The
ippp driver interfaces the IP subsystem of the operating system with the ISDN layer so that a transport of IP packets over an ISDN link is possible.
For configuration of the
ippp driver, either the
ipppctl(8) utility is used or it is configured via
isdnd(8) and its associated
isdnd.rc(5) file.
In case an IP packet for a remote side arrives in the driver and no connection is established yet, the driver communicates with the
isdnd(8) daemon to establish a connection.
The driver has support for interfacing to the
bpf(4) subsystem for using
tcpdump(8) with the
ippp interfaces.
The
ipppctl(8) utility is used to configure all aspects of PPP required to connect to a remote site.
LINK0 and LINK1
The
link0 and
link1 flags given as parameters to
ifconfig(8) have the following meaning for the
ippp devices:
link0
Wait passively for connection. The administrative Open event to the Link Control Protocol (LCP) layer will be delayed until after the lower layers signal an Up event (rise of “carrier”). This can be used by lower layers to support a dial-in connection where the physical layer isn't available immediately at startup, but only after some external event arrives. Receipt of a Down event from the lower layer will not take the interface completely down in this case.
link1
Dial-on-demand mode. The administrative Open event to the LCP layer will be delayed until either an outbound network packet arrives, or until the lower layer signals an Up event, indicating an inbound connection. As with passive mode, receipt of a Down event (loss of carrier) will not automatically take the interface down, thus it remains available for further connections.
The
link0 flag is set to
off by default, the
link1 flag to
on.