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tnat64(1) [debian man page]

TNAT64(1)						      General Commands Manual							 TNAT64(1)

NAME
tnat64 - Shell wrapper to simplify the use of the tnat64(8) library to transparently allow an application to connect to IPv4 hosts via NAT64 on IPv6-only systems when the application doesn't support IPv6 itself. SYNOPSIS
tnat64 [application [application's arguments]] or tnat64 [on|off] or tnat64 DESCRIPTION
tnat64 is a wrapper between the tnat64 library and the application what you would like to run through NAT64. OPTIONS
[application [application's arguments]] run the application as specified with the environment (LD_PRELOAD) set such that tnat64(8) will transparently forward all connec- tions to the NAT64 via IPv6 [on|off] this option adds or removes tnat64(8) from the LD_PRELOAD environment variable. When tnat64(8) is in this variable all executed applications are automatically NAT64-ed. If you want to use this function, you HAVE to source the shell script from yours, like this: "source /usr/bin/tnat64" or ". /usr/bin/tnat64" Example: ". tnat64 on" -- add the tnat64 lib to LD_PRELOAD ". tnat64 off" -- remove the tnat64 lib from LD_PRELOAD [show|sh] show the current value of the LD_PRELOAD variable <without any argument> create a new shell with LD_PRELOAD including tnat64(8). AUTHOR
This script was created by Tamas SZERB <toma@rulez.org> for the Debian package of tsocks. It (along with this manual page) have since been adapted into the main tsocks project and modified, and then modified to be used with tnat64. TNAT64 TNAT64(1)

Check Out this Related Man Page

TORSOCKS(1)						      General Commands Manual						       TORSOCKS(1)

NAME
torsocks - Shell wrapper to simplify the use of the torsocks(8) library to transparently allow an application to use a SOCKS proxy. Basi- cally a renamed, patched tsocks. SYNOPSIS
torsocks [application [application's arguments]] or torsocks [on|off] or torsocks DESCRIPTION
torsocks is a wrapper between the torsocks library and the application what you would like to run socksified. SUMMARY
By default, torsocks will assume that it should connect to the SOCKS proxy running at 127.0.0.1 on port 9050. This is the default address and port for Tor's socks server on most installations. In order to use a configuration file, you must set the environment variable TORSOCKS_CONF_FILE with the location of the file. If TORSOCKS_CONF_FILE is not set, torsocks will attempt to read the configuration file at /etc/torsocks.conf. If that file cannot be read, torsocks will use sensible defaults for most Tor installations, i.e. it will assume that you want to use a SOCKS proxy running at 127.0.0.1 (localhost) on port 9050. For further information on configuration, see torsocks.conf(5). OPTIONS
[application [application's arguments]] run the application as specified with the environment (LD_PRELOAD) set such that torsocks(8) will transparently proxy SOCKS connec- tions in that program [on|off] this option adds or removes torsocks(8) from the LD_PRELOAD environment variable. When torsocks(8) is in this variable all executed applications are automatically socksified. If you want to use this function, you HAVE to source the shell script from yours, like this: "source /usr/bin/torsocks" or ". /usr/bin/torsocks" Example: ". torsocks on" -- add the torsocks lib to LD_PRELOAD ". torsocks off" -- remove the torsocks lib from LD_PRELOAD [show|sh] show the current value of the LD_PRELOAD variable <without any argument> create a new shell with LD_PRELOAD including torsocks(8). AUTHOR
This script was created by Tamas SZERB <toma@rulez.org> for the debian package of tsocks. It (along with this manual page) have since been adapted into the torsocks project and modified. TORSOCKS
TORSOCKS(1)
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