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PROLOG

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of
       this interface may differ (consult the corresponding Linux  manual  page  for  details  of
       Linux behavior), or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME

       netinet/in.h — Internet address family

SYNOPSIS

       #include <netinet/in.h>

DESCRIPTION

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the following types:

       in_port_t Equivalent to the type uint16_t as described in <inttypes.h>.

       in_addr_t Equivalent to the type uint32_t as described in <inttypes.h>.

       The   <netinet_in.h>   header   shall   define   the  sa_family_t  type  as  described  in
       <sys/socket.h>.

       The <netinet_in.h> header shall define the uint8_t and  uint32_t  types  as  described  in
       <inttypes.h>.   Inclusion  of  the <netinet/in.h> header may also make visible all symbols
       from <inttypes.h> and <sys/socket.h>.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the in_addr structure, which shall include at least
       the following member:

           in_addr_t  s_addr

       The  <netinet/in.h>  header shall define the sockaddr_in structure, which shall include at
       least the following members:

           sa_family_t     sin_family   AF_INET.
           in_port_t       sin_port     Port number.
           struct in_addr  sin_addr     IP address.

       The sin_port and sin_addr members shall be in network byte order.

       The sockaddr_in structure is used to store addresses  for  the  Internet  address  family.
       Pointers  to  this  type  shall  be cast by applications to struct sockaddr * for use with
       socket functions.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the in6_addr  structure,  which  shall  include  at
       least the following member:

           uint8_t s6_addr[16]

       This array is used to contain a 128-bit IPv6 address, stored in network byte order.

       The  <netinet/in.h> header shall define the sockaddr_in6 structure, which shall include at
       least the following members:

           sa_family_t      sin6_family    AF_INET6.
           in_port_t        sin6_port      Port number.
           uint32_t         sin6_flowinfo  IPv6 traffic class and flow information.
           struct in6_addr  sin6_addr      IPv6 address.
           uint32_t         sin6_scope_id  Set of interfaces for a scope.

       The sin6_port and sin6_addr members shall be in network byte order.

       Prior to calling a function in this  standard  which  reads  values  from  a  sockaddr_in6
       structure  (for  example,  bind()  or  connect()),  the  application shall ensure that all
       members of the structure, including any  additional  non-standard  members,  if  any,  are
       initialized.  If the sockaddr_in6 structure has a non-standard member, and that member has
       a value other than the value that would result from default initialization,  the  behavior
       of  any  function  in  this  standard that reads values from the sockaddr_in6 structure is
       implementation-defined. All functions in this standard that return data in a  sockaddr_in6
       structure (for example, getaddrinfo() or accept()) shall initialize the structure in a way
       that meets the above requirements, and shall ensure that each non-standard member, if any,
       has  a  value  that  produces  the  same  behavior  as default initialization would in all
       functions in this standard which read values from a sockaddr_in6 structure.

       The sin6_scope_id field is a 32-bit  integer  that  identifies  a  set  of  interfaces  as
       appropriate  for the scope of the address carried in the sin6_addr field. For a link scope
       sin6_addr, the application shall ensure that sin6_scope_id is a link  index.  For  a  site
       scope  sin6_addr,  the  application  shall  ensure that sin6_scope_id is a site index. The
       mapping of sin6_scope_id to an interface or set of interfaces is implementation-defined.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall declare the following external variable:

           const struct in6_addr in6addr_any

       This variable is initialized by the system to  contain  the  wildcard  IPv6  address.  The
       <netinet/in.h> header also defines the IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT macro. This macro must be constant
       at compile time and can be used to initialize a variable of type struct  in6_addr  to  the
       IPv6 wildcard address.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall declare the following external variable:

           const struct in6_addr in6addr_loopback

       This  variable  is  initialized  by  the  system to contain the loopback IPv6 address. The
       <netinet/in.h> header also defines the IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK_INIT macro.  This  macro  must  be
       constant  at compile time and can be used to initialize a variable of type struct in6_addr
       to the IPv6 loopback address.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the ipv6_mreq structure,  which  shall  include  at
       least the following members:

           struct in6_addr  ipv6mr_multiaddr  IPv6 multicast address.
           unsigned         ipv6mr_interface  Interface index.

       The  <netinet/in.h> header shall define the following symbolic constants for use as values
       of the level argument of getsockopt() and setsockopt():

       IPPROTO_IP      Internet protocol.

       IPPROTO_IPV6    Internet Protocol Version 6.

       IPPROTO_ICMP    Control message protocol.

       IPPROTO_RAW     Raw IP Packets Protocol.

       IPPROTO_TCP     Transmission control protocol.

       IPPROTO_UDP     User datagram protocol.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the following symbolic constant for use as a  local
       address in the structure passed to bind():

       INADDR_ANY      IPv4 wildcard address.

       The  <netinet/in.h>  header  shall  define  the  following  symbolic constant for use as a
       destination address in the structures passed to connect(), sendmsg(), and sendto():

       INADDR_BROADCAST
                       IPv4 broadcast address.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the following symbolic  constant,  with  the  value
       specified, to help applications declare buffers of the proper size to store IPv4 addresses
       in string form:

       INET_ADDRSTRLEN 16. Length of the string form for IP.

       The htonl(), htons(), ntohl(), and ntohs() functions shall be available  as  described  in
       <arpa/inet.h>.   Inclusion  of the <netinet/in.h> header may also make visible all symbols
       from <arpa/inet.h>.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the following symbolic  constant,  with  the  value
       specified, to help applications declare buffers of the proper size to store IPv6 addresses
       in string form:

       INET6_ADDRSTRLEN
                       46. Length of the string form for IPv6.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the following  symbolic  constants,  with  distinct
       integer  values,  for  use in the option_name argument in the getsockopt() or setsockopt()
       functions at protocol level IPPROTO_IPV6:

       IPV6_JOIN_GROUP Join a multicast group.

       IPV6_LEAVE_GROUP
                       Quit a multicast group.

       IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS
                       Multicast hop limit.

       IPV6_MULTICAST_IF
                       Interface to use for outgoing multicast packets.

       IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP
                       Multicast packets are delivered back to the local application.

       IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS
                       Unicast hop limit.

       IPV6_V6ONLY     Restrict AF_INET6 socket to IPv6 communications only.

       The <netinet/in.h> header shall define the following macros that  test  for  special  IPv6
       addresses.  Each  macro  is  of  type int and takes a single argument of type const struct
       in6_addr *:

       IN6_IS_ADDR_UNSPECIFIED
             Unspecified address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_LOOPBACK
             Loopback address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_MULTICAST
             Multicast address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_LINKLOCAL
             Unicast link-local address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_SITELOCAL
             Unicast site-local address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_V4MAPPED
             IPv4 mapped address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_V4COMPAT
             IPv4-compatible address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_NODELOCAL
             Multicast node-local address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_LINKLOCAL
             Multicast link-local address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_SITELOCAL
             Multicast site-local address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_ORGLOCAL
             Multicast organization-local address.

       IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_GLOBAL
             Multicast global address.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE

       Although applications are required to initialize all members (including  any  non-standard
       ones) of a sockaddr_in6 structure, the same is not required for the sockaddr_in structure,
       since historically many applications only initialized the standard members. Despite  this,
       applications  are  encouraged  to initialize sockaddr_in structures in a manner similar to
       the required initialization of sockaddr_in6 structures.

       Although it is common practice to initialize a sockaddr_in6 structure using:

           struct sockaddr_in6 sa;
           memset(&sa, 0, sizeof sa);

       this method is not portable according to this standard, because the structure can  contain
       pointer  or  floating-point  members  that  are  not  required  to  have  an all-bits-zero
       representation  after  default  initialization.  Portable  methods  make  use  of  default
       initialization; for example:

           struct sockaddr_in6 sa = { 0 };

       or:

           static struct sockaddr_in6 sa_init;
           struct sockaddr_in6 sa = sa_init;

       A  future version of this standard may require that a pointer object with an all-bits-zero
       representation is a null pointer, and that sockaddr_in6 does not have  any  floating-point
       members  if a floating-point object with an all-bits-zero representation does not have the
       value 0.0.

RATIONALE

       The INADDR_ANY and INADDR_BROADCAST values are  byte-order-neutral  and  thus  their  byte
       order is not specified. Many implementations have additional constants as extensions, such
       as INADDR_LOOPBACK, that are not byte-order-neutral. Traditionally, these constants are in
       host byte order, requiring the use of htonl() when using them in a sockaddr_in structure.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       Section 4.10, Host and Network Byte Orders, <arpa_inet.h>, <inttypes.h>, <sys_socket.h>

       The System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1‐2017, connect(), getsockopt(), htonl(), sendmsg(),
       sendto(), setsockopt()

COPYRIGHT

       Portions of this text are reprinted and  reproduced  in  electronic  form  from  IEEE  Std
       1003.1-2017,  Standard  for  Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface
       (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, 2018 Edition, Copyright (C)  2018  by
       the  Institute  of  Electrical  and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group.  In the
       event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE  and  The  Open  Group
       Standard,  the  original  IEEE  and  The  Open Group Standard is the referee document. The
       original Standard can be obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

       Any typographical or formatting errors that appear in this page are most  likely  to  have
       been  introduced  during  the conversion of the source files to man page format. To report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .