
Chapter 5
Routing Menu
While a very short menu, it is an important one. It would be difficult to do much of anything without
routing.
Configuring routing
The routing menu is split into two parts (see fig 1). The upper part is basic routing and routing
daemons. The lower part is advanced and policy routing. Since it is unlikely you'll have a system
without at least a default route, we'll start there. The rest will follow.
fig 1: the routing menu
Static and default routes
The static and default routes can be set by selecting the static and default routes menu item (see fig 1).
A configuration box will present itself (see fig 2).
The default route is the first line, shown by 0.0.0.0/0 and the IP of the gateway to the world.
All routes must point to an IP on a network on the radio. If not, you'll see a '!' following the line
number. Effectively, this means the route is disabled. It does not mean the IP pointed to is unreachable.
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