| GIF(4) | Device Drivers Manual | GIF(4) |
NAME¶
gif —
SYNOPSIS¶
device gif
DESCRIPTION¶
Thegif interface is a generic tunnelling device for
IPv4 and IPv6. It can tunnel IPv[46] traffic over IPv[46]. Therefore, there
can be four possible configurations. The behavior of
gif is mainly based on RFC2893 IPv6-over-IPv4
configured tunnel. On NetBSD,
gif can also tunnel ISO traffic over IPv[46] using EON
encapsulation. Note that gif does not perform GRE
encapsulation; use gre(4) for GRE encapsulation.
Each gif interface is created at runtime
using interface cloning. This is most easily done with the
“ifconfig
create” command or using the
ifconfig_⟨interface⟩
variable in rc.conf(5).
To use gif, the administrator needs to
configure the protocol and addresses used for the outer header. This can be
done by using ifconfig(8) tunnel,
or SIOCSIFPHYADDR ioctl. The administrator also
needs to configure the protocol and addresses for the inner header, with
ifconfig(8). Note that IPv6 link-local addresses (those
that start with fe80::) will be automatically
configured whenever possible. You may need to remove IPv6 link-local
addresses manually using ifconfig(8), if you want to
disable the use of IPv6 as the inner header (for example, if you need a pure
IPv4-over-IPv6 tunnel). Finally, you must modify the routing table to route
the packets through the gif interface.
The gif device can be configured to be ECN
friendly. This can be configured by IFF_LINK1.
ECN friendly behavior¶
Thegif device can be configured to be ECN friendly, as
described in draft-ietf-ipsec-ecn-02.txt. This is
turned off by default, and can be turned on by the
IFF_LINK1 interface flag.
Without IFF_LINK1,
gif will show normal behavior, as described in
RFC2893. This can be summarized as follows:
- Ingress
- Set outer TOS bit to
0. - Egress
- Drop outer TOS bit.
With IFF_LINK1,
gif will copy ECN bits (0x02
and 0x01 on IPv4 TOS byte or IPv6 traffic class
byte) on egress and ingress, as follows:
- Ingress
- Copy TOS bits except for ECN CE (masked with
0xfe) from inner to outer. Set ECN CE bit to0. - Egress
- Use inner TOS bits with some change. If outer ECN CE bit is
1, enable ECN CE bit on the inner.
Note that the ECN friendly behavior violates RFC2893. This should be used in mutual agreement with the peer.
Security¶
A malicious party may try to circumvent security filters by using tunnelled packets. For better protection,gif performs both
martian and ingress filtering against the outer source address on egress. Note
that martian/ingress filters are in no way complete. You may want to secure
your node by using packet filters. Ingress filtering can break tunnel
operation in an asymmetrically routed network. It can be turned off by
IFF_LINK2 bit.
Miscellaneous¶
By default,gif tunnels may not be nested. This behavior
may be modified at runtime by setting the sysctl(8) variable
net.link.gif.max_nesting to the desired level of
nesting. Additionally, gif tunnels are restricted to
one per pair of end points. Parallel tunnels may be enabled by setting the
sysctl(8) variable
net.link.gif.parallel_tunnels to 1.
SEE ALSO¶
gre(4), inet(4), inet6(4), ifconfig(8)R. Gilligan and E. Nordmark, Transition Mechanisms for IPv6 Hosts and Routers, RFC2893, http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2893, August 2000.
Sally Floyd, David L. Black, and K. K. Ramakrishnan, IPsec Interactions with ECN, December 1999, draft-ietf-ipsec-ecn-02.txt.
HISTORY¶
Thegif device first appeared in the WIDE hydrangea IPv6
kit.
BUGS¶
There are many tunnelling protocol specifications, all defined differently from each other. Thegif device may not interoperate with
peers which are based on different specifications, and are picky about outer
header fields. For example, you cannot usually use gif
to talk with IPsec devices that use IPsec tunnel mode.
The current code does not check if the ingress address (outer
source address) configured in the gif interface
makes sense. Make sure to specify an address which belongs to your node.
Otherwise, your node will not be able to receive packets from the peer, and
it will generate packets with a spoofed source address.
If the outer protocol is IPv4, gif does
not try to perform path MTU discovery for the encapsulated packet (DF bit is
set to 0).
If the outer protocol is IPv6, path MTU discovery for encapsulated
packets may affect communication over the interface. The first
bigger-than-pmtu packet may be lost. To avoid the problem, you may want to
set the interface MTU for gif to 1240 or smaller,
when the outer header is IPv6 and the inner header is IPv4.
The gif device does not translate ICMP
messages for the outer header into the inner header.
In the past, gif had a multi-destination
behavior, configurable via IFF_LINK0 flag. The
behavior is obsolete and is no longer supported.
| September 10, 2015 | Linux 4.9.0-9-amd64 |