Provided by: batmand_0.3.2+74+g2f62b17-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       batmand - better approach to mobile ad‐hoc networking

SYNOPSIS

       batmand [options]interface[interface...]

DESCRIPTION

       B.A.T.M.A.N  means  better  approach  to  mobile  ad‐hoc networking, this is a new routing
       protocol for multi‐hop ad‐hoc mesh networks. Go to https://www.open-mesh.org/ to get  more
       information.

       The following document will explain how to use the batman daemon.

       The batmand binary can be run in 2 different ways. First you need to start the daemon with
       "batmand [options] interface" (daemon mode) and then you can connect  to  that  daemon  to
       issue  further  commands  with  "batmand  -c [options]" (client mode). Some of the options
       below are always available, some are not. See the example section to get an idea.

OPTIONS

       -a add announced network(s)
              Add networks to the daemons list of available connections  to  another  network(s).
              This  option can be used multiple times and can be used to add networks dynamically
              while the daemon  is  running.  The  parameter  has  to  be  in  the  form  of  ip‐
              address/netmask.

       -A delete announced network(s)
              Delete networks to the daemons list of available connections to another network(s).
              This option can be used multiple times and can only be used  while  the  daemon  is
              running. The parameter has to be in the form of ip‐address/netmask.

       -b run debug connection in batch mode
              The  debug information are updated after a period of time by default, so if you use
              "-b" it will execute  once  and  then  stop.  This  option  is  useful  for  script
              integration  of the debug output and is only available in client mode together with
              "-d 1" or "-d 2".

       -c connect via unix socket
              Use this option to switch to client mode. Deploy it without any  arguments  to  get
              the current configuration even if changed at runtime.

       -d debug level
              The debug level can be set to five values.
                        default: 0 -> debug disabled
                 allowed values: 1 -> list neighbors
                                 2 -> list gateways
                                 3 -> observe batman
                                 4 -> observe batman (verbose)
                                 5 -> memory debug / cpu usage
              Note that debug level 5 can be disabled at compile time.

       -g gateway class
              The  gateway  class  is  used  to  tell  other  nodes in the network your available
              internet bandwidth. Just enter any number (optionally followed by "kbit" or "mbit")
              and  the  daemon will guess your appropriate gateway class. Use "/" to separate the
              down‐ and upload rates. You can omit the upload rate and  batmand  will  assume  an
              upload of download / 5.
                        default: 0 -> gateway disabled
                 allowed values: 5000
                                 5000kbit
                                 5mbit
                                 5mbit/1024
                                 5mbit/1024kbit
                                 5mbit/1mbit

       -h short help

       -H verbose help

       -o originator interval in ms
              A  node  transmits  broadcast  messages (we call them originator message or OGM) to
              inform the neighboring nodes about it's existence.  Originator interval is the time
              to  wait after sending one message and before sending the next message. The default
              value is 1000 ms (1 second).  In a mobile network, you may want to  detect  network
              changes  very  quickly,  so you need to send message very often, for example, use a
              value of 500 ms.  In a static network, you can save bandwidth  by  using  a  higher
              value.  This option is only available in daemon mode.

       -p preferred gateway
              Set the internet gateway by yourself. Note: This automatically switches your daemon
              to "internet search mode" with "-r 1"  unless  "-r"  is  given.  If  the  preferred
              gateway  is  not  found the gateway selection will use the current routing class to
              choose a gateway.

       -r routing class
              The routing class can be set to four values ‐ it enables  "internet  search  mode".
              The  daemon  will choose an internet gateway based on certain criteria (unless "-p"
              is specified):
                        default: 0 -> set no default route
                 allowed values: 1 -> use fast connection
                                 2  -> use stable connection
                                 3  -> use fast‐switch connection
                                 XX -> use late‐switch connection
              In level 1, B.A.T.M.A.N tries to find the best available connection by  considering
              the  gateway's  advertised  throughput  as  well  as  the  link quality towards the
              gateway.  In level 2, B.A.T.M.A.N compares the link quality of  the  internet  node
              and  chooses  the one with the best link quality.  In level 3, B.A.T.M.A.N compares
              the link quality of the internet node and  chooses  the  one  with  the  best  link
              quality  but  switches  to another gateway as soon as a better connection is found.
              In level XX (number between 3 and 256) B.A.T.M.A.N compares the link quality of the
              internet  node  and  chooses  the  one  with  the best link quality but switches to
              another gateway as soon as this gateway has a TQ value which is XX better than  the
              currently selected gateway.

       -s visualization server
              Since  no  topology  database is computed by the protocol an additional solution to
              create topology graphs has been implemented, the vis  server.  Batman  daemons  may
              send  their  local  view  about  their  single‐hop  neighbors to the vis server. It
              collects the information and provides data in a format similar to  OLSR's  topology
              information  output. Therefore existing solutions to draw topology graphs developed
              for OLSR can be used to visualize mesh‐clouds using B.A.T.M.A.N.

       -v print version

       --disable-client-nat
              Since version 0.3.2 batmand uses iptables  to  set  the  NAT  rules  on  the  gateX
              interface  of  the  batman  client  (-r  XX).  That option disables this feature of
              batmand and switches the internet  tunnel  mode  to  "half  tunnels"  (the  packets
              towards  the  gateway are tunneled but not the packets that are coming back) unless
              NAT was enabled manually. Be sure to know what  you  are  doing!  Without  NAT  the
              gateway  needs  to  have  a  route  to  the  client  or the packets will be dropped
              silently.

       --no-detach
              Run batmand in foreground

       --policy-routing-script
              This option disables the policy routing feature of batmand ‐  all  routing  changes
              are  send to the script which can make use of this information or not. Firmware and
              package maintainers can use this option to tightly integrate batmand into their own
              routing policies. This option is only available in daemon mode.

EXAMPLES

       batmand eth1 wlan0:test
              Start batman daemon on interface "eth1" and on alias interface "wlan0:test"

       batmand -o 2000 -a 192.168.100.1/32 -a 10.0.0.0/24 eth1
              Start  batman  daemon on interface "eth1" with originator interval of 2000 ms while
              announcing 192.168.100.1 and 10.0.0.0/24.

       batmand -s 192.168.1.1 -d 1 eth1
              Start  batman  daemon  on  interface  "eth1",  sending  topology   information   to
              192.168.1.1 and with debug level 1 (does not fork into the background).

       batmand eth1 && batmand -c -d 1 -b
              Start  batman  daemon  on interface "eth1". Connect in client mode to get the debug
              level 1 output once (batch mode).

       batmand -g 2000kbit/500kbit eth1 && batmand -c -r 1
              Start batman daemon on interface "eth1" as internet gateway. Connect in client mode
              to disable the internet gateway and enable internet search mode.

AUTHOR

       batmand   was   written   by   Marek  Lindner  <lindner_marek-at-yahoo.de>,  Axel  Neumann
       <axel-at-open-mesh.net>, Stefan Sperling  <stsp-at-stsp.in-berlin.de>,  Corinna  'Elektra'
       Aichele  <onelektra-at-gmx.net>,  Thomas  Lopatic   <thomas-at-lopatic.de>,  Felix Fietkau
       <nbd-at-nbd.name>,    Ludger    Schmudde    <lui-at-schmudde.com>,    Simon     Wunderlich
       <siwu-at-hrz.tu-chemnitz.de>, Andreas Langer <a.langer-at-q-dsl.de>.

       This  manual  page  was  written  by  Wesley  Tsai <wesleyboy42@gmail.com>, for the Debian
       GNU/Linux system.

                                                                                       batmand(8)