1@node  Installation
2@chapter Installation
3
4@cindex How to install Quagga
5@cindex Installation
6@cindex Installing Quagga
7@cindex Building the system
8@cindex Making Quagga
9
10There are three steps for installing the software: configuration,
11compilation, and installation.
12
13@menu
14* Configure the Software::
15* Build the Software::
16* Install the Software::
17@end menu
18
19The easiest way to get Quagga running is to issue the following
20commands:
21
22@example
23% configure
24% make
25% make install
26@end example
27
28@node Configure the Software
29@section Configure the Software
30
31@menu
32* The Configure script and its options::
33* Least-Privilege support::
34* Linux notes::
35@end menu
36
37@node The Configure script and its options
38@subsection The Configure script and its options
39
40@cindex Configuration options
41@cindex Options for configuring
42@cindex Build options
43@cindex Distribution configuration
44@cindex Options to @code{./configure}
45 
46Quagga has an excellent configure script which automatically detects most
47host configurations.  There are several additional configure options you can
48use to turn off IPv6 support, to disable the compilation of specific
49daemons, and to enable SNMP support.
50
51@table @option
52@item --disable-ipv6
53Turn off IPv6 related features and daemons.  Quagga configure script
54automatically detects IPv6 stack.  But sometimes you might want to
55disable IPv6 support of Quagga.
56@item --disable-zebra
57Do not build zebra daemon.
58@item --disable-ripd
59Do not build ripd.
60@item --disable-ripngd
61Do not build ripngd.
62@item --disable-ospfd
63Do not build ospfd.
64@item --disable-ospf6d
65Do not build ospf6d.
66@item --disable-bgpd
67Do not build bgpd.
68@item --disable-bgp-announce
69Make @command{bgpd} which does not make bgp announcements at all.  This
70feature is good for using @command{bgpd} as a BGP announcement listener.
71@item --enable-netlink
72Force to enable @sc{gnu}/Linux netlink interface.  Quagga configure
73script detects netlink interface by checking a header file.  When the header
74file does not match to the current running kernel, configure script will
75not turn on netlink support.
76@item --enable-snmp
77Enable SNMP support.  By default, SNMP support is disabled.
78@item --disable-opaque-lsa
79Disable support for Opaque LSAs (RFC2370) in ospfd.
80@item --disable-ospfapi
81Disable support for OSPF-API, an API to interface directly with ospfd.
82OSPF-API is enabled if --enable-opaque-lsa is set.
83@item --disable-ospfclient
84Disable building of the example OSPF-API client.
85@item --disable-ospf-te
86Disable support for OSPF Traffic Engineering Extension (internet-draft) this
87requires support for Opaque LSAs.
88@item --enable-multipath=@var{ARG}
89Enable support for Equal Cost Multipath. @var{ARG} is the maximum number
90of ECMP paths to allow, set to 0 to allow unlimited number of paths.
91@item --disable-rtadv
92Disable support IPV6 router advertisement in zebra.
93@item --enable-gcc-rdynamic
94Pass the @command{-rdynamic} option to the linker driver.  This is in most
95cases neccessary for getting usable backtraces.  This option defaults to on
96if the compiler is detected as gcc, but giving an explicit enable/disable is
97suggested.
98@item --enable-backtrace
99Controls backtrace support for the crash handlers. This is autodetected by
100default. Using the switch will enforce the requested behaviour, failing with
101an error if support is requested but not available.  On BSD systems, this
102needs libexecinfo, while on glibc support for this is part of libc itself.
103@end table
104
105You may specify any combination of the above options to the configure
106script.  By default, the executables are placed in @file{/usr/local/sbin} 
107and the configuration files in @file{/usr/local/etc}. The @file{/usr/local/}
108installation prefix and other directories may be changed using the following 
109options to the configuration script.
110
111@table @option
112@item --prefix=@var{prefix}
113Install architecture-independent files in @var{prefix} [/usr/local].
114@item --sysconfdir=@var{dir}
115Look for configuration files in @var{dir} [@var{prefix}/etc]. Note
116that sample configuration files will be installed here.
117@item --localstatedir=@var{dir}
118Configure zebra to use @var{dir} for local state files, such
119as pid files and unix sockets.
120@end table
121
122@example
123% ./configure --disable-ipv6
124@end example
125
126This command will configure zebra and the routing daemons.
127
128@node Least-Privilege support
129@subsection Least-Privilege support
130
131@cindex Quagga Least-Privileges
132@cindex Quagga Privileges
133
134Additionally, you may configure zebra to drop its elevated privileges
135shortly after startup and switch to another user. The configure script will
136automatically try to configure this support. There are three configure
137options to control the behaviour of Quagga daemons.
138
139@table @option
140@item --enable-user=@var{user}
141Switch to user @var{ARG} shortly after startup, and run as user @var{ARG}
142in normal operation.
143@item --enable-group=@var{group}
144Switch real and effective group to @var{group} shortly after
145startup. 
146@item --enable-vty-group=@var{group}
147Create Unix Vty sockets (for use with vtysh) with group owndership set to
148@var{group}. This allows one to create a seperate group which is
149restricted to accessing only the Vty sockets, hence allowing one to
150delegate this group to individual users, or to run vtysh setgid to
151this group.
152@end table
153
154The default user and group which will be configured is 'quagga' if no user
155or group is specified. Note that this user or group requires write access to
156the local state directory (see --localstatedir) and requires at least read
157access, and write access if you wish to allow daemons to write out their
158configuration, to the configuration directory (see --sysconfdir).
159
160On systems which have the 'libcap' capabilities manipulation library
161(currently only linux), the quagga system will retain only minimal
162capabilities required, further it will only raise these capabilities for
163brief periods. On systems without libcap, quagga will run as the user
164specified and only raise its uid back to uid 0 for brief periods.
165
166@node Linux notes
167@subsection Linux Notes
168
169@cindex Configuring Quagga
170@cindex Building on Linux boxes
171@cindex Linux configurations
172
173There are several options available only to @sc{gnu}/Linux systems:
174@footnote{@sc{gnu}/Linux has very flexible kernel configuration features}.  If
175you use @sc{gnu}/Linux, make sure that the current kernel configuration is
176what you want.  Quagga will run with any kernel configuration but some
177recommendations do exist.
178
179@table @var
180
181@item CONFIG_NETLINK
182Kernel/User netlink socket. This is a brand new feature which enables an
183advanced interface between the Linux kernel and zebra (@pxref{Kernel Interface}).
184
185@item CONFIG_RTNETLINK
186Routing messages.
187This makes it possible to receive netlink routing messages.  If you
188specify this option, @command{zebra} can detect routing information
189updates directly from the kernel (@pxref{Kernel Interface}).
190
191@item CONFIG_IP_MULTICAST
192IP: multicasting.  
193This option should be specified when you use @command{ripd} (@pxref{RIP}) or
194@command{ospfd} (@pxref{OSPFv2}) because these protocols use multicast.
195
196@end table
197
198IPv6 support has been added in @sc{gnu}/Linux kernel version 2.2.  If you
199try to use the Quagga IPv6 feature on a @sc{gnu}/Linux kernel, please
200make sure the following libraries have been installed.  Please note that
201these libraries will not be needed when you uses @sc{gnu} C library 2.1
202or upper.
203
204@table @code
205
206@item inet6-apps
207The @code{inet6-apps} package includes basic IPv6 related libraries such
208as @code{inet_ntop} and @code{inet_pton}.  Some basic IPv6 programs such
209as @command{ping}, @command{ftp}, and @command{inetd} are also
210included. The @code{inet-apps} can be found at
211@uref{ftp://ftp.inner.net/pub/ipv6/}.
212
213@item net-tools
214The @code{net-tools} package provides an IPv6 enabled interface and
215routing utility.  It contains @command{ifconfig}, @command{route},
216@command{netstat}, and other tools.  @code{net-tools} may be found at
217@uref{http://www.tazenda.demon.co.uk/phil/net-tools/}.
218
219@end table
220@c A - end of footnote 
221
222@node Build the Software
223@section Build the Software
224
225After configuring the software, you will need to compile it for your
226system. Simply issue the command @command{make} in the root of the source
227directory and the software will be compiled. If you have *any* problems
228at this stage, be certain to send a bug report @xref{Bug Reports}.
229
230@example
231% ./configure
232.
233.
234.
235./configure output
236.
237.
238.
239% make
240@end example
241@c A - End of node, Building the Software
242
243
244@node Install the Software
245@comment  node-name,  next,  previous,  up
246@section Install the Software
247
248Installing the software to your system consists of copying the compiled
249programs and supporting files to a standard location. After the
250installation process has completed, these files have been copied
251from your work directory to @file{/usr/local/bin}, and @file{/usr/local/etc}.
252
253To install the Quagga suite, issue the following command at your shell
254prompt: @command{make install}.
255
256@example
257%
258% make install
259%
260@end example
261
262Quagga daemons have their own terminal interface or VTY.  After
263installation, you have to setup each beast's port number to connect to
264them.  Please add the following entries to @file{/etc/services}.
265
266@example
267zebrasrv      2600/tcp		  # zebra service
268zebra         2601/tcp		  # zebra vty
269ripd          2602/tcp		  # RIPd vty
270ripngd        2603/tcp		  # RIPngd vty
271ospfd         2604/tcp		  # OSPFd vty
272bgpd          2605/tcp		  # BGPd vty
273ospf6d        2606/tcp		  # OSPF6d vty
274ospfapi       2607/tcp		  # ospfapi
275isisd         2608/tcp		  # ISISd vty
276pimd          2611/tcp		  # PIMd vty
277@end example
278
279If you use a FreeBSD newer than 2.2.8, the above entries are already
280added to @file{/etc/services} so there is no need to add it. If you
281specify a port number when starting the daemon, these entries may not be
282needed.
283
284You may need to make changes to the config files in
285@file{@value{INSTALL_PREFIX_ETC}/*.conf}. @xref{Config Commands}.
286