| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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In a multi-wan setup, netifd may need guidance on which wan device to
use to create the route to the remote peer.
This commit adds a 'tunlink' option similar to other tunneling interfaces
such as 6in4, 6rd, gre, etc.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Goodman <aaronjg@stanford.edu>
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This replaces deprecated backticks by more versatile $(...) syntax.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Schmutzler <freifunk@adrianschmutzler.de>
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If a config section of a peer does not have a public key defined, the
whole interface does not start. The following log is shown
daemon.notice netifd: test (21071): Line unrecognized: `PublicKey='
daemon.notice netifd: test (21071): Configuration parsing erro
The command 'wg show' does only show the interface name.
With this change we skip the peer for this interface and emit a log
message. So the other peers get configured.
Signed-off-by: Florian Eckert <fe@dev.tdt.de>
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As announced on the mailing list, WireGuard will be in Linux 5.6. As a
result, the wg(8) tool, used by OpenWRT in the same manner as ip(8), is
moving to its own wireguard-tools repo. Meanwhile, the out-of-tree
kernel module for kernels 3.10 - 5.5 moved to its own wireguard-linux-
compat repo. Yesterday, releases were cut out of these repos, so this
commit bumps packages to match. Since wg(8) and the compat kernel module
are versioned and released separately, we create a wireguard-tools
Makefile to contain the source for the new tools repo. Later, when
OpenWRT moves permanently to Linux 5.6, we'll drop the original module
package, leaving only the tools. So this commit shuffles the build
definition around a bit but is basically the same idea as before.
Signed-off-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>
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