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tun/tap driver for Mac OS X =========================== This is an experimental IP tunnel/ethertap driver for Mac OS X/Darwin. It provides /dev/tunX and /dev/tapX devices. The maximum number of devices can be configured at compile time, it is currently set to 16. That should be enough in most cases. The driver ships as two kernel extensions, one for tap and one for tun. They are located in /Library/Extensions and can also be loaded and unloaded by hand. If you install the startup item, the system will load them automatically at startup (tun and tap startup items get installed in /Library/StartupItems). Operation & Programming notes ============================= tapX are ethertap devices which provide an interface to the kernel's ethernet layer. Packets can be read from and written to the /dev/tapX character devices one at a time (same name as the interface that shows up in ifconfig). tunX are IP tunnel devices. These can be used to exchange IP packets with the kernel. You will get single packets for each read() and should write() packets one at a time to /dev/tunX. There are some special ioctls with the tun devices that allow you to have them prepend the address family of the packet when reading it from /dev/tunX. Using this mode the driver also expects you put this 4-byte address family field (network byte order) in front of the packets you write to /dev/tunX. Here are the ioctls to setup up address prepending mode (for convenience there also is a header called tun_ioctls.h in the source package that you can use) Set the int argument to one if you want to have AF prepending, use 0 if you want to switch it off. #define TUNSIFHEAD _IOW('t', 96, int) #define TUNGIFHEAD _IOR('t', 97, int) Prepending mode is off by default. Currently it is not recommended to switch the mode while packets are in flight on the device. The character devices are always visible in the filesystem as /dev/tunX and /dev/tapX. The number of available character devices is a compile time constant and is currently fixed to 16. Each character devices is associated with a network interface of the same name. The network interfaces are only created when the corresponding character device is opened by a program and will be removed when the character device is closed. The character devices currently provide a pretty minimal interface. Whole packets are read and written using a singe read/write call. File descriptors opened on the devices can also be select()ed and support O_NONBLOCK. Asynchronous i/o and some ioctls are currently unimplemented, but implementing them shouldn't be very hard. Do it yourself or contact me if you can't live without. There is another limitation imposed by the Darwin 8 kernel. It concerns the poll() system call; Darwin currently does *not* support that for (character) devices. Use select() instead. The interfaces can be configured using ifconfig, the tap devices also support setting the MAC address to be used. Both tun and tap should be ready for IPv6. Just setup addresses and routing as you would do with other interfaces. Please contact me if you find any bugs or have suggestions. Enjoy! Mattias <mattias.nissler@gmx.de> Uninstalling ============ The installer packages for OS X currently don't have support for uninstall as the installer doesn't provide it. Remove the following directories if you want to completely remove the files installed: /Library/Extensions/tap.kext /Library/Extensions/tun.kext /Library/StartupItems/tap /Library/StartupItems/tun Unload the the kernel extensions or reboot and you're done.