ltun
is a Lua module which let you create TUN/TAP device very easily.
License: MIT (see LICENSE)
Lua >= 5.1
To compile, just type the following command in the terminal:
make
If you are on a debian-like system and you have installed all the required dependencies, it should work as-is. If you are out of luck, you can tweak the compilation process using the following variables:
- LUA_VERSION
- LUA_CFLAGS
For example, say that you want to compile ltun
for Lua 5.1 (by default
ltun
is compiled for Lua 5.2) you can try:
make LUA_VERSION=5.1
Or for LuaJIT:
make LUA_VERSION=jit
If the Lua development headers are not in a common location, you can try:
make LUA_CFLAGS="-I/path/to/lua/headers"
NOTE: On most distributions you will need to be root to create TUN/TAP devices.
To create a TUN device:
local ltun = require('ltun') local tun = ltun.create()
To create a TAP device:
local ltun = require('ltun') local tap = ltun.create(ltun.IFF_TAP)
To create a TUN/TAP device with a custom name:
local tun = ltun.create('mytun')
To specify additional flags:
local tun = ltun.create('mytun', ltun.IFF_TUN, ltun.IFF_NO_PI)
Or just:
local tun = ltun.create(ltun.IFF_TUN, ltun.IFF_NO_PI)
You can get/set some parameters of the device directly:
print(tun.name) tun.addr = '10.8.0.1' tun.dstaddr = '10.8.0.2' tun.netmask = '255.255.255.0' tun.mtu = 1500
If the device is a TAP you can also get/set its MAC address:
tap.hwaddr = '\x00\x11\x22\x33\x44\x55' print(tap.hwaddr)
To make the device persistent:
tun:persist(true)
To bring up the device:
tun:up()
To bring down the device:
tun:down()
To read/write to the device, use the methods read(size)
and
write(buf)
:
buf = tun:read(tun.mtu) tun:write(buf)
To close the device:
tun:close()
You can also get the file descriptor associated with a TUN/TAP device:
tun:fileno()