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+====================================================================+ | README - olsr.org OLSR daemon 0.5.4, 21.10.2007 | +====================================================================+ Authors: Andreas Tonnesen([email protected]) Thomas Lopatic ([email protected]) Aaron Kaplan ([email protected]) http://www.olsr.org CONTENTS: I. - GENERAL INFORMATION * ABOUT * GETTING HOLD OF OLSRD * RELEASE NOTES * RFC COMPLIANCE * PLUGINS * LINK QUALITY ROUTING * KNOWN PROBLEMS * FUTURE WORK II. - BUILDING AND RUNNING OLSRD * GENERAL INFORMATION * PLUGINS * GUI FRONTENDS * LINUX * WINDOWS * FREEBSD * OSX ---------------------------------------------------------------------- I. - GENERAL INFORMATION ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ========= * ABOUT ========= The olsr.org OLSR daemon is an implementation of the Optimized Link State routing protocol. The protocol is documented in RFC3626. The website of olsrd is http://www.olsr.org Olsrd is designed to be a modular an extensible implementation. It features a plugin interface, allowing for developers to extend OLSR operation without interfering with the core code. It also features a experimental link quality routing scheme. To ask questions or make comments, join up with the mailing lists: [email protected] - development discussion [email protected] - usage discussion A bug tracker is also available at the sourceforge project site http://sourceforge.net/projects/olsrd/ Olsrd source or binaries can be downloaded from olsr.org. CVS is available for the cutting edge features ;-) The current Olsrd work is done via http://olsr.funkfeuer.at/ in the OLSR-NG project. ================= * RELEASE NOTES ================= ================== * RFC COMPLIANCE ================== If olsrd is ran without using link-quality routing/MPR selection it is RFC3626 compliant in that it will inter-operate with other RFC3626 implementations. Internally there are a few things that are solved differently that proposed in the RFC. Check out the "Conclusions" section of the "Implementing And Extending The Optimized Link State routing Protocol" thesis available at olsr.org. =========== * PLUGINS =========== Olsrd supports dynamic loading of plugins (dynamically loaded libraries) for functions like generation and processing of private package types, setting olsrd configurations in run-time and much more. This design is chosen for amongst others, the following reasons: * No need to change any code in the olsr daemon to add custom packages or functionality. * Users are free to implement olsrd plugins and license them under whatever terms they like. * The plugins can be written in any language that can be compiled as a dynamic library. Linux even allows scripts! * No need for people with extended OLSR versions to rely on heavy patching to maintain functionality when new olsrd versions are released. OLSR provides a default forwarding algorithm that allows for forwarding of OLSR messages of unknown types. This is really neat - because it means that even if only a subset of the nodes in the network actually known how to interpret a certain message type - all nodes will forward them according to the MPR pragma. A user may want to use the optimized flooding technique in OLSR to broadcast certain information, routing related or not, to all nodes that knows how to handle this message. Services that needs to broadcast/multicast data can encapsulate data in a private OLSR message type using a olsrd plugin. The design of the various entities of OLSR allows one to easily add special functionality into most aspects of OLSR. One can both register functions and unregister them with the socket parser, packet parser, scheduler and HNA set etc. This opens up for possibilities like intercepting current operation and replacing it with custom actions. Plugins that are part of this release(can be found in the lib/ directory): - HttpInfo. This plugin implements a simple HTTP server that serves dynamic pages with lots of information about the running olsrd process. - TxtInfo. This delivers output similar to the above. However, it is intended for external tools to use the output. - Mini. - Nameservice. - Dynamic Internet gateway. A plugin that dynamically adds and removes Internet HNA transmissions based on if there exists a default gateway to Internet with hop count = 0(non OLSR gateway). It has been extended to be able to ping Internet nodes to check for connectivity as well. - Dot draw. A plugin that produces output in the dot format representing the network topology. - Secure OLSR plugin. This plugin adds a signature to all messages to ensure data integrity. This way only nodes with access to the shared key can participate in the routing. You need to have the OpenSSL libs installed to use this plugin. ======================== * LINK QUALITY ROUTING ======================== Release 0.4.8 is the first version of olsrd that implements the ETX link quality metric. This enables olsrd to prefer routes that have a superior overall quality to routes that are worse but consist of less hops. Have a look at the README-Link-Quality.html file for details. ================== * KNOWN PROBLEMS ================== There is no synchronization concept (and thus - and for Gods sake - no code). Some plugins use threads for concurrency so this should be solved. ATM the bmf plugin is the only one using threads. =============== * FUTURE WORK =============== Future work concentrates on reduction of ressource (ab)use and to make it more scalable. Of course additional useful plugins are always appreciated. The current track of development is documented in the OLSR-NG project: http://olsr.funkfeuer.at ---------------------------------------------------------------------- II. - BUILDING AND RUNNING OLSRD ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ======================= * GENERAL INFORMATION ======================= Olsrd is implemented in pure C with very few dependencies. Olsrd is known to run on various hardware like: * x86 - your regular PC * PPC - Macintosh hardware * MIPSEL - Embedded systems like the LinkSys WRT54g * ARM - Embedded systems like Compaq/HP iPaq A binary tarball featuring x86, MIPSEL and ARM binaries is available for download at olsr.org Ports exist for all major operating systems: - Linux - Mac OS X - NetBSD/OpenBSD/FreeBSD: ATM the main development occurs on Linux with GNU tools so occasionally it needs some minor tweaks to compile it on *BSD. Please send patches if you fix problems there. - Win32: You need (the relevant parts of) cygwin to compile the daemon as such. The installer and GUI needs VisualC++ though. Win32 is the least supported port. Feel free to send patches! Packages for the operating systems and various distributions are available at olsr.org. Feel free to package it and announce it on the mailing lists. =========== * PLUGINS =========== All the available plugins are also implemented in C and requires gcc/libc to build. the dot_draw plugin compiles for Windows and GNU/Linux. the rest of the plugins will only compile for GNU/Linux. Building the plugins are just a matter of executing: make while installing requires(as root): make install in the plugins top directory (i.e. "lib/$plugin/"). To use the plugins add them to the olsrd configuration file. ===================== * OS SUPPORT STATUS ===================== COMPONENT/OS Linux Win32 FreeBSD NetBSD OpenBSD OSX ------------------------------------------------------------ olsrd +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ ? olsr_switch +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ ? ------------------------------------------------------------ PLUGINS bmf +/+ +/? +/+ +/+ +/+ - dot_draw +/+ +/? +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ dyn_gw +/+ +/? +/- +/- +/- +/+ dyn_gw_plain +/+ +/? +/- +/- +/- +/+ httpinfo +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ mini +/+ +/? +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ nameservice +/+ +/? +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ pgraph +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ quagga +/+ -/- +/+ +/+ +/+ ? secure +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ txtinfo +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ +/+ ------------------------------------------------------------ LEGEND: +/+ = compiles/runs +/- = compiles/does not work - = does not compile ? = unknown ================= * GUI FRONTENDS ================= A GUI front end for GNU/Linux using GTK is available in the gui/ directory. This implementation is no longer supported, and might not work any more. It will be completly removed in a future release. There currently is, however, a native MFC-based Windows GUI. Unlike olsrd the GUI has to be compiled with Visual C++ 6. It can be found in the gui/win32/ directory. Simply open the "Frontend.dsw" workspace in the Visual C++ 6 IDE. Then compile "Frontend" and "Shim", which creates "Switch.exe" and "Shim.exe". To run the Windows GUI simply make sure that "Switch.exe", "Shim.exe", "olsrd.exe", "olsrd_cfgparser.dll", and "Default.olsr" are located in the same directory and run "Switch.exe". "Shim.exe" is just an auxiliary console application that is required by "Switch.exe". The GUI is pretty self-explanatory. The three buttons on the lower right of the GUI window start the OLSR server, stop the OLSR server, and exit the GUI. Use the "Settings" tab to specify the options that the GUI uses to run the OLSR server "olsrd.exe". When you click "Start" the GUI generates a temporary configuration file from the information given by the "Settings" tab. This temporary configuration file is passed to the OLSR server via its "-f" option. "Offer Internet connection" is only available if you have an Internet connection, i.e. if you have a default route configured. If you tick this option an HNA entry for the default route is added to the temporary configuration file, allowing other nodes in the OLSR network to use your Internet connection. IP version 6 cannot currently be selected, as support for IPv6 is not yet complete in the Windows version. "Enable ETX link quality" tells the OLSR server to detect the quality of its links to its neighbors using a variant of the ETX metric. "Window size" specifies the number of most recent packets to be used when calculating the packet loss. If, for example, this parameter is set to 10, then the OLSR server will calculate the packet loss among the most recent 10 OLSR packets received from each neighbor. If "For MPR selection only" is active, the link quality information is only used to select MPRs that offer the best paths to your two-hop neighbors. If "For MPR selection and routing" is active, the link quality is additionally used to create the routing table. WARNING - Enabling ETX breaks compliance with the OLSR standard. ETX-enabled nodes do not inter-operate with nodes that have ETX switched off. DO NOT USE NODES WITH DIFFERENT ETX SETTINGS IN A SINGLE NETWORK! The three buttons on the lower right of the "Settings" tab open previously saved settings, save the current settings to a configuration file, and reset the current settings to default values. If you start the GUI with the path to a configuration file as the only command line argument, the GUI opens the given configuration file and runs the OLSR server with this configuration. So, saving a configuration file with a ".olsr" extension, for example, and making "Switch.exe" the handler for ".olsr" files enables you to run the OLSR server with a simple double click on the configuration file. The "Output" tab shows the output of the currently running OLSR server. The output is limited to 1000 lines. The 1001st line will make the first line disappear and so on. When you click "Start" The GUI simply invokes the OLSR server "olsrd.exe" and intercepts its console output. Use the four buttons on the upper right of the tab to freeze the output, resume frozen output, save the output to a file, or clear the output. The "Nodes" tab contains information about the nodes that the OLSR server currently knows about. If you click on the address of a node in the "Node list" list box, the GUI populates the three "Node information" list boxes on the right with the multi-point relays of the selected node (MPR), the interfaces of the selected node (MID), and the non-OLSR networks accessible via the selected node (HNA). The "Routes" tab shows the routes that the currently running OLSR server has added. The default settings for the "Settings" tab are taken from the "Default.olsr" file. The configuration of the last interface in this file is used to populate the per-interface settings (HELLO interval, etc.) in the "Settings" tab. If you do not want to specify any interface in "Default.olsr", the problem arises that you do not have such a last interface. In this case simply create an interface with the special name of "GUI". This tells the GUI to use the configuration of the interface for the per-interface settings and to forget about this interface afterward. See the comments in the "Default.olsr" file for details. ========= * LINUX ========= To build olsrd you need to have all the regular development tools installed. This includes gcc, make, glibc, makedep etc. To install to a directory different from /(/etc, /usr/bin) use DESTDIR=targetdir. To use other compilers set CC=yourcompiler. To build: make To install(as root): make install To delete object files run: make clean Optionally, to clean all generated files: make uberclean Before running olsrd you must edit the default configuration file /etc/olsrd/olsrd.conf adding at least what interfaces olsrd is to run on. Options in the config file can also be overridden by command line options. See the manual pages olsrd(8) and olsrd.conf(5) for details. The binary is named 'olsrd' and is installed in (PREFIX)/usr/sbin. You must have root privileges to run olsrd! To run olsrd just type: olsrd If debug level is set to 0 olsrd will detach and run in the background, if not it will keep running in your shell. =========== * WINDOWS =========== *** COMPILING To compile the Windows version of the OLSR server or the dot_draw plugin you need a Cygwin installation with a current version of GCC and Mingw32. Simply use make to build the olsrd executable. Building the dot_draw plugin works slightly different, we do not yet have a unified makefile for all architectures here. Switch to the dot_draw directory lib/dot_draw/ and generate the Windows makefile by saying ./mkmf.sh This will generate "Makefile.win32" by adding dependencies to "Makefile.win32.in". Then just say make -f Makefile.win32 to build the dot_draw plugin. However, make sure that you have build olsrd before that, as the dot_draw plugin requires some object files that are only generated when olsrd is built. *** INTERFACE NAMING On Linux network interfaces have nice names like "eth0". In contrast, Windows internally identifies network interfaces by pretty awkward names, for example: "{EECD2AB6-C2FC-4826-B92E-CAA53B29D67C}" Hence, the Windows version implements its own naming scheme that maps each internal name to a made-up name like "if03", which is easier to memorize. Simply invoke the OLSR server as follows to obtain its view of your interfaces: olsrd.exe -int This lists the made-up interface names along with their current IP addresses to enable you to find out which made-up interface name corresponds to which of your physical interfaces. "+" in front of the IP addresses means that the OLSR server has identified the interface as a WLAN interface. "-" indicates that the OLSR server considers this interface to be a wired interface. "?" means "no idea". Detection currently only works on NT, 2000, and XP. Windows 9x and ME will always display "?". For techies: The made-up names consist of the string "if" followed by a two-digit hex representation of the least significant byte of the Windows-internal interface index, which should be different for each interface and thus make each made-up name unique. Again, this is undocumented and this assumption may be wrong in certain cases. So, if the "-int" option reports two interfaces that have the same name, please do let me know. *** CONFIGURATION FILE If you do not specify a configuration file, the OLSR server ("olsrd.exe") by default attempts to use "olsrd.conf" in your Windows directory, e.g. "C:\WINDOWS\olsrd.conf". ========================= * FREEBSD/NETBSD/OPENBSD ========================= The FreeBSD port should be relativley stable at this point. The OpenBSD and NetBSD versions are pretty much untested. They have not been extensively tested beyond "doesn't core dump and it looks like it adds routes". In order to build it, you need GNU make. Then use: gmake to build the olsrd executable. Then do: gmake install to install the executable, the default configuration file, and the manual pages. So, basically it's the same as on Linux. Have a look at the Linux section for details. ======= * OSX ======= The OS X port is a direct descendant of the FreeBSD port. So, the same limitations with respect to testing and maturity apply. Building and installing works in the same was as on FreeBSD.