From: Wessel Dankers Date: Fri, 30 Jun 2000 20:16:15 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Initial revision. Lots of loose ends, not usable yet. X-Git-Tag: release-1.0.3~100 X-Git-Url: https://git.librecmc.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=6f5aac4e39cd6fb2fb76c0121de3f3782f72f18e;p=oweals%2Ftinc.git Initial revision. Lots of loose ends, not usable yet. --- diff --git a/doc/HOWTO b/doc/HOWTO new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f6511bf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/HOWTO @@ -0,0 +1,85 @@ + ============== + The TINC HOWTO + ============== + + Wessel Dankers + wsl@nl.linux.org + +Introduction +------------ +Tinc is a system to create a virtual ethernet network on top of an existing +infrastructure. This infrastructure can be anything from modem lines to +gigabit ethernet networks, as long as they talk IP. Once you install and +configure tinc, your host will get an extra IP address, just like it would +when you stick an extra ethernet card into it. Using this IP address, it can +communicate with all hosts in its virtual network using strong encryption. + +If you install Tinc on a router (and pick your numbers correctly) you can +have the router forward all packets. This way you can---instead of +connecting hosts---connect entire sites together! Now you need only one +outgoing network connection for both internet and intranet. + +Getting Tinc +------------ +Before you fetch the latest tarball, you might want to check if there's a +package for your Linux distribution. One of the main authors is a Debian +Developer, so you can expect the Debian packages to be very up to date. + +The official website for Tinc can be found at http://tinc.nl.linux.org/. +There you can find Debian packages, RPM's and of course... the tarball! +Since we run Doohickey Linux Pro 1.0, for which no package exists (or +indeed the distribution itself) we shall compile the package ourselves. + +Building +-------- +The Tinc source adheres to so many standards it makes you head spin. +Even the debug messages have been localized! Amazing. Tinc also comes +with a configuration script. If you like to see what is there to +configure run ./configure --help | more. If you don't have time for such +nonsense: + + ./configure --sysconfdir=/etc + +This will see if your system is nice enough to run tinc on, and will +create some Makefiles and other stuff which will together build tinc. + + make + make install + +The first will do the actual build, the second copies all files into place. + +The kernel +---------- +FIXME + +Configuring +----------- +The first thing we should do is pick network numbers. Tinc has a very +peculiar taste for network numbers, which is caused by the way it routes +traffic. However, it turns out to be really handy if you want to use +your tinc host as a router for a site. + +The numbers have to be in a range that is not yet in use in your existing, +real network! In this example we will use numbers from the 192.168.0/16 +range. This is standard CIDR notation for all IP addresses from 192.168.0.0 +to 192.168.255.255. The /16 means that the first 16 bits form the network +part. + +In the example we will connect three machines: f00f, fdiv and hlt. We will +give each an address, but not just that, also a slice of our address space +to play with. + + Host Real address Tinc network + --------------------------------------------------- + f00f 126.202.37.20 192.168.1.1/24 + fdiv 126.202.37.81 192.168.2.1/24 + hlt 103.22.1.218 192.168.3.1/24 + +It is very important that none of the Tinc netmasks overlap! Note how the +192.168.0/16 network covers the entire address space of the three hosts. +We will refer to the 192.168.0/16 network as the `umbrella' from now on. +As you can see we can fit 256 hosts into this umbrella this way, which is +also the practical maximum for tinc. + +Let's create a configuration file for f00f. We have to put it in /etc/tinc, +unless you participate in multiple umbrella's (more on that later).