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Babel
=====

Babel is a loop-avoiding distance-vector routing protocol roughly
based on HSDV and AODV, but with provisions for link cost estimation
and redistribution of routes from other routing protocols.


Installation
============

[Babel-over-DTLS][1] support requires [mbedTLS][2] 2.16.

    $ make
    $ su -c 'make install'

If compiling for OpenWRT, you will probably want to say something like

    $ make CC=mipsel-linux-gcc PLATFORM_DEFINES='-march=mips32'

On Mac OS X, you'll need to do

    $ make LDLIBS=''


Setting up a network for use with Babel
=======================================

1. Set up every node's interface
--------------------------------

On every node, set up the wireless interface:

    # iwconfig eth1 mode ad-hoc channel 11 essid "my-mesh-network"
    # ip link set up dev eth1

2. Set up every node's IP addresses
-----------------------------------

You will need to make sure that all of your nodes have a unique IPv6
address, and/or a unique IPv4 address.

On every node, run something like:

    # ip addr add 192.168.13.33/32 dev eth1
    # ip -6 addr add $(generate-ipv6-address -r)/128 dev eth1

You will find the generate-ipv6-address utility, which can generate random
IPv6 addresses according to RFC 4193, on

      https://www.irif.fr/~jch/software/files/


A note about tunnels and VPNs
-----------------------------

Some VPN implementations (notably OpenVPN and Linux GRE) do not
automatically add an IPv6 link-local address to the tunnel interface.
If you attempt to run Babel over such an interface, it will complain
that it ``couldn't allocate requested address''.

The solution is to manually add the link-local address to the
interface.  This can be done by running e.g.

    # ip -6 addr add $(generate-ipv6-address fe80::) dev gre0


3. Start the routing daemon
---------------------------

Run Babel on every node, specifying the set of interfaces that it
should consider:

    # babeld eth1

If your node has multiple interfaces which you want to participate in
the Babel network, just list them all:

    # babeld eth0 eth1 sit1


4. Setting up an Internet gateway
---------------------------------

If you have one or more Internet gateways on your mesh network, you
will want to set them up so that they redistribute the default route.
Babel will only redistribute routes with an explicit protocol
attached, so you must say something like:

    # ip route add 0.0.0.0/0 via 1.2.3.4 dev eth0 proto static

In order to redistribute all routes, you will say:

    # babeld -C 'redistribute metric 128' eth1

You may also be more selective in the routes you redistribute, for
instance by specifying the interface over which the route goes out:

    # babeld -C 'redistribute if eth0 metric 128' eth1

or by constraining the prefix length:

    # babeld -C 'redistribute ip ::/0 le 64 metric 128' \
             -C 'redistribute ip 0.0.0.0/0 le 28 metric 128' \
             eth1

You may also want to constrain which local routes (routes to local
interface addresses) you advertise:

    # babeld -C 'redistribute local if eth1' -C 'redistribute local deny' \
             -C 'redistribute metric 128' \
             eth1

[1]: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-babel-dtls/
[2]: https://tls.mbed.org/

-- Juliusz Chroboczek

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