NAME
racoon
—
IKE (ISAKMP/Oakley) key management
daemon
SYNOPSIS
racoon |
[-46BdFLv ]
[-f configfile]
[-l logfile] |
DESCRIPTION
racoon
is used to setup and maintain an
IPSec tunnel or transport channel, between two devices, over which network
traffic is conveyed securely. This security is made possible by
cryptographic keys and operations on both devices.
racoon
relies on a standardized network protocol
(IKE) to automatically negotiate and manage the cryptographic keys (e.g.
security associations) that are necessary for the IPSec tunnel or transport
channel to function. racoon
speaks the IKE
(ISAKMP/Oakley) key management protocol, to establish security associations
with other hosts. The SPD (Security Policy Database) in the kernel usually
triggers racoon
. racoon
usually sends all informational messages, warnings and error messages to
syslogd(8) with the facility LOG_DAEMON
and
the priority LOG_INFO
. Debugging messages are sent
with the priority LOG_DEBUG
. You should configure
syslog.conf(5) appropriately to see these messages.
-4
-6
- Specify the default address family for the sockets.
-B
- Install SA(s) from the file which is specified in racoon.conf(5).
-d
- Increase the debug level. Multiple
-d
arguments will increase the debug level even more. -F
- Run
racoon
in the foreground. -f
configfile- Use configfile as the configuration file instead of the default.
-L
- Include file_name:line_number:function_name in all messages.
-l
logfile- Use logfile as the logging file instead of syslogd(8).
-v
- This flag causes the packet dump be more verbose, with higher debugging level.
racoon
assumes the presence of the kernel
random number device rnd(4) at /dev/urandom.
RETURN VALUES
The command exits with 0 on success, and non-zero on errors.
FILES
- /private/etc/racoon/racoon.conf
- default configuration file.
- /private/etc/racoon/psk.txt
- default pre-shared key file.
SEE ALSO
ipsec(4), racoon.conf(5), syslog.conf(5), setkey(8), syslogd(8)
HISTORY
The racoon
command first appeared in the
“YIPS” Yokogawa IPsec implementation.
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
The use of IKE phase 1 aggressive mode is not recommended, as described in http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/886601.