* Now uses tun, not slip. All modern Linux kernels have tun support,
and we weren't portable to non-Linux anyway. slattach has sometimes
been implicated in kernel problems. Interfaces are now called
* Now uses tun, not slip. All modern Linux kernels have tun support,
and we weren't portable to non-Linux anyway. slattach has sometimes
been implicated in kernel problems. Interfaces are now called
- "userv%d" (ie, userv0, userv1, etc.).
+ "userv%d" (ie, userv0, userv1, etc.). Only "slip" is now supported.