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.LP
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Parameters with the same index number will all belong to the same network
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interface. By default, index number `0' is used for the configuration of
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interface
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.IR eth0 ,
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index number `1' is used for
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.I eth1
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and so forth. The default interface name can be overruled by the use of
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the parameter
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.B IFNAME.
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.LP
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This is what a typical section of the file looks like for an interface,
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showing all parameters with the index number `0':
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.LP
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.br
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# IPv4 config options for eth0:
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.br
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IPADDRS[0]=""
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.br
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USE_DHCP[0]=""
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.br
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# IPv6 config options for eth0:
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.br
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IP6ADDRS[0]=""
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.br
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USE_SLAAC[0]=""
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.br
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USE_DHCP6[0]=""
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.br
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# Generic options for eth0:
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.br
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DHCP_HOSTNAME[0]=""
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.LP
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Alternatively, here is an example for an interface that uses static
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IPv4 addresses, an autoconfigured IPv6 address, and a non-default name
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.RI ( ath0
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instead of
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.IR eth1 ).
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The parameter index is `1' in this case.
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.LP
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.br
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IFNAME[1]="ath0"
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.br
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# IPv4 config options for ath0:
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.br
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IPADDRS[1]="192.168.1.10/24 10.0.0.10/8"
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.br
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USE_DHCP[1]=""
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.br
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# IPv6 config options for ath0
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.br
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IP6ADDRS[1]=""
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.br
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USE_SLAAC[1]="yes"
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.br
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USE_DHCP6[1]=""
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.br
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# Generic options for ath0:
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.br
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DHCP_HOSTNAME[1]=""
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.br
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# Gateway IP addresses:
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.br
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GATEWAY="192.168.1.1"
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.br
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GATEWAY6=""
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.br
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.SH EXAMPLE VIRTUAL INTERFACE CREATION AND SETUP
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Virtual interfaces are created before any address configuration or bridge
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setup is done, so you may use these interfaces as IFNAME or BRNICS values.
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These can be tun or tap interfaces: adjust VIRTIFNAME and VIRTIFTYPE as
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needed.
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.LP
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# Virtual tap interface example
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.br
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VIRTIFNAME[0]="tap0"
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.br
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VIRTIFTYPE[0]="tap"
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.br
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VIRTIFUSER[0]="root"
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.br
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VIRTIFGROUP[0]="root"
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.br
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.SH EXAMPLE BONDING INTERFACE CREATION
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Link aggregation (bond) interfaces can be configured with the use of 3 new
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parameters for use in rc.inet1.conf. The BONDNICS parameter should contain
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the (space delimited) list of interfaces to include in the bond. The type
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of bond is configured with the BONDMODE parameter, which can be any of the
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supported mode types as found in the bonding kernel documentation found at
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/usr/src/linux/Documentation/networking/bonding.txt.
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.LP
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The final parameter is a new generic IFOPTS parameter, which takes a list
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of interface specific configuration options in a pipe (|) delimited list.
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There are several module specific options which can be set with this
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parameter, and they can be found in the kernel source documentation from
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above. Note: it is
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.B highly
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recommended that you use at least the
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.B miimon
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option. Certain bonding modes will require other options to operate correctly.
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.LP
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Here is a complete configuration for a load balancing, fault tolerant
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interface, with two ethernet devices:
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.LP
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IFNAME[0]="bond0"
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.br
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BONDNICS[0]="eth0 eth1"
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.br
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BONDMODE[0]="balance-rr"
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.br
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IFOPTS[0]="xmit_hash_policy layer2+3 | miimon 100"
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.br
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IPADDRS[0]="192.168.0.10/24"
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.br
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IP6ADDRS[0]="e1ff:fec8:ae47:d9ab::abc1/64"
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.br
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GATEWAY="192.168.0.1"
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.br
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GATEWAY6="e1ff:fec8:ae47:d9ab::1"
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.LP
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.SH EXAMPLE VLAN INTERFACE CREATION
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VLAN interfaces can be configured in rc.inet1.conf, in the standard Slackware
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way of defining an interface. The key to the configuration is to use the
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correct IFNAME setting for the underlying ethernet (or bond) interface and the
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tagged VLAN ID that should be exposed.
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.LP
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Here are the basic settings to expose a VLAN with ID 100 on the eth0
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interface, configured with a static IPv4 address:
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.LP
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IFNAME[0]="eth0.100"
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.br
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IFOPTS[0]=""
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.br
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IPADDRS[0]="192.168.100.10/24"
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.LP
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The IFNAME of the interface contains the underlying ethernet device name
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(eth0), a period (.), and the VLAN ID to be exposed.
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.LP
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Note that the underlying ethernet (or bond) interface does not need to have an
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IP address to be used with the VLAN, but it can have an IP address if you are
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also using an untagged VLAN.
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.LP
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The new generic IFOPTS parameter takes a pipe (|) delimited list of interface
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type specific options, but does not need any options in order for a VLAN
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interface to be configured. However, there are several VLAN specific options
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which can be configured if required - these are documented in the ip-link(8)
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man page (search for "VLAN Type Support").
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.br
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.SH EXAMPLE BRIDGE CREATION AND SETUP
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Note the added BRNICS parameter which contains a space-separated list
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of the physical or virtual network interfaces you want to add to the bridge.
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Note that the parameter index can not be a duplicate of that defined for some
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other interface (e.g. eth0 will be index 0 by default).
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.LP
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IFNAME[5]="br0"
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.br
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BRNICS[5]="eth0 eth1 tun0"
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.br
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IFOPTS[5]=""
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.br
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IPADDRS[5]="192.168.0.10/24"
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.LP
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The new generic IFOPTS parameter takes a pipe (|) delimited list of interface
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type specific options, but does not need any options in order for a bridge
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interface to be configured. However, there are several bridge specific options
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which can be configured if required - these are documented in the ip-link(8)
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man page (search for "BRIDGE Type Support").
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.br
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.SH GENERAL PARAMETERS
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This is a list of parameters you can set for any interface.
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The example section is for `eth0' by default, i.e.
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the parameters all have the array index `0':
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.LP
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# Config information for eth0:
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.TP 25
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IPADDRS[0]=""
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# Set this parameter to a space delimited list of IPv4 addresses and netmasks
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to bind to the interface, The netmask should be in CIDR style separated from
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the IP address with a /. E.g. "192.168.1.10/24 10.0.0.10/8". If the netmask
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is not provided, "/24" is assumed.
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.TP
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USE_DHCP[0]=""
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# If set to "yes", we will run a DHCP client and have the IPv4 address
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dynamically assigned.
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.TP
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DHCP_HOSTNAME[0]=""
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# Tell the DHCP server what hostname to register, e.g. "darkstar".
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.TP
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DHCP_TIMEOUT[0]=""
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# The default timeout for the DHCP client to wait for server response is
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15 seconds, but you might want a shorter or longer wait.
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.TP
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IP6ADDRS[0]=""
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# The static IPv6 addresses for the interface. This option takes a list of
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IPv6 addresses and prefix lengths in CIDR notation, in a space delimited
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list. For example: IP6ADDRS[0]="a:b:c:d::1/48 1:2:3:4::5/64".
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If a prefix length is not given (separated from the IP address with a /), a
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length of 64 will be assumed.
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.TP
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USE_SLAAC[0]=""
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# With this parameter set to "yes", the interface's IPv6 address will be
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configured via SLAAC (also known as autoconfig), even if RA indicates
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DHCP6 is available on the network. If SLAAC is not available on the
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network, no IPv6 address will be assigned. If this parameter is unset or
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empty, the interface will not be autoconfigured -- note that this is
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changed behaviour from Slackware 14.2 and earlier.
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.TP
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USE_DHCP6[0]=""
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# When set to "yes", use DHCP6 to configure the interface. This will
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bring up the interface using DHCP6 if RA indicates DHCP6 support is
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available on the network, falling back to SLAAC (if available on the
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network), or will leave the interface unconfigured after a timeout. When
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this parameter is set to "yes", USE_SLAAC[0] is ignored.
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.TP
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SLAAC_TIMEOUT[0]=""
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# The default timeout for autoconfiguration to wait for the interface
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to come up is 15 sec. Increase the timeout if a longer period is required
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on your network.
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.TP
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USE_RA[0]=""
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# If set to "yes", accept Router Advertisements even when SLAAC is disabled
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on the interface. This parameter should almost never be required.
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.TP
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IFNAME[0]=""
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# Use this to define configuration blocks for interfaces with non-standard
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names.
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.TP
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HWADDR[0]=""
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# Overrule the hardware MAC address (if supported by the network card) by
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setting a new value here, e.g. "00:01:23:45:67:89".
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.TP
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MTU[0]=""
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# The default MTU is 1500, but you might need 1360 when you use NAT'ed
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IPSec traffic.
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.TP
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PROMISCUOUS[0]=""
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# If set to "yes", enable promiscuous mode on the interface.
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.TP
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DHCP_KEEPRESOLV[0]=""
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# If you do
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.B not
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want
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.I /etc/resolv.conf
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overwritten by the DHCP client, set this parameter to "yes".
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.TP
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DHCP_KEEPNTP[0]=""
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# If you do
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.B not
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want
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.I /etc/ntp.conf
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overwritten by the DHCP client, set this parameter to "yes".
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.TP
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DHCP_KEEPGW[0]=""
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# If you do
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.B not
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want the DHCP client to change your default gateway, set this parameter
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to "yes".
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.TP
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DHCP_NOIPV4LL[0]=""
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# When set to "yes", do
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.B not
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assign an IPv4 Link Local (IPv4LL) address when a DHCP server is not found.
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IPv4LL addresses are in the range 169.254.0.0/16, and is also known as
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.I `zeroconf'
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address assignment.
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.TP
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DHCP_IPADDR[0]=""
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# Request a specific IPv4 address from the DHCP server. Note that this is only
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a request - the DHCP server may offer a completely different address.
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.TP
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DHCP_DEBUG[0]="yes"
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# Make dhcpcd show verbose diagnostics.
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.SH WIRELESS PARAMETERS
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For wireless interfaces, several additional parameter definitions are available.
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All these parameters start with the prefix
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.B WLAN_ .
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.LP
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.TP 25
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WLAN_ESSID[4]=""
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# Your Wireless Access Point's name, e.g. "darkstar".
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.TP
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WLAN_MODE[4]=""
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# Set to "Managed" for use with Access Points. For a peer-to-peer connection
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set this parameter to "Ad-Hoc".
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.TP
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WLAN_RATE[4]=""
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# The transmission rates you want the driver to try, e.g. "54M auto".
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("auto" means that bandwidth can be variable).
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.TP
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WLAN_CHANNEL[4]=""
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# The channel to which the Access Point is tuned, or "auto" to let the
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driver find the correct channel.
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.TP
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WLAN_KEY[4]=""
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# Definition of a WEP key, e.g. "D5A31F54ACF0487C2D0B1C10D2".
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.TP
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WLAN_IWPRIV[4]=""
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# Some drivers require a private ioctl to be set through the iwpriv command. e.g.
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"set AuthMode=WPAPSK | set EncrypType=TKIP | set WPAPSK=the_64_character_key".
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If more than one is required, you can place them in the
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.I WLAN_IWPRIV
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parameter separated with the pipe (|) character. Ssee the example.
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.TP
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WLAN_WPA[4]=""
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# The name of the application that should be executed for WPA support. This
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will usually be "wpa_supplicant".
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.TP
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WLAN_WPADRIVER[4]=""
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# Tell wpa_supplicant to specifically use this driver, e.g. "ndiswrapper".
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If you leave this empty the "wext" driver is used by default - most modern
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wireless drivers use wext.
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.TP
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WLAN_WPAWAIT[4]=30
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# In case it takes long for the WPA association to finish, you can
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use this parameter to increase the wait time before rc.wireless decides
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that association failed. The default is 10 seconds.
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.SH DEFAULT GATEWAY PARAMETERS
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These parameters, to set an IPv4 and IPv6 default gateway, are not
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interface-specific and must not have an index number.
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.TP 25
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GATEWAY=""
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# The IPv4 default gateway, e.g. "192.168.1.1". This parameter should be left
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empty when interfaces are configured via DHCP.
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.TP
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GATEWAY6=""
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# The IPv6 default gateway, e.g. "fe80::1". This parameter should be left
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empty when interfaces are configured via DHCP6 or SLAAC.
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.SH FILES
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.TP 25
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.I /etc/rc.d/rc.inet1
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network configuration script.
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.TP
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.I /etc/rc.d/rc.inet1.conf
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configuration parameter file (read by rc.inet1 and rc.wireless).
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.TP
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.I /etc/rc.d/rc.wireless
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wireless configuration script.
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.TP
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.I /etc/rc.d/rc.wireless.conf
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wireless configuration parameter file
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.B (deprecated)
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\.
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.SH CAVEATS
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The network interface definitions are stored in shell variable
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.I arrays
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\.
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The bash shell has no facilities to retrieve the largest array index used.
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Therefore, the
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.I rc.inet1
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script makes the assumption that array indexes stay below the value of
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.B 6
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\.
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.LP
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If you want to configure more than six network interfaces, you will
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have to edit the file
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.I /etc/rc.d/rc.inet1.conf
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and uncomment, and change the value `6' in the line
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.B #MAXNICS="6"
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(at the very bottom of the file) to the number of network interfaces you wish to use.
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.SH AUTHORS
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Patrick J. Volkerding <volkerdi@slackware.com>
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.br
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Eric Hameleers <alien@slackware.com>
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.br
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Robby Workman <rworkman@slackware.com>
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.br
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Darren 'Tadgy' Austin <darren@slackware.uk>
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
|
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.BR rc.inet1(8)
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