Fixed typos
This commit is contained in:
16
README.md
16
README.md
@@ -41,21 +41,21 @@ and
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```
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```
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# Secrets for authentication using CHAP
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# Secrets for authentication using CHAP
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# client server secret IP addresses
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# client server secret IP addresses
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"NAME.SURNAME@tiscali.it" * "123456"
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"NAME.SURNAME@tiscali.it" * "123456"
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```
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```
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(replace 123456 with your password)
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(replace 123456 with your password)
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Finally you can switch on the service like:
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Finally you can switch on the service with:
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```
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```
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ppp call tiscali
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ppp call tiscali
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```
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```
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you can use `journalctl -f` and check whether things are going fine.
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and then use `journalctl -f` to check whether things are going fine.
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Systemd automatization can be created with the help of [these scripts](https://gitlab.com/jimdigriz/debian-clearfog-gt-8k/-/blob/master/README.md).
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Systemd automation can be created with the help of [these scripts](https://gitlab.com/jimdigriz/debian-clearfog-gt-8k/-/blob/master/README.md).
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## Long Story
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## Long Story
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@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ The approach is [like this](https://wiki.wireshark.org/CaptureSetup/Ethernet#cap
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The packets captured just after switching on the ZTE H388X are shown here:
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The packets captured just after powering on the ZTE H388X are shown here:
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@@ -96,12 +96,12 @@ There are basically three steps:
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* Yellow box: the PPP Initialization starts from the ZTE and is followed by an Offer from the Cisco server.
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* Yellow box: the PPP Initialization starts from the ZTE and is followed by an Offer from the Cisco server.
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* Green box: the authentication, with CHAP protocol.
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* Green box: the authentication, with CHAP protocol.
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When using `pppd` the first packet is a PADI, which looks exactly the same as the one in No. 7 above, except for the 802.1Q part shown by the blue arrow. That was indeed the trick: the server replies only is the PADI request comes from a VLAN with ID:835.
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When using `pppd`, the cleanup part is missing and the first packet is a PADI, which looks exactly like the one in packet No. 7 above, except for the 802.1Q part shown by the blue arrow. That was indeed the trick: the server replies only when the PADI request comes from a VLAN with ID 835.
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Setting the PPP device to a newly created vlan with
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Creating the vlan with
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```
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```
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`ip link add link eth0 name eth0.835 type vlan id 835`
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`ip link add link eth0 name eth0.835 type vlan id 835`
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```
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```
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makes the Cisco server happy and it promptly replies to our PADI packet.
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and setting it as the device for the PPP connection makes the Cisco server happy: it promptly replies to our PADI packet and the connection is setup in less than a second.
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