On Mon, Apr 17, 2023 at 12:43:16AM +0200, Samuel Thibault wrote: > Dominique Martinet, le lun. 17 avril 2023 07:26:41 +0900, a ecrit: > > Also, this got me wondering if the 'if' fd can be closed immediately or > > if the interface will be removed when the fd is closed (probably not?) > > Closing the fd would close the if, yes. AIUI one really has to keep the > pppox socket (for stats), the ppp chan (for non-data ppp packets), and > the ppp if (for the if). L2TP has control and data packets. The L2TP socket is there to handle L2TP control packets in user space, as the kernel only handles L2TP data packets. You have to keep the L2TP session socket open, otherwise you can't handle the session anymore. Then there are the PPP file descriptors. A PPP channel is used to send and receive PPP frames. It has to be associated with a lower transport, for example an L2TP session if you want to encapsulate PPP into L2TP. But that could be something else (a PPPoE session, a serial link, etc.). Same as for L2TP session sockets, you need to keep the PPP channel fd open, otherwise you can't handle the PPP session anymore. Finally there are PPP units. A PPP unit represents the PPP networking device (like ppp0). A PPP unit has to be associated with a PPP channel (or several PPP channels for multilink PPP, but better avoid that). A PPP unit doesn't know how to send packets, it delegates that to its PPP channels. You can avoid creating PPP units if you don't need a PPP network device. In particular, if you're forwarding a PPP session between a PPPoE and an L2TP session (or between two different L2TP sesions), you typically don't need to create any PPP unit. You handle the initial LCP negociation and PPP authentication using a PPP channel on the incoming side, then you create another PPP channel on the other side (where you want to forward the incoming PPP session) and finally bridge them together with PPPIOCBRIDGECHAN. > Samuel >