Linux PPP HOWTO Al Longyear, longyear@netcom.com v1.11, 12 July 1995 This document contains a list the most Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) about PPP for Linux (and their answers). It is really not a HOWTO, but is in `classical' Question / Answer form. 1. Preface Please send any corrections to longyear@netcom.com. This is but one of the Linux HOWTO/FAQ documents. You can get the HOWTO's from sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO (this is the `official' place) or via WWW from the Linux Documentation home page . You cannot rely on the HOWTO's being posted to comp.os.linux.answers, as some news feeds have complained about their size. Throughout this document, I have used the word `remote' to mean `the system at the other end of the modem link'. It is also called `peer' in the PPP documentation. Another name for this is called the `gateway' when the term is use for routing. Its IP address will show as the `P-t-P' address if you use ifconfig. Microsoft is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation. Morning Star is a registered trademark of Morning Star Technologies Incorporated. All other products mentioned are trademarks of their respective companies. 2. General information 2.1. What is PPP? PPP, or Point-to-Point Protocol, is a recognized `official' internet protocol. It is a protocol used to exchange IP frames (and others) over a serial link. The current RFC for PPP is 1661. There are many related ones. Contrary to what some people think, it does not mean "Peer to Peer Processing"; although you may do peer-peer communications using TCP/IP over a PPP link. 2.2. My university (company) does not support PPP. Can I use PPP? In general, no. A `classical' PPP implementation requires that you make changes to the routes and network devices supported by the operating system. This may mean that you will have to rebuild the kernel for the remote computer. This is not a job for a general user. If you can convince your administration people that PPP is a `good thing' then you stand a chance of getting it implemented. If you can't, then you probably can't use PPP. However, if you are using a system which is supported by the people who are marketing the "TIA" (The Internet Adapter) package, then there is hope. I do not have much information on this package, however, from what I have found, they plan to support PPP in "the next version". (My information may be old. Contact them directly. Information on TIA is available at ftp.marketplace.com in the /pub/tia directory.) If your system is not supported by TIA and you can't convince the admin group to support PPP then you should use the `term' package. Some service providers will object to you running `term'. They have many different reasons, however the most common is `security concerns'. There is a version of TIA for Linux. 2.3. Where is PPP? It is in two parts. The first part is in the kernel. In the kernels from 1.1.13, the driver is part of the network system drivers. Do not replace the driver in the kernel with a version from the pppd package!!! The second part is the `daemon' process, pppd. This is a required process. The source to it is in the file ppp-2.1.2c.tar.gz located on sunsite.unc.edu in the /pub/Linux/system/Network/serial directory. For kernels before 1.1.13, the necessary driver is included in the daemon code. 2.4. I just obtained PPP. What do I do with it? Read The Fine Material available. Start by reading the README file and then the README.linux file. The documentation sources are listed below. 2.5. (Where's the documentation? Is there a HOWTO?, etc.) Where are additional sources of information for PPP? There are several sources of information for the PPP protocol as implemented under Linux. o The README file in the source package. o The README.linux file in the source package. o The Net-2-HOWTO document. o The Network Administration Guide. o The pppd man page. o The PPP FAQ document. (This is not it, by the way.) The HOWTO file is stored in the usual place for the Linux HOWTOs. That is currently on sunsite.unc.edu in the directory /pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO. The Network Administration Guide is available in the /pub/Linux/docs/LPD/network-guide directory on sunsite. It is also published by O'Riellly and Associates. So, if you want a really professional document, then buy a copy from your local bookstore. The `man' pages are included in the source package. You will probably have to move them to the normal man directory, /usr/man/man8 before the man command may find them. Alternately, you may use nroff and more to view them directly. The PPP faq document describes the PPP protocol itself and the various implementations. You will find the FAQ for the usenet news group, comp.protocols.PPP, archived on rtfm.mit.edu in the /usenet directory. It is in eight parts at the present time. 2.6. Where should I post questions about PPP? The primary usenet group for the PPP implementations is comp.protocols.PPP. Use this group for general questions such as "How do I use pppd?" or "Why doesn't this work?". Questions such as "Why wont pppd compile?" are generally linux related and belong on the comp.os.linux.networking group. Please don't use comp.os.linux.help. 2.7. The PPP software doesn't work. HELP!!! This is one of the most sickening questions. I realize that this is a plea for help. However, it is practically useless to post this message with no other information. I, and most others, will only ignore it. Please see the question regarding errors which normally occur at the modem's disconnection. They are not the cause of a problem, only a symptom. Posting a message with only those errors is also meaningless. What is needed is the output of the system log (syslog) when you run the pppd program with the option `debug'. In addition, if you are using chat then please use the `-v' option to run the sequence with verbose output. Please include the output from the kernel's startup. This shows the various kernel hardware information such as your UART type, PPP version, etc. Please include all information that you can relating to the problem. However your system configuration, disk drive configuration, terminal type, mouse location and button status, etc. are irrelevant. What is important is the system to which your are trying to contact, the PPP (or terminal server) that they are using, the modem types and speed that you are using, etc. Take care and go through the output. Remove the references to the telephone number, your account name, and the password. They are not important to analyzing the problem and would pose a security risk to you if you published them to usenet. Also discard the lines which neither come from the kernel nor pppd. Do NOT run the pppd program with the option `kdebug 7' and post that! If the problem warrants examining the data stream, then you will be contacted by email and asked to mail the trace. Usenet already costs too much for too many people. Information is written to various levels. The debug information is written to the debug level. The informational messages are written to the info level. The errors are written to the error level. Please include all levels the the `local2' group which come from the pppd process. In addition, please do not delete the time stamp information. It is important. 2.8. How do I use PPP with a system which uses dynamic IP assign- ments? It assigns a different IP address to me with each call. The assignment of the local IP address is a function of the options given to pppd and the IPCP protocol. You should use the `magic' IP address of 0.0.0.0 if you must specify the local IP address. Most people simply leave the local IP address out of the option list. The other option which is closely tied to this is called `noipdefault'. The noipdefault option instructs the pppd process to not attempt to guess the local IP address from your hostname and the IP addresses in the /etc/hosts file. Most people use this option when the IP address is dynamically assigned. However, this option does not mean `use dynamic IP addresses'. The use of dynamic IP addresses is automatic when the local IP address is not given. 2.9. How do I know what IP address was given to me when it is dynami- cally assigned? Use the /etc/PPP/ip-up hook. The local IP address is the fourth parameter. This will be executed when pppd knows the IP address for the local system. The fifth parameter is the remote IP address if you should wish to know this value as well. 2.10. Can I use the same local IP address for each line of a PPP server? Yes. The local address is not significant to the local system. You must have a unique remote IP address. The routing is performed based upon the remote IP address and not the local IP address. 3. Other implementations 3.1. Do you know of a implementation for PPP other than Linux? I would like one for HP-UX, or AIX, or ... (you fill in the blank) ? Check the PPP FAQ document mentioned above. AIX is due to be supported in the 2.2 version of the pppd process. HP-UX is, to my knowledge, only supported by the Morning Star commercial package. If you don't find one listed then post to the comp.protocols.PPP group and not the Linux group. (Please don't mail me asking for "Do you know of a PPP package for ..."? These requests will now be `appropriately' filed. ;-)) 3.2. Did you know that there is a program called `dp'? Yes, we know. The dp package was considered very early in the development stage quite a few months back. It is nice. It supports 'demand dial'. It also only works with systems which support streams. This is primarily the SunOS (Solaris) operating systems. Linux, at the present time, does not supports streams. There are several other packages for PPP available on the `net'. The `portable PPP' package is very much like the TIA code. There is another package called simply `PPP'. There is code for PPP in the KA9Q package. Of all of the packages available, the pppd package was the closest to the requirements and functions of Linux to warrant the port. (If you want more information about these other packages, ask in the comp.protocols.PPP group!) 3.3. What RFCs describe the PPP protocol? The current implementation of PPP is a mixture of several. The major portion of the PPP code is written against the RFCs 1331 and 1332. These RFCs were later obsoleted. 1331 was replaced by 1548 and that, in turn, was obsoleted by 1661 six months later. Most implementations of PPP will be happy to talk to the Linux PPP code. A complete list is in the PPP faq. [to quote the FAQ document]: All of 1134, 1171, and 1172 (and 1055, for that matter :-) have been obsoleted. They're interesting only if you want to debug a connection with an ancient PPP implementation, and you're wondering why (e.g.) it asked you for IPCP option 2 with a length of only 4, and Compression-Type 0x0037. (There's a lot of that still running around - be careful out there.) Linux PPP will not support this. 4. Compatibility 4.1. Can PPP talk to a SLIP interface? No. SLIP works with SLIP. PPP works with PPP. Some vendors may offer products which work both as SLIP and PPP. However, they must be configured to run in one mode or the other. There is no present method to determine, based upon the protocol passed at the time of a connection, which combination of SLIP protocols or PPP is being requested. 4.2. Which is better? PPP or SLIP? IT DEPENDS UPON MANY FACTORS. The people who post this type of question have usually not read the Net-2-HOWTO document. A good technical discussion is available at Morning Star's www server, www.morningstar.com. 4.3. Is CHAP or PAP better for authentication? If you have the choice, use CHAP. Failing that, PAP is better than nothing. 5. Authentication files 5.1. What goes into the /etc/PPP/pap-secrets file? Do you have a sam- ple? The PAP protocol is most often implemented as your user name and password. You need to include the name of the remote system, your account name, and the password. If the user on abbot wishes to call costello, the entry would be similar to the following. #remote account password IP address list * abbot firstbase 5.2. What goes into the /etc/PPP/chap-secrets file? Do you have a sample? The most common problem is that people don't recognize that CHAP deals with a pair of secrets. Both computers involved in the link must have both secrets to work. For example, if abbot wants to talk to costello, then abbot's file would have: #local remote secret IP address list abbot costello firstbase costello abbot who And costello's file would have: #local remote secret IP address list abbot costello firstbase costello abbot who 6. Construction problems 6.1. I get compile errors when I try to compile the kernel With the release of the 1.2 kernel for Linux, the PPP driver is a standard part of the network devices. Each kernel should include the software necessary to make the PPP support within the kernel. Please do not edit the PPP driver. It has been pre-configured for the kernel. If you are attempting to run PPP on kernels prior to the 1.2, then please consider upgrading the kernel. The 1.0 kernels require patching to support the PPP driver. The 1.2 kernels supported PPP to some degree, but also required changes depending upon the specific patch level. 7. Problems running pppd 7.1. pppd wont run unless you are root The pppd process needs to make changes to the networking system and this can only be done if you are the root user. If you wish to run pppd from other than the root user then the pppd program needs to be secured 'suid to root'. chown root pppd chmod 4755 pppd If you wish to control the pppd access to a select group of people, then make the pppd process owned by the group and do not permit all others to run the program. 7.2. The ppp-2.1.2d package says it needs the 4.6 libraries Sorry, I goofed. You will have to forego the binaries and re-compile the code yourself. It is easy. Go to the pppd directory, delete the bad binary, and issue the command `make'. Go to the chat directory and do the same if you want a corrected chat program. You must have the C language compiler and GNU make installed to rebuild the PPP software. It turns out that when I compiled the ppp-2.1.2d package, while I used the proper definitions, I used the 4.6 libraries. One of these days, Al may finally get his act together . . . . Or, you can get binaries from the Slackware 2.0.2 (or later) package. They are in the PPP.tgz file in the `n' series of disks. Please use the source in the ppp-2.1.2d to compile the code. The source has been corrected over the `a' package. 7.3. unable to create pid file: no such file or directory You need to create the directory /var/run. On earlier Slackware distributions, this was a symbolic link to the /etc directory. This is a warning. The PPP software will work normally in spite of this message. However, the PPP-off script depends upon this file. It is a good idea to create the directory or make the link to the appropriate location. The posix header, paths.h, defines the location for the pid file under the name "_VAR_RUN". If you wish to use a different directory for PPP and others, change the value for this define and rebuild the software. 7.4. /etc/PPP/options: no such file or directory You need to create the directory /etc/PPP and have a file called 'options' in that directory. It needs to be readable by the pppd process (root). The file may be empty. To make an empty file use the `touch' command. See the pppd man page, pppd.8, for a description of this file. 7.5. Could not determine local IP address This happens with many configurations of the Telebit Netblazer. The problem is not the terminal server, but the site which has not configured the terminal server with a set of IP addresses. The Netblazer does not have your IP address. You do not have your IP address. The link will not work unless both IP addresses are known. o The Netblazer does not have your IP address and you do not have your IP address. o The Netblazer does know its IP address and you do not have its IP address. The link will not work unless both IP addresses are known. You must tell the Netblazer the IP addresses to be used. Use the local IP address and the remote IP address as a parameter to the pppd process. Use the pppd option format of: local_ip:remote_ip (That is the local IP address, a colon, and the remote IP address.) 7.6. Could not determine remote IP address See the previous answer. 7.7. I keep getting the message to the effect that the magic number is always NAKed. The system will not connect. There is a one in over four billion chance that the two systems have chosen the same magic number. If you get a continual failure about the magic number, the chances that this is a fluke will geometrically reduce. The two most common reasons for this failure are: o The remote PPP software is not running when you think it is. Is the remote system configured to run PPP? Is the PPP process in the expected location? Is the privileges suitable so that you may run it? This would indicate that the shell is doing the local echo of the data. This is the more common reason. o The modem has disconnected immediately upon making the connection and logging you on to the remote. Most modems are configured to echo the data sent to them and you are seeing the local echo from the modem. In either case, the Linux system is sending data to the remote which is being fed immediately back into the serial receiver. This is not an acceptable condition. You have what is called a "loop". 7.8. protocol reject for protocol fffb This usually occurs when you are trying to connect to a Xyplex terminal server. Version 5.1 of the Xyplex terminal server software, according to Xyplex, has numerous problems with PPP. It is strongly recommended that you update the Xyplex software to at least version 5.3. If you must use version 5.1, then use the pppd option "vj-max-slots 3" to limit the number of slots to three. The problem on the Xyplex server is that it will accept the request for the default 16 slots, but fail to operate beyond the third slot. It should have return a NAK frame with the limit, but it does not. Alternately, you can disable the Van Jacobson header compression with the option "-vj". 7.9. The PPP software connects, sends quite a few frames, but still does not seem to connect. Why is that? Examine the system log when you use the "debug" option. (You will need the system log data anyway if you are going to ask for help.) If the trace shows that it is sending the LCP-request frame over and over again and the id number is not incrementing then you are not exchanging frames with the remote PPP software. Three common reasons for this are: o You don't have the PPP software running on the other end. You are sending the PPP frames to some other program which is probably saying "What is this #$%^ ?" Please make sure that you have the PPP software started on the other end before you enter the PPP protocol sequence. Try to use a normal modem program and go through the logon sequence that you would normally do. Do you see the PPP frames being sent to you? The PPP frames are fairly distinctive. They will be about 16 characters in length and contain several { characters. They should not have a carriage return character after them and are sent out in a burst with a pause between the bursts. o The line is not "eight bit clean". This means that you need to have eight data bits, no parity, and one stop bit. The PPP link absolutely requires eight data bits. The pppd software will automatically put the line into eight data bits, no parity, and one stop bit. The remote must match this configuration or framing and parity errors may occur. PPP will escape characters. It is not possible for it to escape bits as kermit does. PPP will not work with a seven bit communications link. There is a compile option in the PPP.c driver (part of the kernel) called CHECK_CHARACTERS which will include additional code in the driver to provide additional checking on the input characters. It will be able to tell you if the parity was enabled or if the remote system always sent the characters as seven bits. o The remote is configured to require authentication such as PAP or CHAP. You have not configured the local system to use this feature. Therefore, the remote is discarding all of your frames until it sees a valid authentication frame from you. Since you are not configured to generate the frames, the IPCP frames which you send are being ignored. In this case, either configure the remote to not expect authentication or configure the local system to do authentication and supply the proper secrets. Examine the receipt of the LCP configure frame. If it shows an 'auth' type, then the remote is configured for authentication. 7.10. I can't connect to the merit network. Some users of the merit network have indicated that it needs PAP. Did you try PAP authentication? 8. DIP 8.1. DIP does not have support for PPP's mode The current version of dip-uri supports PPP in that it will execute the pppd process when you execute `mode PPP'. However, there are many options which are needed for the proper operation of pppd. Since dip does not pass these to the program, they must be stored in the /etc/PPP/options file. The dip program controls the establishment of the SLIP link. It controls the SLIP link with the aid of slattach, ifconfig, and route. These programs may be used to establish a SLIP link. They are not useful for the establishment of a PPP link. The dip program may be used to dial the telephone and start the PPP software on the remote system. It is best used in this mode as the parameter to the `connect' option. However, you have the option to use dip to control the link. It is not important how pppd be executed to run the PPP link. It is only important that it be executed as it is a mandatory program for the PPP protocol. 9. Process termination 9.1. Is there a `dip -k' for PPP? No. There is no `dip -k'. In the chat directory, there is a `PPP-off' script. This will stop the PPP link in the same manner as the 'dip -k'. I have included it below. (Cut it out. Store it in its own file. Make the file executable with chmod.) ______________________________________________________________________ #!/bin/sh DEVICE=ppp0 # # If the ppp0 pid file is present then the program is running. Stop it. if [ -r /var/run/$DEVICE.pid ]; then kill -INT `cat /var/run/$DEVICE.pid` # # If the kill did not work then there is no process running for this # pid. It may also mean that the lock file will be left. You may wish # to delete the lock file at the same time. if [ ! "$?" = "0" ]; then rm -f /var/run/$DEVICE.pid echo "ERROR: Removed stale pid file" exit 1 fi # # Success. Let pppd clean up its own junk. echo "PPP link to $DEVICE terminated." exit 0 fi # # The PPP process is not running for ppp0 echo "ERROR: PPP link is not active on $DEVICE" exit 1 ______________________________________________________________________ 9.2. PPP does not hangup the modem when it terminates There are several reasons for this. o Did you use the pppd `modem' parameter? This parameter controls whether or not the pppd process is to control and honor the signals reflecting the modem status. This parameter is explained in the man page for pppd. o Do you have the modem presenting the DCD signal and honoring DTR? The Hayes sequence for this is usually "&C1". If you reset the modem during the connection sequence with "ATZ" then ensure that your modem is configured correctly. The DTR signal is generated by the computer and instructs the modem to disconnect. Hayes sequence for this is usually "&D1" or "&D2" with "&D2" being the preferred setting for PPP. Many manufacturers will ignore the DTR condition in their `factory defaults' setting. o Did you use a cheap cable which does not pass the DCD signal? Macintosh `Classic' cables are notorious for this problem. The Macintosh Classic does not use this signal. o For dial-in connections, did you exec the pppd process properly? The pppd process should be `exec'ed from the script rather than simply executed. If you attempt to simply run the pppd process then it will be the shell which will receive the SIGHUP hangup signal and not the pppd process. The `shell' script should have a format similar to the following: ___________________________________________________________________ #!/bin/sh exec pppd -detach modem ... ___________________________________________________________________ 10. Data Transfer related issues 10.1. The ftp transfers seems to die when I do a `put' operation. They will work correctly if I `get' a file. Why? Do you have the flow control enabled? Flow control is set by the pppd option crtscts for RTS/CTS and xonxoff for XON/XOFF. If you don't enable the flow control then you will probably overrun the modem's buffers and this will prove to be disastrous with vj header compression. 10.2. How do I use XON/XOFF for flow control? The better flow control is CTS/RTS. However, if you can not do the hardware flow control with the signals CTS and RTS, then use XON/XOFF. The following three steps need to be performed. o You need to specify the pppd option xonxoff. This tells the pppd process to configure the serial device for XON/XOFF flow control and to load the two characters into the tty driver. o You need to specify the XON and XOFF characters in the pppd parameter asyncmap. This tells the remote system that is should quote the XON and XOFF characters when it wishes to send them to you. It is normally specified as the pppd parameter `asyncmap a0000'. o Of course, don't forget to tell the modem to use XON/XOFF flow control. My ZyXEL modem uses a sequence `&R1&H4' to do this. 10.3. The modem seems to always connect at a strange rate. When I use minicom, the modem will always use 14400. However, PPP is using 9600 or 7200 or even 2400. How do I fix this? Put the desired rate as an option to the pppd process. If you don't put the rate, then pppd process will use whatever rate is set currently at the time. Not all programs will restore all of the parameters to the previous settings properly upon exit. This may lead to strange rates configured for the serial device. 10.4. The ftp transfers seems to be very slow when I do a `get' oper- ation. The `put' operation is much faster. Why? Did you specify the option: asyncmap 0 when you ran pppd? If you forgot the option, the peer must quote (double) all of the control characters in the range from 00 to 1F (hex). This will result in a statistical loss of about 12.5% in speed for all of the data which you receive. Did you configure the remote system? If so, did you forget flow control on its modem? 10.5. The proxyarp function fails to find the hardware address. Use the ppp-2.1.2d.tar.gz package. The pppd process was erroneously compiled with the 1.1.8 kernel and it used Net-3 rather than Net-2 definitions. Additionally, you should refer to the proxy-ARP mini-HOWTO about the requirements for using proxy-ARP. 11. Routing and other problems 11.1. My route to the remote keeps disappearing! It last for about 3 minutes and then the route just goes away. Help! This is not a question for PPP. Hint: DON'T RUN routed! 11.2. I can reach the remote server, but I can not get anywhere else. Did you forget the `defaultroute' parameter to pppd? This parameter adds a default route into your routing system so that frames to all other IP addresses will be sent to the PPP device. The PPP software will not replace the default route if you have one already set when you run pppd. This is done to prevent people from destroying their default route to the ethernet routers by accident. A warning message is written to the system log if the defaultroute parameter is not performed for this reason. 11.3. I have a default route and I still can't get anywhere else! Now what? The problem then is not with the local Linux system. It most likely is routing problem on the remote end. The remote system is not configured for `IP forwarding'. It is an RFC requirement that this option NOT be enabled by default. You must enable the option. For Linux systems, you will need to build the kernel and specify that you want IP forwarding/gatewaying. The remote computers need a route back to you just as you need a route to them. This may be accomplished by one of four methods. Each has advantages and limitations. You need to do one and only one of these. o Use a host route. At each host on the remote system, add a host route to your Linux IP address with the gateway being the terminal server that you use for your local access. This will work if you have a small number of host systems and a simple network without bridges, routers, gateways, etc. o Use a network route. Subdivide the remote IP addresses so that your local Linux IP address and the remote terminal server address and the remote terminal server's ethernet address is on the same IP domain. This will work if you have the IP addresses to spare. It will work very well if you have a Class-B IP domain and can afford to put the all of the remote addresses on the same IP domain. Then add a network route on each of the gateways and routers so that any address of the remote network is sent to the terminal server. Most configurations have many hosts but few routers. (At sii.com, we have over 300 active host systems with only 3 routers.) o Use gated on all of the gateways and on the terminal server. This will cause the terminal server to broadcast to the gateways that it can accept the frames for your IP address. Since the hosts will have a default route to one of the gateways, the gateways will generate the ICMP re-direct frame and the specific host will automatically add its host route. o Use proxy ARP on the terminal server. This will only work if your remote IP address is in the same IP domain as one of the domains for the network cards. There is no clear solution. You must choose one of these. If your remote router requires to receive RIP frames in order to update the route to your system then you should use the bcastd program on sunsite.unc.edu. This will generate the RIP frames without actually running gated. 11.4. I can not ping my local IP address You are not able to do this because you wont normally have a route to the address. This is the normal operating environment. If you wish to ping your own system then use the loopback address of 127.0.0.1. You may be able to ping the remote address. However, some terminal servers may not allow this as the address may be 'phony' to them. It depends upon their environment. In general, don't try to ping either address. Choose a third address which is well known to be available on the remote network such as one of your name server IP address. While the PPP software will not perform this task, you may add the route table entry yourself once the link has been established. The syntax for the route statement is: route add -host 192.187.163.32 lo where the local IP address is represented as 192.187.163.32 in this example. This will tell the network software to route all frames destined to your local IP address to the loopback adapter. Once you add the appropriate route to the local IP address then you may use this address as the target to IP frames. You will be responsible for deleting the route when the link goes down. 12. Interactions with other PPP implementations 12.1. I am using a Trumpet (for MSDOS) and the connection simply ter- minates. Why is this happening? Trumpet does not like any VJ header compression. Use the pppd option "-vj" to turn it off. 12.2. I am using dp-3.1.2 (with SunOS) and the system will not allow me to use anything but ping, or nslookup. Why is this happening? There is a bug in the 3.1.2 version of dp. Please get the 3.1.2a or later file from the dp ftp home site harbor.ecn.purdue.ecu. Until you can put the patch into dp, disable the vj header compression. 12.3. I can not connect to/with my Windows NT code (originally called 'Daytona') Microsoft has chosen to support a non-standard authentication protocol with Windows NT. That is their right to do so provided that they have registered the protocol number with the IANA. (They have.) If the `accept only Microsoft encrypted authentication' check box is set in the phone book entry, the connection will not complete. This setting mandates that the Windows NT system only exchange PPP authentication with another Microsoft PPP implementation. Linux does not support this authentication protocol. If you have the option of changing the settings on the Windows NT system then go to the Windows NT Phone Book settings, advanced, security settings and ensure that the `Accept any authentication including clear text' box is checked and the `accept only Microsoft encrypted authentication' is not checked. The other checkboxes may be checked or not as you see fit. Then use PAP on the Linux side. Put your Windows NT account name and password into the /etc/PPP/pap-secrets file. The Microsoft authentication sequence is a PAP style authentication with their DES encryption algorithm for the passwords. Normal PAP sends the passwords in clear text. This would violate their C2 security goals. Versions of the Linux PPP code earlier than 2.1.2c have a flaw in their decoding of the authentication request. They will not work with a Windows NT system as they will not negotiate the proper authentication. Please used 2.1.2c or later if you wish to connect to Windows NT. The current version, 2.1.2d, should be used if possible. Scott Hutton sent me the following: Basically, NT RAS (Remote Access Services) will drop your connection if you REJ anything critical (i.e., authentication protocol). So, the trick was to create a mostly bogus chap-secrets file. Mine has * "" "" in it. This causes pppd to send a NAK rather than a REJ. With the SPAP registry key removed, the next protocol attempted is PAP (which is what I'm using). Other points are to make sure that *only* TCP/IP services are enabled in RAS (not NetBEUI nor IPX [Ed: IPX is being addressed. Until it is installed properly, this is probably a good thing to disable as well.]). I also had to fiddle with a couple of other registry keys to kill timeouts (which are problematic when you're only doing TCP/IP): HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\eSYSTEM\eCurrentControlSet\eServices\eRemoteAccess\eParameters Autodisconnect: REG_DWORD: 0 and to get my routing to work correctly: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\eSYSTEM\eCurrentControlSet\eServices\eRasArp\eParameters DisableOtherSrcPackets: REG_DWORD: 0 For completeness, the key that needs to be disabled to eliminate SPAP: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\eSYSTEM\eCurrentControlSet\eServices\eRasMan\ePPP\eSPAP 13. Other messages written to the system log 13.1. Alarm This is not a problem. It means that a timer has expired. Timers are a necessary part of the protocol establishment phase. 13.2. SIGHUP The pppd process has received a HUP signal. The HUP signal is generated by the tty software when the remote system has disconnected the modem link. It means that the modem has put the 'telephone receiver back on the hook', or, 'Hung UP' the connection. The kill program may also be used to send this signal to the pppd process. The pppd process will terminate the link in an orderly fashion when it receives this signal. 13.3. SIGINT The pppd process has received an INT signal. The INT signal is generated by the console software when you press the Ctrl-C key combination and pppd is the foreground process. The kill program may also be used to send this signal to the pppd process. In fact, the recommended method to terminate the pppd link is to send the process an INT. See the question relating to "dip -k" for a script which will perform this task. The pppd process will terminate the link in an orderly fashion when it receives this signal. 13.4. Unknown protocol (c025) received!. The remote wishes to exchange Link Quality Reporting protocol with the Linux system. This protocol is presently not supported. This is not an error. It is merely saying that it has received the request and will tell the remote that "I can't do this now. Don't bother me with this!" The Morning Star PPP package will always try to do LQR protocol. This is normal. 13.5. The connection fails with an ioctl(TIOCSCTTY) error. Use the ppp-2.1.2c.tar.gz package. This was a bug which was not caught before the `a' package was released. 13.6. The connection fails with errors "ioctl(TIOCGETD): I/O error" or "ioctl(PPPIOCSINPSIG): I/O error". What now? Look at the boot messages when you boot the kernel. If it says "PPP version 0.1.2" then you have an old version of the PPP.c driver. If it says "PPP version 0.2.7" then you have the current driver, however, it was not built with the same set of defines for the ioctl numbers. Ensure that you have only one file called "PPP.h". It should be located in the kernel's include/linux directory. Once you have done this, rebuild the kernel and the pppd process. 13.7. Sometimes the messages "ioctl(PPPIOCGDEBUG): I/O error", "ioctl(TIOCSETD): I/O error" and "ioctl(TIOCNXCL): I/O error" occur. Why? The remote system has disconnected the telephone. The tty drivers will re-establish the proper tty discipline and these errors are the result of the pppd process trying to do the same thing. These are to be expected. 13.8. My ifconfig has strange output for PPP. Usually the ifconfig program reports information similar to the following: ppp0 Link encap UNSPEC HWaddr 00-00-00-00-00-00-00 ... inet addr 192.76.32.2 P-t-P 129.67.1.65 Mask 255.255.255.0 UP POINTOPOINT RUNNING MTU 1500 Metric 1 The information is for display purposes only. If you are using a recent 1.2 kernel then update the nettools package with the current one on sunacm.swan.ac.uk in the directory /pub/Linux/networking/nettools. 13.9. The file /proc/net/dev seems to be empty Did you just issue the command "ls -l /proc/net" and are wondering why the size is zero? If so, this is normal. Instead, issue the command: cat /proc/net/dev You should not find the file empty. The size is always shown as zero, but that is the 'proc' file system. Don't believe the size. Do the command. The 'more', 'less', and 'most' programs may not be used to view the file directly. If you wish to use these programs, use it as follows: cat /proc/net/dev | less 14. Network routing issues (using PPP as a `cheap' bridge) 14.1. Slattach and ifconfig don't work like SLIP Do not use slattach and ifconfig with PPP. These are used for SLIP. The pppd process does these functions at the appropriate time. These must occur after the LCP and IPCP protocols have been exchanged. You can not replace pppd with slattach and ifconfig. Most of the protocol support for PPP is in the pppd process. Only the IP (and IPX when it is completed) processing is in the kernel. The host route to the remote system will be automatically added by pppd. There is no option to NOT add the route. The pppd process will terminate if the route could not be added. The default route may or may not be added. This is controlled by the option `defaultroute'. If you have a default route, it will not be changed. If you must do routing for an entire network, then put the route command into the /etc/PPP/ip-up script. The parameters to the script are: $0 - name of the script (/etc/PPP/ip-up or /etc/PPP/ip-down) $1 - name of the network device (such as ppp0) $2 - name of the tty device (such as /dev/cua0) $3 - speed of the tty device in Bits Per Second (such as 38400) $4 - the local IP address in dotted decimal notation $5 - the remote IP address in dotted decimal notation 14.2. I want the route to the network and not the route to the host. On sunsite there is a package called devinfo.tar.gz. It contains some useful little programs which will extract the data from the device and to do various things with the dotted IP addresses. The documentation is in the man pages in the file. For example, if you want to route the entire IP domain to the remote, the following may be used in /etc/PPP/ip-up. Of course, if the values are not variable, then simply use the appropriate entry in the route command. ______________________________________________________________________ # Obtain the netmask for the ppp0 (or whatever) device NETMASK = `devinfo -d $1 -t mask` # Obtain the IP domain (without the host address by removing the extra bits) DOMAIN = `netmath -a $5 $NETMASK` # Do the network route now that the IP domain is known route -net add $DOMAIN gw $5 ______________________________________________________________________ 15. Other features and protocols 15.1. What about support for `demand dial' Use the diald package. This is on sunsite in the same directory as the PPP source, /pub/Linux/system/Network/serial. 15.2. What about `filtering' There are no plans to put filtering into the PPP code. Run the ipfirewall code. It is on sunsite. Help the author debug that code. It will do the filtering that you want in a general solution. The latest development kernels will include the patches to support filtering. (You will still need the ipfirewall code as the kernel only contains the patches which were in the ipfirewall code for the kernel.) Again, filtering is a network issue and not one specifically for PPP. 15.3. How about IPX? The addition of support for IPX is fairly straight forward. Work is underway to include the IPX protocol. 15.4. How about NETBIOS? There is a netbios PPP protocol. However, your better solution would be to use TCP/IP and the `samba' code. Microsoft and others have used Netbios PPP protocol. The nbfcp protocol is a public document and available from several sources. The Netbios protocol is not a valid address family at the present time for Linux. Until Linux supports the protocol, there is little need to support Netbios over PPP for Linux. 15.5. I need ISDN support. Is there any? ISDN support revolves around having a working ISDN driver. The present design of the PPP driver does not lend itself well to the concept of a block of data being received. This is being changed. A driver for the Sonix interface is being developed. 15.6. How about just standard synchronous PPP? There are small changes needed to support a serial interface which uses synchronous communications. The redesign of the PPP driver will help with this function as well. Kate Marika Alhola has expressed an intrest in writing such a synchronous driver for her hardware. You should contact her at kate@digiw.fi for further information. 16. Miscellenous 16.1. Do you have a PPP compatible mail reader? Huh? You have the wrong group if you want MSDOS. PPP has nothing to do with the mail user agent. All of the mail agents are compatible with PPP. 16.2. How about a news reader? Refer to the previous answer.