tincd |
[-cdDKnsoLRU ]
[--config =DIR]
[--no-detach ]
[--debug [=LEVEL]]
[--net =NETNAME]
[--option =[HOST.]KEY=VALUE]
[--mlock ]
[--logfile [=FILE]]
[--syslog ]
[--bypass-security ]
[--chroot ]
[--user =USER]
[--help ] [--version ] |
This is the daemon of tinc, a secure virtual private network (VPN)
project. When started, tincd
will read it's
configuration file to determine what virtual subnets it has to serve and to
what other tinc daemons it should connect. It will connect to the ethertap
or tun/tap device and set up a socket for incoming connections. Optionally a
script will be executed to further configure the virtual device. If that
succeeds, it will detach from the controlling terminal and continue in the
background, accepting and setting up connections to other tinc daemons that
are part of the virtual private network. Under Windows tinc will install
itself as a service, which will be restarted automatically after
reboots.
-c,
--config
=DIR
- Read configuration files from DIR instead of
/usr/local/etc/tinc/.
-D,
--no-detach
- Don't fork and detach. This will also disable the automatic restart
mechanism for fatal errors. If not mentioned otherwise, this will show log
messages on the standard error output.
-d,
--debug
[=LEVEL]
- Increase debug level or set it to LEVEL (see
below).
-n,
--net
=NETNAME
- Connect to net NETNAME. This will let tinc read all
configuration files from /usr/local/etc/tinc/
NETNAME. Specifying . for
NETNAME is the same as not specifying any
NETNAME.
-o,
--option
=[HOST.]KEY=VALUE
- Without specifying a HOST, this will set server
configuration variable KEY to
VALUE. If specified as
HOST.KEY=VALUE, this will set the host configuration
variable KEY of the host named
HOST to VALUE. This option can
be used more than once to specify multiple configuration variables.
-L,
--mlock
- Lock tinc into main memory. This will prevent sensitive data like shared
private keys to be written to the system swap files/partitions. This
option is not supported on all platforms.
--logfile
[=FILE]
- Write log entries to a file instead of to the system logging facility. If
FILE is omitted, the default is
/var/log/tinc.NETNAME.log.
-s,
--syslog
- When this option is is set, tinc uses syslog instead of stderr in
--no-detach mode.
--pidfile
=FILENAME
- Store a cookie in FILENAME which allows
tinc(8)
to authenticate. If FILE is omitted, the default is
/var/run/tinc.NETNAME.pid.
--bypass-security
- Disables encryption and authentication of the meta protocol. Only useful
for debugging.
-R,
--chroot
- With this option tinc chroots into the directory where network config is
located (/usr/local/etc/tinc/NETNAME if -n option is used, or to the
directory specified with -c option) after initialization. This option is
not supported on all platforms.
-U,
--user
=USER
- setuid to the specified USER after initialization.
This option is not supported on all platforms.
--help
- Display short list of options.
--version
- Output version information and exit.
- ALRM
- Forces
tincd
to try to connect to all uplinks
immediately. Usually tincd
attempts to do this
itself, but increases the time it waits between the attempts each time it
failed, and if tincd
didn't succeed to connect to
an uplink the first time after it started, it defaults to the maximum time
of 15 minutes.
- HUP
- Partially rereads configuration files. Connections to hosts whose host
config file are removed are closed. New outgoing connections specified in
tinc.conf will be made. If the
--logfile
option is used, this will also close and
reopen the log file, useful when log rotation is used.
The tinc daemon can send a lot of messages to the syslog. The
higher the debug level, the more messages it will log. Each level inherits
all messages of the previous level:
- 0
- This will log a message indicating
tincd
has
started along with a version number. It will also log any serious
error.
- 1
- This will log all connections that are made with other tinc daemons.
- 2
- This will log status and error messages from scripts and other tinc
daemons.
- 3
- This will log all requests that are exchanged with other tinc daemons.
These include authentication, key exchange and connection list
updates.
- 4
- This will log a copy of everything received on the meta socket.
- 5
- This will log all network traffic over the virtual private network.
- /usr/local/etc/tinc/
- Directory containing the configuration files tinc uses. For more
information, see
tinc.conf(5).
- /var/run/tinc.NETNAME.pid
- The PID of the currently running
tincd
is stored
in this file.
A lot, especially security auditing.
tinc(8),
tinc.conf(5),
https://www.tinc-vpn.org/,
http://www.cabal.org/.
The full documentation for tinc is maintained as a Texinfo manual.
If the info and tinc programs are properly installed at your site, the
command info tinc
should give you access to the
complete manual.
tinc comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. This is free software, and
you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; see the file
COPYING for details.
Ivo Timmermans
Guus Sliepen ⟨guus@tinc-vpn.org⟩
And thanks to many others for their contributions to tinc!