unless that node is not reachable, in which case the node with the next highest
priority will be tried, and so on.
-.It Va TCPOnly Li = yes | no Pq no
+.It Va TCPOnly Li = yes | no Pq no Bq obsolete
If this variable is set to yes,
then the packets are tunnelled over the TCP connection instead of a UDP connection.
This is especially useful for those who want to run a tinc daemon
from behind a masquerading firewall,
or if UDP packet routing is disabled somehow.
Setting this options also implicitly sets IndirectData.
+
+.Pp
+Since version 1.0.10, tinc will automatically detect whether communication via
+UDP is possible or not.
.El
.Sh SCRIPTS
When a subnet becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the subnet.
.El
+.It Ev WEIGHT
+When a subnet becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the subnet weight.
+.El
+
.Sh FILES
The most important files are:
.Bl -tag -width indent
/22. This conforms to standard CIDR notation as described in
@uref{ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1519.txt, RFC1519}
+@cindex Subnet weight
A Subnet can be given a weight to indicate its priority over identical Subnets
owned by different nodes. The default weight is 10. Lower values indicate
higher priority. Packets will be sent to the node with the highest priority,
priority will be tried, and so on.
@cindex TCPonly
-@item TCPonly = <yes|no> (no)
+@item TCPonly = <yes|no> (no) [deprecated]
If this variable is set to yes, then the packets are tunnelled over a
TCP connection instead of a UDP connection. This is especially useful
for those who want to run a tinc daemon from behind a masquerading
firewall, or if UDP packet routing is disabled somehow.
Setting this options also implicitly sets IndirectData.
+
+Since version 1.0.10, tinc will automatically detect whether communication via
+UDP is possible or not.
@end table
@item SUBNET
When a subnet becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the subnet.
+@cindex WEIGHT
+@item SUBNET
+When a subnet becomes (un)reachable, this is set to the subnet weight.
+
@end table
@item -K, --generate-keys[=@var{bits}]
Generate public/private keypair of @var{bits} length. If @var{bits} is not specified,
-1024 is the default. tinc will ask where you want to store the files,
+2048 is the default. tinc will ask where you want to store the files,
but will default to the configuration directory (you can use the -c or -n option
in combination with -K). After that, tinc will quit.
If so, check that it allows TCP and UDP traffic on port 655.
If it masquerades and the host running tinc is behind it, make sure that it forwards TCP and UDP traffic to port 655 to the host running tinc.
You can add @samp{TCPOnly = yes} to your host config file to force tinc to only use a single TCP connection,
-this works through most firewalls and NATs.
+this works through most firewalls and NATs. Since version 1.0.10, tinc will automatically fall back to TCP if direct communication via UDP is not possible.
@end itemize
@itemize
@item If you see this only sporadically, it is harmless and caused by a node sending packets using an old key.
-@item If you see this often and another node is not reachable anymore, then a NAT (masquerading firewall) is changing the source address of UDP packets.
-You can add @samp{TCPOnly = yes} to host configuration files to force all VPN traffic to go over a TCP connection.
@end itemize
@item Got bad/bogus/unauthorized REQUEST from foo (1.2.3.4 port 12345)