1FRR-OSPF6D(8)                         FRR                        FRR-OSPF6D(8)
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NAME

6       frr-ospf6d - an OSPFv3 routing engine for use with FRRouting.
7

SYNOPSIS

9       ospf6d [-h] [-v]
10
11       ospf6d   [-d|-t|-dt]   [-C]   [-f   config-file]   [-i   pid-file]  [-z
12       zclient-path] [-u user] [-g group] [-A vty-addr] [-P vty-port] [-M mod‐
13       ule[:options]] [-N pathspace] [--vty_socket vty-path] [--moduledir mod‐
14       ule-path]
15

DESCRIPTION

17       ospf6d is a routing component that works  with  the  FRRouting  routing
18       engine.
19

OPTIONS

21       OPTIONS available for the ospf6d command:
22
23   HELP AND VERSION
24       -h, --help
25              Print a short description of the daemon's command line options.
26
27       -v, --version
28              Print version and build information for the daemon.
29
30       Both  of  these  options  inhibit normal operation and will immediately
31       exit.
32
33   PROCESS CONTROL
34       These options control background operation:
35
36       -d, --daemon
37                 Launches the process in background/daemon mode,  forking  and
38                 detaching from the terminal.
39
40              The  parent  process  will delay its exit until the daemon/child
41              has finished its initialization and has entered its  main  loop.
42              This  is  important  for zebra startup because the other daemons
43              will attempt to connect to zebra. A return from zebra -d guaran‐
44              tees its readiness to accept these connections.
45
46       -t, --terminal
47              Opens  an  interactive VTY session on the terminal, allowing for
48              both state and configuration operations.  Note that the terminal
49              starts  operating after startup has completed and the configura‐
50              tion file has been loaded.
51
52              The process will exit when end of file is detected on the termi‐
53              nal.  It is possible to daemonize a process started with -t (but
54              without -d) by sending SIGQUIT to the process  (normally  mapped
55              to a ^keypress.)
56
57       The  combination  of --daemon and --terminal will delay the daemon from
58       going into background until the terminal session ends (by end of file.)
59
60       If the process receives SIGINT (e.g. a ^C keypress) in  this  mode,  it
61       will exit instead of daemonizing.
62
63       It is safe to suspend (SIGTSTP / ^Z) the terminal session opened by the
64       previous two options;  this will only stop the  terminal  but  not  the
65       protocol daemon itself (which runs in a separate second process.)
66
67   CONFIGURATION AND PATHS
68       The  following  options control configuration and file system locations
69       for frr processes:
70
71       -f, --config_file config-file
72              Specify a configuration file to be used instead of  the  default
73              /etc/frr/<daemon>.conf file.
74
75              Note  that  the daemon will attempt to write to this file if the
76              write file command is issued on its  VTY  interface  or  through
77              vtysh.
78
79       -C, --dryrun
80              Load the configuration file and check its validity, then exit.
81
82       -i, --pid_file pid-file
83              Output  a  pid  file  to  a  location  other  than  the  default
84              /var/run/frr/<daemon>.pid.
85
86       -z, --socket zclient-path
87              Override the path of the ZAPI socket used to communicate between
88              zebra   and   the  various  protocol  daemons.  The  default  is
89              /var/run/frr/zserv.api.  The value of this option  must  be  the
90              same across all daemons.
91
92       -N, --pathspace pathspace
93              Insert  pathspace  into all default paths, changing the defaults
94              to:
95
96              /etc/frr/pathspace/<daemon>.conf    /var/run/frr/pathspace/<dae‐
97              mon>.pid                     /var/run/frr/pathspace/<daemon>.vty
98              /var/run/frr/pathspace/zserv.api
99
100              ´.´ and ´/´ characters will not be accepted  in  pathspace,  but
101              the empty string will be accepted.
102
103              Note  that  this only changes the respective defaults, it has no
104              effect on the respective path if the -f, -i, -z or  --vty_socket
105              options are used.
106
107              The  purpose  of  this option is to easily group all file system
108              related bits together for running multiple fully-separate "logi‐
109              cal routers" on a system, particularly with Linux network names‐
110              paces.  Groups of daemons running with distinct pathspace values
111              will be completely unaware of each other and not interact in any
112              way.
113
114              This option does not do any system setup  (like  network  names‐
115              paces.) This must be done by the user, for example by running:
116
117              ip netns exec namespace <daemon> -N namespace
118
119   PROCESS CREDENTIALS
120       -u, --user user
121              (default: frr)
122
123       -g, --group group
124              (default: frr)
125
126              Change the user/group which the daemon will switch to.
127
128       -S, --skip_runas
129              Skip setting the process effective user and group.
130
131       Note  that  there  is an additional group, frrvty, which controls group
132       ownership of the VTY sockets.  The name of this group cannot  currently
133       be changed, and user must be a member of this group.
134
135   VTY SETUP
136       These  following  options control the daemon's VTY (interactive command
137       line) interface.  The interface is available over TCP, using the telnet
138       protocol, as well as through the vtysh frontend.
139
140       -A, --vty_addr vty-addr
141              Specify an IP/IPv6 address to bind the TCP VTY interface to.  It
142              is generally recommended to specify ::1 or 127.0.0.1.  For  rea‐
143              sons of backwards compatibility, the default is to listen on all
144              interfaces.
145
146       -P, --vty_port vty-port
147              Override the daemon's default TCP VTY port (each  daemon  has  a
148              different  default value upwards of 2600, listed below.)  Speci‐
149              fying 0 disables the TCP VTY interface.
150
151              Default ports are::
152
153                 zebra           2601
154                 ripd            2602
155                 ripngd          2603
156                 ospfd           2604
157                 bgpd            2605
158                 ospf6d          2606
159                 isisd           2608
160                 babeld          2609
161                 nhrpd           2610
162                 pimd            2611
163                 ldpd            2612
164                 eigrpd          2613
165                 pbrd            2615
166                 staticd         2616
167                 bfdd            2617
168                 fabricd         2618
169                 vrrpd           2619
170
171              Port 2607 is used for ospfd's Opaque LSA API.
172
173       --vty_socket vty-path
174              Overrides the  directory  used  for  the  <daemon>.vty  sockets.
175              vtysh connects to these sockets in order to access each daemon's
176              VTY.  Default: /var/run/frr[/<pathspace>]
177
178              NB: Unlike the other options, this option specifies a directory,
179              not a full path.
180
181              This  option is primarily used by the SNAP packaging system, its
182              semantics may change.  It should not be necessary in most  other
183              scenarios.
184
185   MODULE LOADING
186       frr  supports optional dynamically loadable modules, although these can
187       only be loaded at startup.  The  set  of  available  modules  may  vary
188       across  distributions  and  packages,  and modules may be available for
189       installation as separate packages.
190
191       -M, --module module[:options]
192              Load a module named module, optionally passing options to it.
193
194              If there is a ´/´ character in module, the value is  assumed  to
195              be a pathname to a module.
196
197              If  there  is  no  ´/´ character, the module directory (see next
198              option) is searched first for  a  module  named  "<daemon>_<mod‐
199              ule>.so",  then  for "<module>.so".  This allows for a module to
200              exist in variations appropriate  for  particular  daemons,  e.g.
201              zebra_snmp  and  bgp_snmp,  with  the correct one selected by -M
202              snmp.
203
204              The meaning of options is specific to the module  being  loaded.
205              Most modules currently ignore it.
206
207              Modules  are  loaded in the order as listed on the command line.
208              This is not generally relevant.
209
210       --moduledir module-path
211              Look for modules in the module-path  directory  instead  of  the
212              default /usr/lib/frr/modules.  (This path is not affected by the
213              -N option.)
214
215       The list of loaded modules can be inspected at runtime  with  the  show
216       modules VTY command.
217

FILES

219       /usr/lib/frr/ospf6d
220              The default location of the ospf6d binary.
221
222       /etc/frr/ospf6d.conf
223              The default location of the ospf6d config file.
224
225       $(PWD)/ospf6d.log
226              If  the  ospf6d  process is configured to output logs to a file,
227              then you will find this file in the directory where you  started
228              ospf6d.
229

WARNING

231       This  man  page  is  intended  to be a quick reference for command line
232       options. The definitive document is the info file frr 7.3 or the  docu‐
233       mentation available on the project website at https://frrouting.org/.
234

DIAGNOSTICS

236       The  daemon  may  log  to  standard output, to a VTY, to a log file, or
237       through syslog to the system logs. FRR supports many debugging options,
238       see the Info file, web docs or source for details.
239

SEE ALSO

241       frr-zebra(8),   vtysh(1),   frr-ripd(8),  frr-ripngd(8),  frr-ospfd(8),
242       frr-ospf6d(8), frr-bgpd(8), frr-isisd(8), frr-babeld(8),  frr-nhrpd(8),
243       frr-pimd(8),  frr-pbrd(8),  frr-ldpd(8), frr-eigrpd(8), frr-staticd(8),
244       frr-fabricd(8), frr-vrrpd(8), mtracebis(8) https://frrouting.org/
245

BUGS

247       FRR eats bugs for breakfast. If you  have  food  for  the  maintainers,
248       please email <dev@lists.frrouting.org>.
249
251       2020, FRR
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2567.3                              Feb 19, 2020                    FRR-OSPF6D(8)
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