On Tue, Jun 22, 2010 at 08:05:31PM -0700, Matt S wrote:
> I apologize in advance if this subject has been addressed but I was unable
> to turn up anything from a Google search and the manual pages did not quite
> yield enough information.  IPv6 needs aside, what is the primary difference
> between tun(4) and gif(4)?  When is it preferrable to use gif(4) over
> tun(4)?  Is there any reason why I could not, say, perform IPSEC encryption
> over a tun(4) tunnel?
> 

Huh? From the man pages:
     The tun driver provides a network interface pseudo-device.  Packets sent
     to this interface can be read by a userland process and processed as
     desired.  Packets written by the userland process are injected back into
     the kernel networking subsystem.

     The gif interface is a generic tunnelling pseudo-device for IPv4 and
     IPv6.  It can tunnel IPv[46] over IPv[46] with behavior mainly based on
     RFC 1933 IPv6-over-IPv4, for a total of four possible combinations...

So tun(4) is a way to get packets to userland while gif is a real tunnel
device encapsulating the packets and sending it to a remote tunnel
endpoint. The two things are totaly different and yes you could make IPsec
in userland over tun(4) but nobody is enough of a masochist to do that.

-- 
:wq Claudio

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