1
* Choose the Client Network Interface
3
Please make sure that the correct network interface is specified in
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the DEVICE setting in the "/etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf"
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file. If the setting is empty, the interface will be autodetected
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at boot time, which may not be correct. *If* the DEVICE setting is
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changed, it will be necessary to update the initrd image by running
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update-initramfs -k all -u
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The device can be overridden at boot time on the Linux kernel
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command line using the sixth colon-separated field of the "ip="
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option; for exact syntax, read the documentation in the file
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"/usr/share/doc/linux-doc-*/Documentation/filesystems/nfsroot.txt",
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available in the "linux-doc-*" package.
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Note that since this network interface is used in the initial RAM
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disk environment, the network interface *must* exist at that stage.
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Thus, the interface can *not* be a pseudo-interface such as "br0" or
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"tun0"; instead, a real interface (such as "eth0") must be used.
23
1
* Adding a Client Password to the Server
25
3
The server must be given a password to give back to the client on
46
24
it, and output it to standard output. There it can be verified to
47
25
be the correct password, before rebooting.
29
If it ever should be necessary, the Mandos client can be temporarily
30
prevented from running at startup by passing the parameter
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"mandos=off" to the kernel.
33
* Specifying a Client Network Interface
35
At boot time the network interfaces to use will by default be
36
automatically detected. If this should result in incorrect
37
interfaces, edit the DEVICE setting in the
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"/etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf" file. (The default setting is
39
empty, meaning it will autodetect the interface.) *If* the DEVICE
40
setting is changed, it will be necessary to update the initrd image
41
by running the command
43
update-initramfs -k all -u
45
The device can also be overridden at boot time on the Linux kernel
46
command line using the sixth colon-separated field of the "ip="
47
option; for exact syntax, read the documentation in the file
48
"/usr/share/doc/linux-doc-*/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt",
49
available in the "linux-doc-*" package.
51
Note that since the network interfaces are used in the initial RAM
52
disk environment, the network interfaces *must* exist at that stage.
53
Thus, an interface can *not* be a pseudo-interface such as "br0" or
54
"tun0"; instead, only real interfaces (such as "eth0") can be used.
55
This can be overcome by writing a "network hook" program to create
56
an interface (see mandos-client(8mandos)) and placing it in
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"/etc/mandos/network-hooks.d", from where it will be copied into the
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initial RAM disk. Example network hook scripts can be found in
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"/usr/share/doc/mandos-client/examples/network-hooks.d".
49
61
* User-Supplied Plugins
51
63
Any plugins found in "/etc/mandos/plugins.d" will override and add
62
74
Mandos client will be the new default way for getting a password for
63
75
the root file system when booting.
67
If it ever should be necessary, the Mandos client can be temporarily
68
prevented from running at startup by passing the parameter
69
"mandos=off" to the kernel.
71
77
* Non-local Connection (Not Using ZeroConf)
73
79
If the "ip=" kernel command line option is used to specify a
74
80
complete IP address and device name, as noted above, it then becomes
75
81
possible to specify a specific IP address and port to connect to,
76
82
instead of using ZeroConf. The syntax for doing this is
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"mandos=connect:<IP_ADDRESS>:<PORT_NUMBER>".
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"mandos=connect:<IP_ADDRESS>:<PORT_NUMBER>" on the kernel command
79
86
For very advanced users, it it possible to specify simply
80
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"mandos=connect" on the kernel command line to make the system only
83
90
work, "--options-for=mandos-client:--connect=<ADDRESS>:<PORT>" needs
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91
to be manually added to the file "/etc/mandos/plugin-runner.conf".
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-- Teddy Hogeborn <teddy@fukt.bsnet.se>, Mon, 27 Sep 2010 19:53:21 +0200
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-- Teddy Hogeborn <teddy@recompile.se>, Sun, 23 Jun 2013 17:31:53 +0200