README revision 1.7 1 Configuring FAITH IPv6-to-IPv4 TCP relay
2
3 Kazu Yamamoto and Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino
4 $NetBSD: README,v 1.7 2000/07/02 09:17:30 itojun Exp $
5 $KAME: README,v 1.5 2000/07/02 08:50:50 itojun Exp $
6
7
8 Introduction
9 ============
10
11 FAITH is a IPv6-to-IPv4 TCP relay. It performs tcp relay just as some of
12 firewall-oriented gateway does, but between IPv6 and IPv4 with address
13 translation.
14 TCP connections has to be made from IPv6 node to IPv4 node. FAITH will
15 not relay connections for the opposite direction.
16 To perform relays, FAITH daemon needs to be executed on a router between
17 your local IPv6 site and outside IPv4 network. The daemon needs to be
18 invoked per each TCP services (TCP port number).
19
20 IPv4 node "dest" = 123.4.5.6
21 |
22 [[[[ outside IPv4 ocean ]]]]
23 |
24 node that runs FAITH-daemon (usually a router)
25 |
26 ==+=====+===+==== IPv6, or IPv4/v6 network in your site ^
27 | | | connection
28 clients IPv6 node "src" |
29
30 You will have to allocate an IPv6 address prefix to map IPv4 addresses into.
31 The following description uses 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff:: as example.
32 Please use a prefix which belongs to your site.
33 FAITH will make it possible to make a IPv6 TCP connection From IPv6 node
34 "src", toward IPv4 node "dest", by specifying FAITH-mapped address
35 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff::123.4.5.6
36 (which is, 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff:0000:0000:7b04:0506).
37 The address mapping can be performed by hand:-), by speical nameserver on
38 the network, or by special resolver on the source node.
39
40
41 Setup
42 =====
43
44 The following example assumes:
45 - You have assigned 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff:: as FAITH adderss prefix.
46 - You are willing to provide IPv6-to IPv4 TCP relay for telnet.
47
48 <<On the translating router on which faithd runs>>
49
50 (1) If you have IPv6 TCP server for the "telnet" service, i.e. telnetd via
51 inet6d, disable that daemon. Comment out the line from "inet6d.conf"
52 and send the HUP signal to "inet6d".
53
54 (2) Execute sysctl as root to enable FAITH support in the kernel.
55
56 # sysctl -w net.inet6.ip6.keepfaith=1
57
58 (3) Route packets toward FAITH prefix into "faith0" interface.
59
60 # ifconfig faith0 up
61 # route add -inet6 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff:: -prefixlen 64 \
62 fe80::xxxx:yyyy:zzzz:wwww%faith0
63
64 (4) Execute "faithd" by root as follows:
65
66 # faithd telnet /usr/libexec/telnetd telnetd
67
68 1st argument is a service name you are willing to provide TCP relay.
69 (it can be specified either by number "23" or by string "telnet")
70 2nd argument is a path name for local IPv6 TCP server. If there is a
71 connection toward the router itself, this program will be invoked.
72 3rd and the following arguments are arguments for the local IPv6 TCP
73 server. (3rd argument is typically the program name without its path.)
74
75 More examples:
76
77 # faithd login /usr/libexec/rlogin rlogind
78 # faithd shell /usr/libexec/rshd rshd
79 # faithd ftpd /usr/libexec/ftpd ftpd -l
80 # faithd sshd
81
82
83 <<Routing>>
84
85 (4) Make sure that packets whose destinations match the prefix can
86 reach from the IPv6 host to the translating router.
87
88 <<On the IPv6 host>>
89
90 There are two ways to translate IPv4 address to IPv6 address:
91 (a) Faked by DNS
92 (b) Faked by /etc/hosts.
93
94 (5.a) Install "newbie" and set up FAITH mode. See kit/ports/newbie.
95
96 (5.b) Add an entry into /etc/hosts so that you can resolve hostname into
97 faked IPv6 addrss. For example, add the following line for www.netbsd.org:
98
99 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff::140.160.140.252 www.netbsd.org
100
101 <<On the translating router on which faithd runs.>>
102
103 (6) To see if "faithd" works, watch "/var/log/daemon". Note: please
104 setup "/etc/syslog.conf" so that LOG_DAEMON messages are to be stored
105 in "/var/log/daemon".
106
107 <e.g.>
108 daemon.* /var/log/daemon
109
110
111 Advanced configuration
112 ======================
113
114 If you would like to restrict IPv4 destination for translation, you may
115 want to do the following:
116
117 # route add -inet6 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff::123.0.0.0 -prefixlen 104 \
118 -interface faith0
119
120 By this way, you can restrict IPv4 destination to 123.0.0.0/8.
121 You may also want to reject packets toward 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff::/64 which
122 is not in 3ffe:0501:1234:ffff::123.0.0.0/104. This will be left as excerside
123 for the reader.
124
125 By doing this, you will be able to provide your IPv4 web server to outside
126 IPv6 customers, without risks of unwanted open relays.
127
128 [[[[ IPv6 network outside ]]]] |
129 | | connection
130 node that runs FAITH-daemon (usually a router) v
131 |
132 ========+======== IPv4/v6 network in your site
133 | (123.0.0.0/8)
134 IPv4 web server
135