Provided by: irpas_0.10-4_i386 bug
 

NAME

        igrp - igrp route injector
 

SYNOPSIS

        igrp  -i  <interface>  -v  -f  <routes file> -a <as number> -S <spoofed
        source ip addrs> -D <destination router ip addrs>
 

DESCRIPTION

        This manual page documents briefly the igrp command.  This manual  page
        was  written  for  the Debian distribution because the original program
        does not have a manual page.
 
        IGRP is a tool for route injection. The routing  protocol  IGRP  is  no
        longer  really  widely  used  in  the  outside world, but for the first
        steps, we decided to use this one as a starting point.
 
        The whole purpose is to define a routing table with all possible param‐
        eters  by  hand without having your system actually running any kind of
        dynamic routing and sending this information out to the routers.  Since
        IGRP  is  a  broadcast  based protocol, the default behavior is to send
        these messages to the ip broadcast address  (255.255.255.255).  If  you
        want to inject a route to a system remote from you, you have to address
        the ’update’ accordingly and make sure that you send the packet(s) with
        the right source address, so the router accepts the update.
 
        Before  using  the tool, you have to design your routing table you want
        to inject in the target router. It should contain data which makes your
        route the prefered one for the victim. The format is:
 
        destination:delay:bandwith:mtu:reliability:load:hopcount
 
        where  destination  is  the  network  (192.168.1.0), delay is in ms/10,
        bandwith in MBit per second, MTU is the maximum transfer unit (1500 for
        ethernet),  reliability  and  load  are in percent (255=100%, 1=0%) and
        hopcount just in hops.
 
        Empty lines and lines beginning with # are ignored.
 
        -i <interface> interface
 
        -v verbose
 
        -f <routes file> file, which contains the routes  (as much as you like)
 
        -a  <autonomous  system>  autonomous system the IGRP process is running
        on, use ASS to find it out or specify a range to use with -a  START  -b
        STOP  to  send updates to all AS from START to STOP (I highly recommend
        using ASS for this!!)
 
        -S <spoofed source IP> maybe you need this
 
        -D <destination IP> If you don’t specify this, the broadcast address is
        used
 
        If  you  want  the routes to be persistent (after some testing around),
        make up a shell loop and run the program within this loop  every  25-30
        seconds, to keep the router beliving your routes.
 

AUTHOR

        This  manual  page was written by Vince Mulhollon <vlm@debian.org>, for
        the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
 
                                 January 1, 2003                        IGRP(1)