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ldp(7) [linux man page]

LDP(7)							 Miscellaneous Information Manual						    LDP(7)

NAME
LDP - Intro to the Linux Documentation Project, with help, guides and documents SYNOPSIS
The Linux Documentation Project (LDP) provides a variety of free documentation resources including guides, FAQs, HOWTOs, and man-pages to the Linux community. AUTHORS
The various documents in the LDP archives are maintained by individual authors, and are listed in the beginning of each HOWTO. If you have any questions or inputs to a document we encourage you to contact the authors directly. WEB PAGES
The LDP has its own dedicated web site as do many of the various translations projects which are linked from the main LDP web site at: http://www.tldp.org/ MAN PAGES
A web page with status information for manual pages and translations is found at: http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/man/ MAILING LISTS
LDP has a number of mailing lists, such as <announce@en.tlpd.org> Announcements from the LDP project <discuss@en.tldp.org> General discussion on the LDP project <docbook@en.tldp.org> Questions about the use of DocBook For subscription information, see the website. If you are interested in DocBook beyond the simple markup of your LDP document, you may want to consider joining one of the OASIS DocBook mailing lists. Please see http://docbook.org/mailinglist/index.html for more information. FILES
Most distributions include the HOWTOs and mini-HOWTOs in the installation /usr/doc/ (old place for documentation) /usr/share/doc/ (new place for documentation) /usr/share/doc/HOWTO/ (HOWTO files) /usr/share/doc/HOWTO/mini/ (mini-HOWTO files) SEE ALSO
info(1), man(1), xman(1x) info pages as read with emacs(1) or info(1) LDP
2001-11-15 LDP(7)

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LDPD(8) 						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						   LDPD(8)

NAME
ldpd -- Label Distribution Protocol Daemon SYNOPSIS
ldpd [-DdfhW] [-c config_file] [-p port] DESCRIPTION
ldpd is a utility used to automatically distribute labels between two MPLS LSRs almost conforming to RFC3036. Right now it is in BETA stage and many features are not implemented or may not work. As a security measure you SHOULD filter the LDP well-known (646) TCP and UDP ports using your favourite packet filter before starting ldpd. Also this is the current measure used to filter neighbours. You should see some logs reported via syslog(3) interface. You can increase the log verbosity using the -W and -D flags. Also you can telnet to the control port (default: 2626) and use this interface in order to get informations about protocol, neighbours etc. but also to set runtime parameters. The required password is the same as the root password. ldpd computes existing routes and tries to match them on MPLS labels announced by other LDP peers. This means that ``normal'' routes will be changed into tagged routes, and MPLS routing table will be populated. It will also announce its mappings to its peers. ldpd will listen on a route socket and compute the necessary changes in order to change untagged routes into tagged routes. This means that one may use one's favourite dynamic routing protocol daemon without modifications. The options are as follows: -c config_file Specifies a path to the config file. Default: /etc/ldpd.conf - see ldpd.conf(5) for configuration file format. -D Enable debug mode. -d Don't use route interception code. -f Run in foreground. Use STDOUT for warning and debug messages. -h Outputs supported flags. -p port Changes the TCP control port (default: 2626). -W Enable output of warning messages. SEE ALSO
LDP Specification, RFC, 3036, January 2001. LDP Applicability, RFC, 3037, January 2001. HISTORY
The ldpd command appeared in NetBSD 6.0. BUGS
ldpd supports only IPv4 and doesn't implement Path Vector and Hop Count TLVs. BSD
July 7, 2011 BSD
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