2009/3/26 :
>> I've wanted to work with somebody
>> on Plan 9 as a routing device in networks for some time, at least in
>> the field of packet classification.
>
> I'll be happy to help, too, if so desired, I have been playing with
> IPFilters in a pretty serious way for many years (and ipfw befor
> I've wanted to work with somebody
> on Plan 9 as a routing device in networks for some time, at least in
> the field of packet classification.
I'll be happy to help, too, if so desired, I have been playing with
IPFilters in a pretty serious way for many years (and ipfw before
that) and may well
2009/3/25 Bakul Shah :
> On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 09:00:58 EDT "Devon H. O'Dell"
> wrote:
>> While creating an
>> entire routing suite (such as Zebra/Quagga) is probably outside of the
>> scope of a 3 month project, I think a diligent student could pro
On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 09:00:58 EDT "Devon H. O'Dell"
wrote:
> While creating an
> entire routing suite (such as Zebra/Quagga) is probably outside of the
> scope of a 3 month project, I think a diligent student could probably
> do something useful wi
> I didn't understand IP 'till I read the Plan9 source code.
one can replace "IP" in that sentence with so many other things... i'm
really glad plan9 exists.
On Mar 25, 6:14 am, rahul.is.a...@gmail.com (Rahul Murmuria) wrote:
> I was poking around for what it would take to get there. I found
> this[1]. I am basically looking to have a way to do routing using Plan
> 9. You can already do that on any standard Linux using Quagga[2] based
> on GNU Zebra.
>
2009/3/25 erik quanstrom :
>> I believe I have a rudimentary and probably non-working (at this
>> point) packet filter in /n/sources/contrib/dho somewhere (it was
>> written at least 4 years ago). I think it's called ``nfil.'' I
>> believe it is desirable. Others disagree. Its usefulness is relate
> I believe I have a rudimentary and probably non-working (at this
> point) packet filter in /n/sources/contrib/dho somewhere (it was
> written at least 4 years ago). I think it's called ``nfil.'' I
> believe it is desirable. Others disagree. Its usefulness is related
> directly to its application
2009/3/24 Rahul Murmuria :
> @ Devon:
> About Packet Classification. I read that iptables is not needed on
> Plan 9 because its "mount /net over the network" concept achieved
> anonymity or transparency -- something along those lines. "There are
> no logs about who is sending what, and that is a go
as long as you restrict your network to plan 9 machines, it is possible
to import /net from a gateway machine and avoid sticky things like packet
filtering.
Back to the future yet? May I suggest that the "sticky" packet filtering,
more generally packet manipulation, has crucial applications in
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 7:20 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
>
> see ipconfig(8).
>
ip/rip ... I wonder!
P.S.: Thanks for all the pointers...
--
Rahul Murmuria
> It seems that /net/iproute is where I can start. It has a complete
> interface for editing routes. What we need is a user space script that
> implements routing, like http://www.openbgp.org/ does on OpenBSD.
> Except that, it will only have to send add, delete and flush control
> messages to the
So, the bottom line is no one has really explored Plan 9 on routers.
It seems that /net/iproute is where I can start. It has a complete
interface for editing routes. What we need is a user space script that
implements routing, like http://www.openbgp.org/ does on OpenBSD.
Except that, it will only
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:05:08 EDT Rahul Murmuria
wrote:
> I am willing to explore this area. Maybe if /net reaches every router, such
> metrics can be retrieved and exchanged between the routers like other router
> OSes do (or maybe better than they already do) ?
>
> I am planning to understand
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 4:05 PM, Rahul Murmuria wrote:
> Hi Devon!
>
> On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 3:45 PM, Devon H. O'Dell
> wrote:
>>
>> Are you a student? This kind of stuff has interested me quite a bit in
>> Plan 9 (though more from a packet classification standpoint -- read:
>> firewalling), an
Hi Devon!
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 3:45 PM, Devon H. O'Dell
wrote:
>
> Are you a student? This kind of stuff has interested me quite a bit in
> Plan 9 (though more from a packet classification standpoint -- read:
> firewalling), and it seems like a nifty project for GSoC.
>
Yes, I am a student. I
> Maybe there is a filesystem that exposes the kernel routing table to
> user space for certain routing algorithm scripts to hack upon?
#I publishes routes in iproute, typically bound so that
this appears as /net/iproute. that's probablly a good start.
- erik
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 3:45 PM, Devon H. O'Dell wrote:
> 2009/3/24 Rahul Murmuria :
>> I was poking around for what it would take to get there. I found
>> this[1]. I am basically looking to have a way to do routing using Plan
>> 9. You can already do that on any standard Linux using Quagga[2] bas
2009/3/24 Rahul Murmuria :
> I was poking around for what it would take to get there. I found
> this[1]. I am basically looking to have a way to do routing using Plan
> 9. You can already do that on any standard Linux using Quagga[2] based
> on GNU Zebra.
>
> Maybe there is a filesystem that expose
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