DHCP6CTL(8) | System Manager's Manual | DHCP6CTL(8) |
NAME¶
dhcp6ctl
— DHCPv6
client and server control utility
SYNOPSIS¶
dhcp6ctl |
[-C -|
-S ] [-k
keyfile] [-p
port] [-s
address] command |
DESCRIPTION¶
dhcp6ctl
controls the operation of a
DHCPv6 process, which is either dhcp6c
or
dhcp6s
, a DHCPv6 client or a server. By default,
dhcp6ctl
controls a client. The type of the process
can also be specified explicitly by the -C
or
-S
options.
dhcp6ctl
communicates with the DHCPv6
process over a TCP connection, sending commands authenticated with digital
signatures. Currently, the only supported authentication algorithm is
HMAC-MD5, which uses a shared secret on each end of the connection.
Command line options are as below:
-C
- Control a DHCPv6 client. This option is exclusive with the
-S
option. -S
- Control a DHCPv6 server. This option is exclusive with the
-C
option. -k
keyfile- Use keyfile to provide the shared secret to communicate with the process. The default file name used when unspecified is /etc/wide-dhcpv6/dhcp6cctlkey with a client, and /etc/wide-dhcpv6/dhcp6sctlkey with a server.
-p
port- Specify port as the listening port of the process. The default port number used when unspecified is 5546 for a client, and 5547 for a server.
-s
address- Specify address as the listening address of the process. The default address used when unspecified is ::1.
KEY FILE¶
Since the operation available with the
dhcp6ctl
command is powerful, the communication
between the command and dhcp6c
or
dhcp6s
must be authenticated. The supported
algorithm for authentication is HMAC-MD5, which requires a shared secret,
and the secret is stored in the key file. The key file must consist of a
single line, in which the secret value is written in the form of BASE-64
encoding.
COMMANDS¶
Each command
specifies a single control
operation. Supported commands are as follows:
reload
- This command specifies the process to reload the configuration file. Existing bindings, if any, are intact.
remove
arguments- This command is only applicable to a server. This specifies the server to
remove a run-time object specified by arguments from
the server. Currently, the only possible object is one particular IA_NA or
IA_PD binding, which is specified as
‘
’ or ‘binding IA
IA_NA
IAID DUID
’ where IAID is a decimal number specifying the IAID of the IA, and DUID is a DHCP Unique Identifier of the binding. The format of DUID is the same as that specified in dhcp6s.conf(5).binding IA
IA_PD
IAID DUID start
interface
ifname- This command is only applicable to a client. It tells the client to release the current configuration information (if any) on the interface ifname and restart the DHCPv6 configuration process on the interface.
stop
interface
ifname- This command is only applicable to a client. It tells the client to
release the current configuration information (if any) on the interface
ifname. Any timer running for the interface will be
stopped, and no more DHCPv6 messages will be sent on the interface. The
configuration process can later be restarted by the
start
command. stop
- This command stops the specified process. If the process is a client, it will release all configuration information (if any) and exits.
FILES¶
- /etc/wide-dhcpv6/dhcp6cctlkey
- is the default key file to communicate with a client.
- /etc/wide-dhcpv6/dhcp6sctlkey
- is the default key file to communicate with a server.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The dhcp6ctl
command first appeared in
WIDE/KAME IPv6 protocol stack kit.
September 7, 2004 | KAME |