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NAME

       atmsigd - ATM signaling demon

SYNOPSIS

       atmsigd  [-b]  [-c config_file]  [-d]  [-D dump_dir]  [-l logfile] [-m mode] [-n] [-q qos]
       [-t trace_length] [-u uni_version] [[itf.]vpi.vci [input output]]
       atmsigd -V

DESCRIPTION

       atmsigd implements the ATM UNI signaling protocol. Requests to establish, accept, or close
       ATM  SVCs  are  sent from the kernel (using a comparably simple protocol) to the signaling
       demon, which then performs the dialog with the network.

       Note that atmsigd is not able to accept or  establish  connections  until  the  local  ATM
       address of the interface is configured by ilmid or manually using atmaddr.

       The default signaling VC (interface 0, VPI 0, VCI 5) can be overridden on the command line
       by specifying a different PVC address.

       When overriding the default VC, optionally a pair of named pipes to use for  communicating
       with the user of signaling can be specified. Normally, the kernel is the user of signaling
       and atmsigd opens a special socket for communication with it.

       If atmsigd is killed, all system calls requiring interaction with it will return  with  an
       error and set errno to EUNATCH.

OPTIONS

       -b     Run in background (i.e. in a forked child process) after initializing.

       -c config_file
              Use  the  specified configuration file instead of /etc/atmsigd.conf If an option is
              specified in the configuration file and on the command line, the command  line  has
              priority.

       -d     Enables (lots of) debugging output. By default, atmsigd is comparably quiet.

       -D dump_dir
              Specifies  the  directory to which atmsigd will write status and trace dumps. If -D
              is not specified, dumps are written to /var/tmp.

       -l logfile
              Write diagnostic messages to the specified file. The special name syslog is used to
              send  diagnostics  to  the  system  logger,  stderr  is used to send diagnostics to
              standard error. If -l is absent, the setting in atmsigd.conf is  used.  If  atmsigd
              doesn't specify a destination either, messages are written to standard error.

       -m mode
              Set  the  mode  of  operation. The following modes are available: user for the user
              side (the default), network for the network side (useful if you have two PCs but no
              switch), and switch for operation with a signaling relay in a switch.

       -n     Prints  addresses  in  numeric  format only, i.e. no address to name translation is
              attempted.

       -q qos Configures the signaling VC to use the specified quality of service (see qos(7) for
              the syntax).  By default, UBR at link speed is used on the signaling VC.

       -t trace_length
              Sets  the number of entries that should be kept in the trace buffer.  -t 0 disables
              tracing. If -t is not specified, atmsigd uses a default of 20 trace entries.

       -u uni_version
              Sets the signaling mode. The following modes are  supported:  uni30  for  UNI  3.0,
              uni31  for  UNI  3.1, uni31+uni30 for UNI 3.1 with 3.0 compatibility, uni40 for UNI
              4.0, and uni40+q.2963.1 for UNI 4.0 with Q.2963.1 peak cell rate renegotiation.

       -V     Prints the version number of atmsigd on standard output and exits.

FILES

       /etc/atmsigd.conf        default configuration file
       /var/tmp/atmsigd.pid.status.version
                                default location of status dumps
       /var/tmp/atmsigd.pid.trace.version
                                default location of signaling trace dumps

DEBUGGING

       When  receiving  a  SIGUSR1  signal,  atmsigd  dumps  the  list  of  all  internal  socket
       descriptors.  With SIGUSR2, it dumps the contents of the trace buffer. If a dump directory
       was   set,   dumps   are   written   to   files   called   atmsigd.pid.status.number   and
       atmsigd.pid.trace.number, respectively, with number starting at zero and being incremented
       for every dump. If no dump directory is set, dumps are written to standard error.

       Dumps are also generated whenever atmsigd detects a fatal error and terminates. No attempt
       is made to catch signals like SIGSEGV.

BUGS

       The  generation  of  traces  is  a  comparably slow process which may already take several
       seconds for only 100 trace entries.  To generate a trace dump, atmsigd therefore  forks  a
       child process that runs in parallel to the signaling demon.

AUTHOR

       Werner Almesberger, EPFL ICA <Werner.Almesberger@epfl.ch>

SEE ALSO

       atmaddr(8), atmsigd.conf(4), ilmid(8), qos(7)