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Configuring a PPP Server Contents
Next: Various Network Applications Up: The Point-to-Point Protocol Previous: The PAP Secrets File

Configuring a PPP Server

Running pppd as a server is just a matter of adding the appropriate options to the command line. Ideally, you would create a special account, say ppp, and give it a script or program as login shell that invokes pppd with these options. For instance, you would add the following line to /etc/passwd:
           ppp:*:500:200:Public PPP Account:/tmp:/etc/ppp/ppplogin
Of course, you may want to use different uids and gids than those shown above. You would also have to set the password for the above account using the passwd command.

The ppplogin script might then look like this:

           #!/bin/sh
           # ppplogin - script to fire up pppd on login
           mesg n
           stty -echo
           exec pppd -detach silent modem crtscts
The mesg command disables other users to write to the tty using, for instance, the write command. The stty command turns off character echoing. The is necessary, because otherwise everything the peer sends would be echoed back to it. The most important pppd option given above is -detach, because it prevents pppd drom detaching from the controlling tty. If we didn't specify this option, it would go to the background, making the shell script exit. This would in turn would cause the serial line to be hung up and the connection to be dropped. The silent option causes pppd to wait until it receives a packet from the calling system before it starts sending. This prevents transmit timeouts to occur when the calling system is slow in firing up its PPP client. The modem makes pppd watch the DTR line to see if the peer has dropped the connection, and crtscts turns on hardware handshake.

Beside these options, you might want to force some sort of authentication, for example by specifying auth on pppd's command line, or in the global options file. The manual page also discusses more specific options for turning individual authentication protocols on and off.


Contents
Next: Various Network Applications Up: The Point-to-Point Protocol Previous: The PAP Secrets File

Andrew Anderson
Thu Mar 7 23:22:06 EST 1996


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