1.\" Copyright (c) 1988, 1989, 1991 Carnegie Mellon University 2.\" 3.\" $FreeBSD$ 4.\" 5.Dd February 10, 2004 6.Dt BOOTPD 8 7.Os 8.Sh NAME 9.Nm bootpd , bootpgw 10.Nd Internet Boot Protocol server/gateway 11.Sh SYNOPSIS 12.Nm 13.Op Fl i | s 14.Op Fl c Ar chdir-path 15.Op Fl d Ar level 16.Op Fl h Ar hostname 17.Op Fl t Ar timeout 18.Oo 19.Ar bootptab 20.Op Ar dumpfile 21.Oc 22.Nm bootpgw 23.Op Fl i | s 24.Op Fl d Ar level 25.Op Fl h Ar hostname 26.Op Fl t Ar timeout 27.Ar server 28.Sh DESCRIPTION 29The 30.Nm 31utility 32implements an Internet Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) server as defined in 33RFC951, RFC1532, and RFC1533. 34The 35.Nm bootpgw 36utility implements a simple BOOTP gateway which can be used to forward 37requests and responses between clients on one subnet and a 38BOOTP server (i.e.\& 39.Nm ) 40on another subnet. 41While either 42.Nm 43or 44.Nm bootpgw 45will forward BOOTREPLY packets, only 46.Nm bootpgw 47will forward BOOTREQUEST packets. 48.Pp 49One host on each network segment is normally configured to run either 50.Nm 51or 52.Nm bootpgw 53from 54.Xr inetd 8 55by including one of the following lines in the file 56.Pa /etc/inetd.conf : 57.Pp 58.Dl bootps dgram udp wait root /usr/libexec/bootpd bootpd /etc/bootptab 59.Dl bootps dgram udp wait root /usr/libexec/bootpgw bootpgw server 60.Pp 61This mode of operation is referred to as "inetd mode" and causes 62.Nm 63(or 64.Nm bootpgw ) 65to be started only when a boot request arrives. 66If it does not 67receive another packet within fifteen minutes of the last one 68it received, it will exit to conserve system resources. 69The 70.Fl t 71option controls this timeout (see OPTIONS). 72.Pp 73It is also possible to run 74.Nm 75(or 76.Nm bootpgw ) 77in "standalone mode" (without 78.Xr inetd 8 ) 79by simply invoking it from a shell like any other regular command. 80Standalone mode is particularly useful when 81.Nm 82is used with a large configuration database, where the start up 83delay might otherwise prevent timely response to client requests. 84(Automatic start up in standalone mode can be done by invoking 85.Nm 86from within 87.Pa /etc/rc.local , 88for example.) 89Standalone mode is less useful for 90.Nm bootpgw 91which 92has very little start up delay because 93it does not read a configuration file. 94.Pp 95Either program automatically detects whether it was invoked from inetd 96or from a shell and automatically selects the appropriate mode. 97The 98.Fl s 99or 100.Fl i 101option may be used to force standalone or inetd mode respectively 102(see OPTIONS). 103.Sh OPTIONS 104The following options are available: 105.Bl -tag -width indent 106.It Fl t Ar timeout 107Specify the 108.Ar timeout 109value (in minutes) that a 110.Nm 111or 112.Nm bootpgw 113process will wait for a BOOTP packet before exiting. 114If no packets are received for 115.Ar timeout 116minutes, then the program will exit. 117A timeout value of zero means "run forever". 118In standalone mode, this option is forced to zero. 119.It Fl d Ar debug-level 120Set the 121.Ar debug-level 122variable that controls the amount of debugging messages generated. 123For example, 124.Fl d Ns 4 125or 126.Fl d 1274 will set the debugging level to 4. 128For compatibility with older versions of 129.Nm , 130omitting the numeric parameter (i.e., just 131.Fl d ) 132will simply increment the debug level by one. 133.It Fl c Ar chdir-path 134Set the current directory used by 135.Nm 136while checking the existence and size of client boot files. 137This is 138useful when client boot files are specified as relative pathnames, and 139.Nm 140needs to use the same current directory as the TFTP server 141(typically 142.Pa /tftpboot ) . 143This option is not recognized by 144.Nm bootpgw . 145.It Fl h Ar hostname 146Specify the hostname corresponding to the IP address to listen on. 147By default, 148.Nm 149listens on the IP address corresponding to the machine's hostname, as 150returned by 151.Xr gethostname 3 . 152.It Fl i 153Force inetd mode. 154This option is obsolete, but remains for 155compatibility with older versions of 156.Nm . 157.It Fl s 158Force standalone mode. 159This option is obsolete, but remains for 160compatibility with older versions of 161.Nm . 162.It Ar bootptab 163Specify the name of the configuration file from which 164.Nm 165loads its database of known clients and client options 166.No ( Nm 167only). 168.It Ar dumpfile 169Specify the name of the file that 170.Nm 171will dump its internal database into when it receives a 172SIGUSR1 signal 173.No ( Nm 174only). 175This option is only recognized if 176.Nm 177was compiled with the -DDEBUG flag. 178.It Ar server 179Specify the name of a BOOTP server to which 180.Nm bootpgw 181will forward all BOOTREQUEST packets it receives 182.Pf ( Nm bootpgw 183only). 184.El 185.Sh OPERATION 186Both 187.Nm 188and 189.Nm bootpgw 190operate similarly in that both listen for any packets sent to the 191.Em bootps 192port, and both simply forward any BOOTREPLY packets. 193They differ in their handling of BOOTREQUEST packets. 194.Pp 195When 196.Nm bootpgw 197is started, it determines the address of a BOOTP server 198whose name is provided as a command line parameter. 199When 200.Nm bootpgw 201receives a BOOTREQUEST packet, it sets the "gateway address" 202and "hop count" fields in the packet and forwards the packet 203to the BOOTP server at the address determined earlier. 204Requests are forwarded only if they indicate that 205the client has been waiting for at least three seconds. 206.Pp 207When 208.Nm 209is started it reads a configuration file, (normally 210.Pa /etc/bootptab ) 211that initializes the internal database of known clients and client 212options. 213This internal database is reloaded 214from the configuration file when 215.Nm 216receives a hangup signal (SIGHUP) or when it discovers that the 217configuration file has changed. 218.Pp 219When 220.Nm 221receives a BOOTREQUEST packet, it 222.\" checks the modification time of the 223.\" configuration file and reloads the database if necessary. Then it 224looks for a database entry matching the client request. 225If the client is known, 226.Nm 227composes a BOOTREPLY packet using the database entry found above, 228and sends the reply to the client (possibly using a gateway). 229If the client is unknown, the request is discarded 230(with a notice if debug > 0). 231.Pp 232If 233.Nm 234is compiled with the -DDEBUG option, receipt of a SIGUSR1 signal causes 235it to dump its internal database to the file 236.Pa /tmp/bootpd.dump 237or the dumpfile specified as a command line parameter. 238.Pp 239During initialization, both programs 240determine the UDP port numbers to be used by calling 241.Xr getservbyname 3 242(which normally uses 243.Pa /etc/services ) . 244Two service names (and port numbers) are used: 245.Pp 246.Dl bootps BOOTP Server listening port 247.Dl bootpc BOOTP Client destination port 248.Pp 249If the port numbers cannot be determined using 250.Xr getservbyname 3 251then the values default to bootps=67 and bootpc=68. 252.Sh FILES 253.Bl -tag -width /tmp/bootpd.dump -compact 254.It Pa /etc/bootptab 255Database file read by 256.Nm . 257.It Pa /tmp/bootpd.dump 258Debugging dump file created by 259.Nm . 260.It Pa /etc/services 261Internet service numbers. 262.It Pa /tftpboot 263Current directory typically used by the TFTP server and 264.Nm . 265.El 266.Sh "SEE ALSO" 267.Xr bootptab 5 , 268.Xr inetd 8 , 269.Xr tftpd 8 270.Pp 271DARPA Internet Request For Comments: 272.Bl -tag -width RFC1533 -compact 273.It RFC951 274Bootstrap Protocol 275.It RFC1532 276Clarifications and Extensions for the Bootstrap Protocol 277.It RFC1533 278DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor Extensions 279.El 280.Sh AUTHORS 281This distribution is currently maintained by 282.An Walter L. Wimer Aq walt+@cmu.edu . 283.Pp 284The original BOOTP server was created by 285.An Bill Croft 286at Stanford University in January 1986. 287.Pp 288The current version of 289.Nm 290is primarily the work of 291.An David Kovar , 292.An Drew D. Perkins , 293and 294.An Walter L. Wimer , 295at Carnegie Mellon University. 296.Pp 297Enhancements and bug-fixes have been contributed by: 298.Pp 299(in alphabetical order) 300.Pp 301.An -split 302.An Danny Backx Aq db@sunbim.be 303.An John Brezak Aq brezak@ch.hp.com 304.An Frank da Cruz Aq fdc@cc.columbia.edu 305.An David R. Linn Aq drl@vuse.vanderbilt.edu 306.An Jim McKim Aq mckim@lerc.nasa.gov 307.An Gordon W. Ross Aq gwr@mc.com 308.An Jason Zions Aq jazz@hal.com . 309.Sh BUGS 310Individual host entries must not exceed 1024 characters. 311