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nexedi
babeld
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42d47e46
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42d47e46
authored
Jun 16, 2007
by
Juliusz Chroboczek
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More newbie-friendly README.
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README
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42d47e46
...
@@ -13,18 +13,68 @@ Installation
...
@@ -13,18 +13,68 @@ Installation
$ su -c 'make install'
$ su -c 'make install'
Running
Babel
Setting up a network for use with
Babel
*************
*************
**************************
In order to run Babel on a node (wireless or wired), just give it an
1. Choose a prefix
IPv6 address, then run the routing daemon. Assuming your wireless
==================
interface is eth1, and your IPv6 address is $IPv6, do
# ip -6 addr add $IPv6 dev eth1
You will want your mesh network to run on a single /64 prefix. If
# babel $IPv6 eth1
you've already got IPv6 routing with the rest of the Internet (either
native or using 6to4) and you've got a /64 to spare, use that.
If you don't, you can generate a random prefix. RFC 4193 defines how
such prefixes are generated. The simplest way to make sure that you
follow the rules is to use the utility ``ahcp-generate-address'',
which you'll find in the AHCP package.
$ ahcp-generate-address -p -r
fdf0:bb4:f192::
This needs to be done only once for the network; the following steps
need to be repeated for every node.
2. Choose a host number
=======================
You will need to choose a unique host number for every node. You can
number your nodes sequentially (fdf0:bb4:f192::1, fdf0:bb4:f192::2,
etc.), generate a node number from the interface's MAC address, or
choose it randomly. Again, ``ahcp-generate-address'' knows the rules.
$ ip -0 addr show dev eth1
3: eth1: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST> mtu 1500 qdisc noop qlen 1000
link/ieee1394 00:11:d8:00:00:12:34:56 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
$ ahcp-generate-address fdf0:bb4:f192:: 00:11:d8:00:00:12:34:56
fdf0:bb4:f192:0:211:d8ff:fe00:12
This is your IPv6 address; save it for later use.
$ IPv6=fdf0:bb4:f192:0:211:d8ff:fe00:12
3. Set up the interface
=======================
Set up the MAC layer's parameters first:
$ iwconfig eth1 mode ad-hoc channel 11
$ iwconfig eth essid "my-wireless-network"
Then the network layer:
$ ip link set eth1 up
$ ip -6 addr add $IPv6 dev eth1
4. Start the routing daemon
===========================
$ babel $IPv6 eth1
If your node has multiple interfaces which you want to participate in
If your node has multiple interfaces which you want to participate in
the Babel net
ow
k, just list them all:
the Babel net
wor
k, just list them all:
# babel $IPv6 eth0 eth1 sit1
# babel $IPv6 eth0 eth1 sit1
...
@@ -34,14 +84,8 @@ zero-cost external routes:
...
@@ -34,14 +84,8 @@ zero-cost external routes:
# babel -X $IPv6-2 0 -X $IPv6-3 0 $IPv6 eth1
# babel -X $IPv6-2 0 -X $IPv6-3 0 $IPv6 eth1
On an access point, you'll probably want to inject external routes
On a gateway to the Internet, you'll want to redistribute the default
into the Babel network. First check that you have a default route
route into the mesh network:
on your access point:
$ ip -6 route show default
default via ...
Then run the routing daemon as so:
# babel -x default 256 $IPv6 eth1
# babel -x default 256 $IPv6 eth1
...
...
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