The KAME project, a sub-project of the WIDE Project, was a joint effort of six organizations in Japan which aimed to provide a free IPv6 and IPsec (for both IPv4 and IPv6) protocol stack implementation for variants of the BSD Unix computer operating-system. [1] The project began in 1998 and on November 7, 2005 it was announced that the project would be finished at the end of March 2006. [2] The name KAME is a short version of Karigome, the location of the project's offices beside Keio University SFC. [3]
KAME Project's code is based on "WIDE Hydrangea" IPv6/IPsec stack by WIDE Project.
The following organizations participated in the project:
FreeBSD, NetBSD and DragonFly BSD integrated IPsec and IPv6 code from the KAME project; OpenBSD integrated just IPv6 code rather than both (having developed their own IPsec stack). Linux also integrated code from the project in its native IPsec implementation. [4]
The KAME project collaborated with the TAHI Project [5] (which develops and provides verification-technology for IPv6), the USAGI Project [6] and the WIDE Project.
racoon, KAME's user-space daemon, handles Internet Key Exchange (IKE). In Linux systems it forms part of the ipsec-tools package.
The KAME project, a sub-project of the WIDE Project, was a joint effort of six organizations in Japan which aimed to provide a free IPv6 and IPsec (for both IPv4 and IPv6) protocol stack implementation for variants of the BSD Unix computer operating-system. [1] The project began in 1998 and on November 7, 2005 it was announced that the project would be finished at the end of March 2006. [2] The name KAME is a short version of Karigome, the location of the project's offices beside Keio University SFC. [3]
KAME Project's code is based on "WIDE Hydrangea" IPv6/IPsec stack by WIDE Project.
The following organizations participated in the project:
FreeBSD, NetBSD and DragonFly BSD integrated IPsec and IPv6 code from the KAME project; OpenBSD integrated just IPv6 code rather than both (having developed their own IPsec stack). Linux also integrated code from the project in its native IPsec implementation. [4]
The KAME project collaborated with the TAHI Project [5] (which develops and provides verification-technology for IPv6), the USAGI Project [6] and the WIDE Project.
racoon, KAME's user-space daemon, handles Internet Key Exchange (IKE). In Linux systems it forms part of the ipsec-tools package.