.TH IRDPD 8 .SH NAME irdpd \- internet router discovery protocol daemon .SH SYNOPSIS .B irdpd .RB [ \-bd ] .RB [ \-U .IR udp-device ] .RB [ \-I .IR ip-device ] .RB [ \-o .IR priority-offset ] .SH DESCRIPTION .B Irdpd looks for routers. This should be a simple task, but some routers are hard to find because they do not implement the router discovery protocol. This daemon collects information that routers do send out and makes it available. .PP At startup .B irdpd sends out several router solicitation broadcasts. A good router should respond to this with a router advertisement. .PP If a router advertisement arrives then no more solicitations are sent. The TCP/IP server has filled its routing table with the info from the advertisement, so it now has at least one router. If the advertisement is sent by a genuine router (the sender is in the table) then the .B irdpd daemon goes dormant for the time the advert is valid. Routers send new adverts periodically, keeping the daemon silent. .PP Otherwise .B irdpd will listen for RIP (Router Information Protocol) packets. These packets are sent between routers to exchange routing information. .B Irdpd uses this information to build a routing table. .PP Every now and then a router advertisement is sent to the local host to give it router information build from the RIP packets. .SH OPTIONS .TP .B \-b Broadcast advertisements instead of sending them to the local host only. This may be used to keep (non-Minix) hosts alive on a net without adverts. .TP .B \-d Debug mode, tell where info is coming from and where it is sent. Debugging can also be turned on at runtime by sending signal .B SIGUSR1 or turned off with .BR SIGUSR2 . .TP .BI \-o " priority-offset Offset used to make the gateway's preferences collected from RIP packets look worse than those found in genuine router adverts. By default .BR -1024 . .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR inet (8), .BR boot (8), .BR dhcpd (8), .BR inetd (8), .BR nonamed (8). .SH BUGS This daemon has gone out of favour thanks to .BR dhcpd , that also does router solicitations among other things. .PP Under standard MINIX 3 this daemon can't listen to both IRDP and RIP at the same time, so it starts out with IRDP. It switches over to RIP if it can't find a router, or if it threatens to lose its router. It does not switch back. .SH AUTHOR Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl)