############################################################################### # $Id$ # # Sample Poptop configuration file /etc/pptpd.conf # # Changes are effective when pptpd is restarted. ############################################################################### # TAG: ppp # Path to the pppd program, default '/usr/sbin/pppd' on Linux # #ppp /usr/sbin/pppd # TAG: option # Specifies the location of the PPP options file. # By default PPP looks in '/etc/ppp/options' # option /etc/ppp/pptpd-options # TAG: debug # Turns on (more) debugging to syslog # #debug # TAG: stimeout # Specifies timeout (in seconds) on starting ctrl connection # # stimeout 10 # TAG: noipparam # Suppress the passing of the client's IP address to PPP, which is # done by default otherwise. # #noipparam # TAG: logwtmp # Use wtmp(5) to record client connections and disconnections. # logwtmp # TAG: bcrelay # Turns on broadcast relay to clients from interface # #bcrelay eth1 # TAG: delegate # Delegates the allocation of client IP addresses to pppd. # # Without this option, which is the default, pptpd manages the list of # IP addresses for clients and passes the next free address to pppd. # With this option, pptpd does not pass an address, and so pppd may use # radius or chap-secrets to allocate an address. # #delegate # TAG: connections # Limits the number of client connections that may be accepted. # # If pptpd is allocating IP addresses (e.g. delegate is not # used) then the number of connections is also limited by the # remoteip option. The default is 100. #connections 100 # TAG: localip # TAG: remoteip # Specifies the local and remote IP address ranges. # # These options are ignored if delegate option is set. # # Any addresses work as long as the local machine takes care of the # routing. But if you want to use MS-Windows networking, you should # use IP addresses out of the LAN address space and use the proxyarp # option in the pppd options file, or run bcrelay. # # You can specify single IP addresses seperated by commas or you can # specify ranges, or both. For example: # # 192.168.0.234,192.168.0.245-249,192.168.0.254 # # IMPORTANT RESTRICTIONS: # # 1. No spaces are permitted between commas or within addresses. # # 2. If you give more IP addresses than the value of connections, # it will start at the beginning of the list and go until it # gets connections IPs. Others will be ignored. # # 3. No shortcuts in ranges! ie. 234-8 does not mean 234 to 238, # you must type 234-238 if you mean this. # # 4. If you give a single localIP, that's ok - all local IPs will # be set to the given one. You MUST still give at least one remote # IP for each simultaneous client. # # (Recommended) #localip 192.168.0.1 #remoteip 192.168.0.234-238,192.168.0.245 # or #localip 192.168.0.234-238,192.168.0.245 #remoteip 192.168.1.234-238,192.168.1.245 localip 192.168.100.1 remoteip 192.168.100.101-199