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7.2 Routes

In some cases it might be necessary to add more routes to the virtual network interface. There are two ways to indicate which interface a packet should go to, one is to use the name of the interface itself, another way is to specify the (local) address that is assigned to that interface (local_address). The former way is unambiguous and therefore preferable, but not all platforms support this.

Adding routes to IPv4 subnets:

Linux route add -net network_address netmask netmask interface
Linux iproute2 ip route add network_address/prefixlength dev interface
FreeBSD route add network_address/prefixlength local_address
OpenBSD route add network_address/prefixlength local_address
NetBSD route add network_address/prefixlength local_address
Solaris route add network_address/prefixlength local_address -interface
Darwin (MacOS/X) route add network_address/prefixlength local_address
Windows netsh routing ip add persistentroute network_address netmask interface local_address

Adding routes to IPv6 subnets:

Linux route add -A inet6 network_address/prefixlength interface
Linux iproute2 ip route add network_address/prefixlength dev interface
FreeBSD route add -inet6 network_address/prefixlength local_address
OpenBSD route add -inet6 network_address local_address -prefixlen prefixlength
NetBSD route add -inet6 network_address local_address -prefixlen prefixlength
Solaris route add -inet6 network_address/prefixlength local_address -interface
Darwin (MacOS/X) ?
Windows netsh interface ipv6 add route network address/prefixlength interface