NG_MPPC(4) | Device Drivers Manual | NG_MPPC(4) |
ng_mppc
—
Microsoft MPPC/MPPE compression and encryption netgraph
node type
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include
<netgraph/ng_mppc.h>
The mppc
node type implements the
Microsoft Point-to-Point Compression (MPPC) and Microsoft Point-to-Point
Encryption (MPPE) sub-protocols of the PPP protocol. These protocols are
often used in conjunction with the Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol
(PPTP).
The node has two hooks, comp
for
compression and decomp
for decompression. Typically
one or both of these hooks would be connected to the
ng_ppp(4) node type hook of the same name. Each direction
of traffic flow is independent of the other.
This node type supports the following hooks:
This node type supports the generic control messages, plus the following:
NGM_MPPC_CONFIG_COMP
struct ng_mppc_config
as an argument:
/* Length of MPPE key */ #define MPPE_KEY_LEN 16 /* MPPC/MPPE PPP negotiation bits */ #define MPPC_BIT 0x00000001 /* mppc compression bits */ #define MPPE_40 0x00000020 /* use 40 bit key */ #define MPPE_56 0x00000080 /* use 56 bit key */ #define MPPE_128 0x00000040 /* use 128 bit key */ #define MPPE_BITS 0x000000e0 /* mppe encryption bits */ #define MPPE_STATELESS 0x01000000 /* use stateless mode */ #define MPPC_VALID_BITS 0x010000e1 /* possibly valid bits */ /* Configuration for a session */ struct ng_mppc_config { u_char enable; /* enable */ uint32_t bits; /* config bits */ u_char startkey[MPPE_KEY_LEN]; /* start key */ };
enabled
field enables traffic flow through the
node. The bits
field contains the bits as
negotiated by the Compression Control Protocol (CCP) in PPP. The
startkey
is only necessary if MPPE was negotiated,
and must be equal to the session start key as defined for MPPE. This key
is based on the MS-CHAP credentials used at link authentication time.NGM_MPPC_CONFIG_DECOMP
struct ng_mppc_config
as an
argument.NGM_MPPC_RESETREQ
NGM_MPPC_CONFIG_DECOMP
message
that initiated the session. The receiver should respond by sending a PPP
CCP Reset-Request to the peer.
This message may also be received by this node type when a CCP Reset-Request is received by the local PPP entity. The node will respond by flushing its outgoing compression and encryption state so the remote side can resynchronize.
This node shuts down upon receipt of a
NGM_SHUTDOWN
control message, or when both hooks
have been disconnected.
The kernel options
NETGRAPH_MPPC_COMPRESSION
and
NETGRAPH_MPPC_ENCRYPTION
are supplied to selectively
compile in either or both capabilities. At least one of these must be
defined, or else this node type is useless.
netgraph(4), ng_ppp(4), ngctl(8)
G. Pall, Microsoft Point-To-Point Compression (MPPC) Protocol, RFC 2118.
G. S. Pall and G. Zorn, Microsoft Point-To-Point Encryption (MPPE) Protocol, draft-ietf-pppext-mppe-04.txt.
K. Hamzeh, G. Pall, W. Verthein, J. Taarud, W. Little, and G. Zorn, Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP), RFC 2637.
Archie Cobbs <archie@FreeBSD.org>
In PPP, encryption should be handled by the Encryption Control Protocol (ECP) rather than CCP. However, Microsoft combined both compression and encryption into their ``compression'' algorithm, which is confusing.
June 7, 2016 | Debian |