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	README of KAME kit
	KAME Project
	$KAME: README,v 1.73 2004/12/21 06:34:35 jinmei Exp $

<<<Project Overview>>>

"KAME Project" is a joint effort to create single solid software set,
especially targeted at IPv6/IPsec.  Talented researchers from Fujitsu
Limited, Hitachi, Ltd., IIJ Research Laboratory, NEC Corporation,
Toshiba Corporation, YDC Corporation and Yokogawa Electric Corporation
joined the project.  This joint effort will avoid unnecessary duplicated
development in the same area, and effectively provides high quality and
advanced featured packages.

KAME was originally called "Hydrangea" which was developed by v6
working group, WIDE Project.  We have merged codes, which each company
in Japan has developed, into "Hydrangea".  To identify the joint
effort, we changed the name from "Hydrangea" to "KAME".

Stabilized portion of KAME software has been merged into FreeBSD, NetBSD,
OpenBSD, and BSD/OS.  Therefore, if you just want to use IPv6, you do not
need the KAME patch contained in this tar.gz file.
- FreeBSD: 4.0 and beyond
- NetBSD: 1.5 and beyond
- OpenBSD: 2.7 and beyond
- BSD/OS: 4.2 and beyond

"KAME" officially indicates a short word of <Ka>rigo<me> where our office
locates.  But it, in fact, stands for turtle in Japanese.


<<<Our Goals>>>

KAME Project aims to provide FREE reference implementations of
	(1) IPv6
	(2) IPsec
	(3) advanced internetworking such as advanced packet queuing, 
	    ATM, mobility, and whatever interesting
on several BSD variants.


<<<Copyright>>>

The kit comes with BSD-like copyright.  In short, the code is FREELY
available but with NO WARRANTY.  Even commercial use is OK.  Please
refer to the COPYRIGHT file for more details.  The copyright holder is
WIDE Project instead of KAME Project.  This is because KAME Project is
to be terminated in March 2006 (may be extended).

READ CAREFULLY: Several countries have legal enforcement for
export/import/use of cryptographic software.  Check it before playing
with the kit.  We do not intend to be your legalease clearing house
(NO WARRANTY).  If you intend to include KAME stack into your product,
you'll need to check if the licenses on each file fit your situations,
and/or possible intellectual property right issues.

In KAME kit, there are some software which come with restricted copyright
notices.  Here is a list of those software (may not be comprehensive):

kame/bsdi[34]: some of the modules are BSDi copyrighted.  for those modules
	we ship diffs instead of full source.
kame/kame/kame/pim6[sd]d: see LICENCE.{pimd,mrouted}.
kame/sys/netinet6/in6_rmx.c: specifies "without fee" (affects kame/freebsd[234])
kame/kame/kame/libaltq/parser.c


<<<What's Next?>>>

To know the difference from the previous stable release, please refer
to CHANGELOG and RELNOTES.

To install this kit, please read INSTALL at the top directory, and
INSTALL under operating system directory (for example,
netbsd/INSTALL).

If you want to know what features are provided, please refer to
IMPLEMENTATION. 

Before you start using this kit, please take a look at USAGE. 


<<<What is the difference with *BSD IPv6/IPsec code and KAME code?>>>

Starting summer 1999, *BSD distributions start incorporating KAME IPv6/IPsec
stack into their development track (i.e. *BSD-current).  Recently some of
*BSDs ship with integrated IPv6 code (for example, FreeBSD 4.0-RELEASE).
Basically,
- *BSD distributions ship with past KAME code.  and they do not include
  some of experimental code in KAME tree (merger did not take place for
  some of experimental portion, on purpose).
- KAME kit includes more recent IPv6/IPsec changes by KAME team.
  It also includes more experimental code than the *BSD distributions, as
  well as additional functionalities which haven't integrated into *BSDs yet.

http://www.kame.net/project-overview.html#release talks more about this issue.
A file named COVERAGE has detailed comparison between kame/*bsd, *bsd-curernt
and recent *bsd releases.


<<<Reporting bugs>>

When you report bugs, please be sure to include the following information:
- the opertaing system platform you are using (like "FreeBSD 2.2.8-RELEASE")
- the hardware architecture you are using (i386, sparc, vax or whatever)
- the version of KAME you are using ("SNAP dated Jan 1 2000", or
  "grabbed via anonymous CVS around Jan 1 2000")
- information necessary to repeat the problem
  this includes, but not limited to,
	(1) kernel compilation options,
	(2) exact command line that raises the issue,
	(3) routing table setup taken by "netstat -rn",
	(4) interface configuration via "ifconfig -a",
	(5) sysctl setting taken by "sysctl -a"
- (if necessary) hardware configuration, like "ethernet card is NE2000"
- (if necessary) screen trace on the trouble, taken by "script" command.
- (if necessary) packet trace taken by "tcpdump" command.
- (if necessary) IPv6/v4 connectivity status in your network

Before sending questions, or you are uncertain if it is really a bug or not,
make sure you have checked all available documents, including release notes
and manual pages.  Also make sure that you have the latest code with you
(normally we are unable to help you if you are using ancient version of
KAME kit).

Don't try to *describe* your settings, just paste command output itself
onto the report instead.  A bad example is "I assigned a global address on
my ethernet interface, but ping6 didn't work.  Why?" No one will be
able to answer this kind of question.  Instead, you should type as follows:
# /usr/local/v6/sbin/ifconfig -a
(paste the output.  Again, the exact output is best.  Do not try to
 describe the output by your own word)
# /usr/local/v6/sbin/ifconfig ne0 inet6 2001:200::1234 prefixlen 64 alias
(paste the output)
# /usr/local/v6/sbin/ifconfig -a
(paste the output.  The difference between the two "ifconfig -a" might
 be important.)
# /usr/local/v6/sbin/ping6 -n 2001:300::1
(paste the output, including errors and warnings)
etc...

If you track the bugs, please notice the following items:
- be sure to use "ping6 -n", not "ping6", when you probe reachability.
- read IMPLEMENTATION chapter 1.3 if you try link-local addresses on
  your tests.

Submit your bug report by using bug database, or you may want to
submit it to snap-users mailing list.
	bug database: http://www.kame.net/, or /usr/local/v6/bin/kame-send-pr
	snap-users mailing list: http://www.kame.net/snap-users/

If you try to send an email for bug report or questions, use public mailing
list whenever possible, as the discussions may be able to help other people
as well.  The following lists the public mailing lists popular among our
community.
	[email protected]
		see http://www.kame.net/ for subscription guideline
	[email protected]
		see http://www.ipv6.org/ for subscription guideline

Thanks for your feedback!


<<<Contact Points>>

If you want to know more about KAME Project, please visit:
	http://www.kame.net/
You can get source code snapshots as well as bug reports (you can also
send bug reports on this web page).

We maintain users mailing list, called "snap-users".
	http://www.kame.net/snap-users/
has archives of postings, how to subscribe, and some other information.
Share your tips, experiences, comments with other users.

If you have private comments to our developers, please drop a line to:
	[email protected]

If you have questions about commercial usage or other
administrative/political issues, please send the questions to:
	[email protected]


<<<Researchers>>>

Current core members are:
           Kazu YAMAMOTO  IIJ Research Laboratory
       Jun-ichiro HAGINO  IIJ Research Laboratory
          Shoichi SAKANE  Yokogawa Electric Corporation
           Tatuya JINMEI  Toshiba Corporation
	     Kenjiro CHO  Sony Computer Science Laboratory Inc.
	 Shinsuke SUZUKI  Hitachi, Ltd.
	   Keiichi SHIMA  IIJ Research Laboratory
	 Tsuyoshi MOMOSE  NEC Corporation
	  Ken'ichi KUDOU  Fujitsu Limited
	  Keisuke UEHARA  Keio University
	  Ryuji WAKIKAWA  Keio University
	 Koshiro MITSUYA  Keio University

Alumni of core members:
         Yoshinobu INOUE  Fujitsu Limited
      Munechika SUMIKAWA  Hitachi, Ltd.
           Kazushi SUGYO  NEC Corporation
      Shin-ichi FUJISAWA  Yokogawa Electric Corporation
	  Shuichi KARINO  NEC Corporation
	     Koji KAWANO  Matsushita Graphic Communication Systems, Inc.
	   Noriyasu KATO  Toshiba Corporation
	      Hideki ONO  Fujitsu Limited

<<<Acknowledgements>>>

The core members deeply thank the original members and the
contributors including:
Yusaku HASEGAWA, Kentaro MISU, Yasushi YAMASAKI,
Atsushi ONOE, Noritoshi DEMIZU, Katsushi KOBAYASHI, Takahiro
KIKUCHI, Motonori NAKAMURA, Francis Dupont, Kazunori FUJIWARA,
HO Sonmyong, Masanari TSUBAI, Hiroshi URA, Craig Metz, Chris the
Elder, UO Youjiro, Wayne Knowles, Hajimu UMEMOTO, Ichiro Fukuhara,
David P.  Wiggins, Martti Kuparinen, Tetsuya Isaki, Erik Bertelsen,
Toshio Shimojou, Kazunori Fujiwara, Kimio Ishii, Masafumi OE,
Mickael Hoerdt, Tomomi Suzuki, Arkadiusz Miskiewicz, Wolfgang Rupprecht,
YASUOKA Masahiko, Nobumichi Ozoe, Frederic SOULIER, Koji Kondo,
David PATE, Kenjiro Komaki, Satosi KOBAYASI, Takashi Tanaka, Heiko
W. Rupp, Kazuto Ushioda, Masahiro Ishiyama, Bill Sommerfeld, Jason
Thorpe, Yasunari Momoi, Chris P. Ross, Hideaki Imaizumi, Alexander
Fung, Scott Mace, Peter Tattam, Hideaki YOSHIFUJI, Naoyasu Takenaka,
Wada Keiji, Theo de Raadt, Niels Baggesen, Takahiro Yugawa, Laine
Stump, Hans-Joachim Knobloch, Angelos D. Keromytis, KOIE Hidetaka,
Markus Friedl, Ryota HIROSE, Shigeya Suzuki, Assar Westerlund,
Bruce A. Mah, Masaaki Noro, Hugh Graham, Hubert Feyer, Eric Lemiere,
Benoit Hilt, Noriaki Takamiya, Olivier TOGNI, Greg Troxel, Bill
Fenner, Goeran Bengtson, Tomio Narita, Conny Larsson, Ryuji Somegawa,
Akira Kato, Ronald van der Pol, Graham Wheeler, Kris Kennaway, Kazuo Horikawa,
larry baird, rimi guyomarch, Makoto MATSUSHITA, Kevin Lahey
SHIMIZU Ryo, Shigeyuki Fukushima, Toshiaki Nakatsu, Florent Parent,
SHIRASAKI Yasuhiro, Constantine Sapuntzakis, Jun-ya Kato, Kazuyoshi Tomita,
Hitoshi Asaeda, and SUDOH Yoshiaki.
(in no particular order).

We would also like to thank BSDI (http://www.bsdi.com/) for donating
BSD/OS licenses for development.

We apologize for any omissions from this list, which are certainly
unintentional.

							<end of README>

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