freebsd-skq/usr.sbin/rarpd/rarpd.8
Bill Fenner a9695b96ac Add -s flag to always supply mapping if known, ignoring the
presence or absence of files in /tftpboot.
1996-11-27 20:45:10 +00:00

109 lines
3.3 KiB
Groff

.\" @(#) $Header: /home/ncvs/src/usr.sbin/rarpd/rarpd.8,v 1.4 1996/11/19 23:57:05 wpaul Exp $ (LBL)
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.TH RARPD 8 "19 Jul 1993"
.SH NAME
rarpd \- Reverse ARP Daemon
.SH SYNOPSIS
.na
.B rarpd
[
.B \-afsv
]
[
.I interface
]
.br
.ad
.SH DESCRIPTION
.LP
.I Rarpd
services Reverse ARP requests on the Ethernet connected to
.I interface.
Upon receiving a request,
.I rarpd
maps the target hardware address to an IP address via its name, which
must be present in both the
.I ethers(5)
and
.I hosts(5)
databases.
If a host does not exist in both databases, the translation cannot
proceed and a reply will not be sent.
By default, a request is honored only if the server
(i.e., the host that rarpd is running on)
can "boot" the target; that is, a file or directory matching the glob
/tftpboot/\fIipaddr\fP*
exists, where \fIipaddr\fP is the target IP address in hex.
For example, the IP address 204.216.27.18 will be replied to if any of
/tftpboot/CCD81B12, /tftpboot/CCD81B12.SUN3, or /tftpboot/CCD81B12-boot
exist.
This requirement can be overridden with the
.B \-s
flag (see below).
In normal operation,
.I rarpd
forks a copy of itself and runs in
the background. Anomalies and errors are reported via
.I syslog(3).
.SH OPTIONS
.LP
.TP
.B \-a
Listen on all the Ethernets attached to the system.
If `-a' is omitted, an interface must be specified.
.TP
.B \-f
Run in the foreground.
.TP
.B \-s
Supply a response to any RARP request for which an ethernet to IP address
mapping exists; do not depend on the existence of
/tftpboot/\fIipaddr\fP*.
.TP
.B \-v
Enable verbose sysloging.
.SH FILES
/etc/ethers
.br
/etc/hosts
.br
/tftpboot
.SH SEE ALSO
bpf(4)
.br
RFC 903: Finlayson, R.; Mann, T.; Mogul, J.C.; Theimer, M. Reverse Address
Resolution Protocol. 1984 June; 4 p.
.SH AUTHORS
Craig Leres (leres@ee.lbl.gov) and
Steven McCanne (mccanne@ee.lbl.gov).
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA.
.SH BUGS
.I rarpd
can depend on the DNS to resolve the name discovered from /etc/ethers.
If this name is not in the DNS but is in /etc/hosts, the DNS lookup
can cause a delayed RARP response, so in this situation it is reccommended to
configure /etc/host.conf to read /etc/hosts first.