SYNOPSIS

mpcd [ -s Control ATM address ] [ -l Data ATM address ] [ -c MPS control ATM address ] [ -i Interface number ] [ -m MPS MAC address ] [ -L LEC address [ -n ELAN name ] [ -C LECS Address ]]

DESCRIPTION

MPOA client (MPC) is responsible for creating and receiving internetwork layer shortcuts. Using these shortcuts MPCs forward unicast internetwork layer packets effectively over ATM without need for routing protocols.

MPC has two roles; ingress and egress. In ingress role MPC detects flows destined outside it's own subnet and tries to establish shortcuts to those destinations. In egress role MPC accepts shortcuts and packets arriving on those shortcuts. Maintaining shortcuts is done with the help of MPOA server (MPS).

Just as the Linux LAN Emulation client, MPOA client is also divided in two parts. The parts are kernel component and a daemon process. The daemon opens and receives data shortcuts and control connections with the kernel component. The kernel component tallies packets flowing out from the LANE device and makes the decision if a packet should be forwarded using LANE or MPOA shortcuts.

If the daemon is killed with SIGHUP it will close all the open connections, purge ingress and egress cache entries, query LECS if applicable and then restart itself.

Linux MPOA client only supports non-LLC-muxed shortcuts. The number of supported MPOA clients is unlimited.

OPTIONS

-s Control ATM address

Local ATM address this MPC uses for MPOA control connections.

-l Data ATM address

Local ATM address from and to which MPOA shortcuts are established.

-c MPS control ATM address

ATM address of MPS. Only needed if MPS can not advertise it by itself.

-i Interface number

The interface number of LEC this MPC serves. E.g. 2 for "lec2".

-m MPS MAC address

MAC address of default router where MPS recides. Only useful if the MPOA server fails to advertise itself.

-L LEC address

Listen address of the LANE client zeppelin. mpcd uses this address as its own ATM address when it queries LECS for MPC configuration parameters. If this option is not present then mpcd will not use LECS to query for configuration parameters. This option is normally the same as zeppelin's -l option.

-n ELAN name

Name of the ELAN for which mpcd asks for parameters when it connects to LECS. If this option is not given, LECS should respond with parameters belonging to the default ELAN if one exists. This option is normally the same as zeppelin's -n option.

-C LECS address

ATM address of LECS mpcd asks for parameters. If this option is left empty and -L is given, mpcd uses ATM Forum assigned Well-Known LECS address. This option is normally the same as zeppelin's -c option.

EXAMPLES

This script snippet shows how to run LANE and MPOA. After UNI signalling and ILMI have been started LANE (zeppelin) and MPOA (mpcd) are started. The commented out line shows how to start mpcd so that it queries LECS for MPC parameters.

Arguments jaarli[1-3] are local ATM addresses listed in file /etc/hosts.atm.

ATM=/usr/src/atm

case "$1" in

start)

    cd $ATM
    if [ -x sigd/atmsigd ] ; then
        sigd/atmsigd -b
    fi
    if [ -x ilmid/ilmid ] ; then
        ilmid/ilmid -b -x
    fi
    if [ -x led/zeppelin ] ; then
        led/zeppelin -2 -n sampo -i2 -l jaarli3 &
        ifconfig lec2 10.10.10.208 \
             netmask 255.255.255.192 \
             broadcast 10.10.10.255
        ifconfig lec2 up
        route add default gw 10.10.10.193
    fi
    if [ -x mpoad/mpcd ] ; then
        mpoad/mpcd -i2 -s jaarli1 -l jaarli2 &
        #mpoad/mpcd -i2 -s jaarli1 -l jaarli2 \
                    -L jaarli3 -n sampo &
    fi
    ;;

esac

exit 0

BUGS

Supports only Ethernet type of ELANs. Probably others too.

AUTHORS

Heikki Vatiainen <[email protected]>, Sampo Saaristo <[email protected]>

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