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NAME

     ip6 — Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) network layer

SYNOPSIS

     #include <sys/socket.h>
     #include <netinet/in.h>

     int
     socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_RAW, proto);

DESCRIPTION

     The IPv6 network layer is used by the IPv6 protocol family for transporting data.  IPv6
     packets contain an IPv6 header that is not provided as part of the payload contents when
     passed to an application.  IPv6 header options affect the behavior of this protocol and may
     be used by high-level protocols (such as the tcp(4) and udp(4) protocols) as well as
     directly by “raw sockets”, which process IPv6 messages at a lower-level and may be useful
     for developing new protocols and special-purpose applications.

   Header
     All IPv6 packets begin with an IPv6 header.  When data received by the kernel are passed to
     the application, this header is not included in buffer, even when raw sockets are being
     used.  Likewise, when data are sent to the kernel for transmit from the application, the
     buffer is not examined for an IPv6 header: the kernel always constructs the header.  To
     directly access IPv6 headers from received packets and specify them as part of the buffer
     passed to the kernel, link-level access (bpf(4), for example) must instead be utilized.

     The header has the following definition:

           struct ip6_hdr {
                union {
                     struct ip6_hdrctl {
                          uint32_t ip6_un1_flow;   /* 20 bits of flow ID */
                          uint16_t ip6_un1_plen;   /* payload length */
                          uint8_t  ip6_un1_nxt;    /* next header */
                          uint8_t  ip6_un1_hlim;   /* hop limit */
                     } ip6_un1;
                     uint8_t ip6_un2_vfc;  /* version and class */
                } ip6_ctlun;
                struct in6_addr ip6_src;   /* source address */
                struct in6_addr ip6_dst;   /* destination address */
           } __packed;

           #define ip6_vfc         ip6_ctlun.ip6_un2_vfc
           #define ip6_flow        ip6_ctlun.ip6_un1.ip6_un1_flow
           #define ip6_plen        ip6_ctlun.ip6_un1.ip6_un1_plen
           #define ip6_nxt         ip6_ctlun.ip6_un1.ip6_un1_nxt
           #define ip6_hlim        ip6_ctlun.ip6_un1.ip6_un1_hlim
           #define ip6_hops        ip6_ctlun.ip6_un1.ip6_un1_hlim

     All fields are in network-byte order.  Any options specified (see Options below) must also
     be specified in network-byte order.

     ip6_flow specifies the flow ID.  ip6_plen specifies the payload length.  ip6_nxt specifies
     the type of the next header.  ip6_hlim specifies the hop limit.

     The top 4 bits of ip6_vfc specify the class and the bottom 4 bits specify the version.

     ip6_src and ip6_dst specify the source and destination addresses.

     The IPv6 header may be followed by any number of extension headers that start with the
     following generic definition:

           struct ip6_ext {
                uint8_t ip6e_nxt;
                uint8_t ip6e_len;
           } __packed;

   Options
     IPv6 allows header options on packets to manipulate the behavior of the protocol.  These
     options and other control requests are accessed with the getsockopt(2) and setsockopt(2)
     system calls at level IPPROTO_IPV6 and by using ancillary data in recvmsg(2) and sendmsg(2).
     They can be used to access most of the fields in the IPv6 header and extension headers.

     The following socket options are supported:

     IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS int *
             Get or set the default hop limit header field for outgoing unicast datagrams sent on
             this socket.

     IPV6_MULTICAST_IF u_int *
             Get or set the interface from which multicast packets will be sent.  For hosts with
             multiple interfaces, each multicast transmission is sent from the primary network
             interface.  The interface is specified as its index as provided by
             if_nametoindex(3).  A value of zero specifies the default interface.

     IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS int *
             Get or set the default hop limit header field for outgoing multicast datagrams sent
             on this socket.  This option controls the scope of multicast datagram transmissions.

             Datagrams with a hop limit of 1 are not forwarded beyond the local network.
             Multicast datagrams with a hop limit of zero will not be transmitted on any network
             but may be delivered locally if the sending host belongs to the destination group
             and if multicast loopback (see below) has not been disabled on the sending socket.
             Multicast datagrams with a hop limit greater than 1 may be forwarded to the other
             networks if a multicast router (such as mrouted(8) (ports/net/mrouted)) is attached
             to the local network.

     IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP u_int *
             Get or set the status of whether multicast datagrams will be looped back for local
             delivery when a multicast datagram is sent to a group to which the sending host
             belongs.

             This option improves performance for applications that may have no more than one
             instance on a single host (such as a router daemon) by eliminating the overhead of
             receiving their own transmissions.  It should generally not be used by applications
             for which there may be more than one instance on a single host (such as a
             conferencing program) or for which the sender does not belong to the destination
             group (such as a time-querying program).

             A multicast datagram sent with an initial hop limit greater than 1 may be delivered
             to the sending host on a different interface from that on which it was sent if the
             host belongs to the destination group on that other interface.  The multicast
             loopback control option has no effect on such delivery.

     IPV6_JOIN_GROUP struct ipv6_mreq *
             Join a multicast group.  A host must become a member of a multicast group before it
             can receive datagrams sent to the group.

             struct ipv6_mreq {
                     struct in6_addr ipv6mr_multiaddr;
                     unsigned int    ipv6mr_interface;
             };

             ipv6mr_interface may be set to zeroes to choose the default multicast interface or
             to the index of a particular multicast-capable interface if the host is multihomed.
             Membership is associated with a single interface; programs running on multihomed
             hosts may need to join the same group on more than one interface.

             If the multicast address is unspecified (i.e., all zeroes), messages from all
             multicast addresses will be accepted by this group.  Note that setting to this value
             requires superuser privileges.

     IPV6_LEAVE_GROUP struct ipv6_mreq *
             Drop membership from the associated multicast group.  Memberships are automatically
             dropped when the socket is closed or when the process exits.

     IPV6_PORTRANGE int *
             Get or set the allocation policy of ephemeral ports for when the kernel
             automatically binds a local address to this socket.  The following values are
             available:

             IPV6_PORTRANGE_DEFAULT  Use the regular range of non-reserved ports (varies, see
                                     ip(4)).
             IPV6_PORTRANGE_HIGH     Use a high range (varies, see ip(4)).
             IPV6_PORTRANGE_LOW      Use a low, reserved range (600-1023, see ip(4)).

     IPV6_PKTINFO int *
             Get or set whether additional information about subsequent packets will be provided
             as ancillary data along with the payload in subsequent recvmsg(2) calls.  The
             information is stored in the following structure in the ancillary data returned:

             struct in6_pktinfo {
                     struct in6_addr ipi6_addr;    /* src/dst IPv6 address */
                     unsigned int    ipi6_ifindex; /* send/recv if index */
             };

     IPV6_HOPLIMIT int *
             Get or set whether the hop limit header field from subsequent packets will be
             provided as ancillary data along with the payload in subsequent recvmsg(2) calls.
             The value is stored as an int in the ancillary data returned.

     IPV6_HOPOPTS int *
             Get or set whether the hop-by-hop options from subsequent packets will be provided
             as ancillary data along with the payload in subsequent recvmsg(2) calls.  The option
             is stored in the following structure in the ancillary data returned:

             struct ip6_hbh {
                     uint8_t ip6h_nxt;       /* next header */
                     uint8_t ip6h_len;       /* length in units of 8 octets */
             /* followed by options */
             } __packed;

             The inet6_option_space() routine and family of routines may be used to manipulate
             this data.

             This option requires superuser privileges.

     IPV6_DSTOPTS int *
             Get or set whether the destination options from subsequent packets will be provided
             as ancillary data along with the payload in subsequent recvmsg(2) calls.  The option
             is stored in the following structure in the ancillary data returned:

             struct ip6_dest {
                     uint8_t ip6d_nxt;       /* next header */
                     uint8_t ip6d_len;       /* length in units of 8 octets */
             /* followed by options */
             } __packed;

             The inet6_option_space() routine and family of routines may be used to manipulate
             this data.

             This option requires superuser privileges.

     IPV6_TCLASS int *
             Get or set the value of the traffic class field used for outgoing datagrams on this
             socket.  The value must be between -1 and 255.  A value of -1 resets to the default
             value.

     IPV6_RECVTCLASS int *
             Get or set the status of whether the traffic class header field will be provided as
             ancillary data along with the payload in subsequent recvmsg(2) calls.  The header
             field is stored as a single value of type int.

     IPV6_RTHDR int *
             Get or set whether the routing header from subsequent packets will be provided as
             ancillary data along with the payload in subsequent recvmsg(2) calls.  The header is
             stored in the following structure in the ancillary data returned:

             struct ip6_rthdr {
                     uint8_t ip6r_nxt;       /* next header */
                     uint8_t ip6r_len;       /* length in units of 8 octets */
                     uint8_t ip6r_type;      /* routing type */
                     uint8_t ip6r_segleft;   /* segments left */
             /* followed by routing-type-specific data */
             } __packed;

             The inet6_option_space() routine and family of routines may be used to manipulate
             this data.

             This option requires superuser privileges.

     IPV6_PKTOPTIONS struct cmsghdr *
             Get or set all header options and extension headers at one time on the last packet
             sent or received on the socket.  All options must fit within the size of an mbuf
             (see mbuf(9)).  Options are specified as a series of cmsghdr structures followed by
             corresponding values.  cmsg_level is set to IPPROTO_IPV6, cmsg_type to one of the
             other values in this list, and trailing data to the option value.  When setting
             options, if the length optlen to setsockopt(2) is zero, all header options will be
             reset to their default values.  Otherwise, the length should specify the size the
             series of control messages consumes.

             Instead of using sendmsg(2) to specify option values, the ancillary data used in
             these calls that correspond to the desired header options may be directly specified
             as the control message in the series of control messages provided as the argument to
             setsockopt(2).

     IPV6_CHECKSUM int *
             Get or set the byte offset into a packet where the 16-bit checksum is located.  When
             set, this byte offset is where incoming packets will be expected to have checksums
             of their data stored and where outgoing packets will have checksums of their data
             computed and stored by the kernel.  A value of -1 specifies that no checksums will
             be checked on incoming packets and that no checksums will be computed or stored on
             outgoing packets.  The offset of the checksum for ICMPv6 sockets cannot be relocated
             or turned off.

     IPV6_V6ONLY int *
             Get or set whether only IPv6 connections can be made to this socket.  For wildcard
             sockets, this can restrict connections to IPv6 only.

     IPV6_USE_MIN_MTU int *
             Get or set whether the minimal IPv6 maximum transmission unit (MTU) size will be
             used to avoid fragmentation from occurring for subsequent outgoing datagrams.

     IPV6_AUTH_LEVEL int *
             Get or set the ipsec(4) authentication level.

     IPV6_ESP_TRANS_LEVEL int *
             Get or set the ESP transport level.

     IPV6_ESP_NETWORK_LEVEL int *
             Get or set the ESP encapsulation level.

     IPV6_IPCOMP_LEVEL int *
             Get or set the ipcomp(4) level.

     The IPV6_PKTINFO, IPV6_HOPLIMIT, IPV6_HOPOPTS, IPV6_DSTOPTS, and IPV6_RTHDR options will
     return ancillary data along with payload contents in subsequent recvmsg(2) calls with
     cmsg_level set to IPPROTO_IPV6 and cmsg_type set to respective option name value (e.g.,
     IPV6_HOPTLIMIT).  These options may also be used directly as ancillary cmsg_type values in
     sendmsg(2) to set options on the packet being transmitted by the call.  The cmsg_level value
     must be IPPROTO_IPV6.  For these options, the ancillary data object value format is the same
     as the value returned as explained for each when received with recvmsg(2).

     Note that using sendmsg(2) to specify options on particular packets works only on UDP and
     raw sockets.  To manipulate header options for packets on TCP sockets, only the socket
     options may be used.

     In some cases, there are multiple APIs defined for manipulating an IPv6 header field.  A
     good example is the outgoing interface for multicast datagrams, which can be set by the
     IPV6_MULTICAST_IF socket option, through the IPV6_PKTINFO option, and through the
     sin6_scope_id field of the socket address passed to the sendto(2) system call.

     Resolving these conflicts is implementation dependent.  This implementation determines the
     value in the following way: options specified by using ancillary data (i.e., sendmsg(2)) are
     considered first, options specified by using IPV6_PKTOPTIONS to set “sticky” options are
     considered second, options specified by using the individual, basic, and direct socket
     options (e.g., IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS) are considered third, and options specified in the socket
     address supplied to sendto(2) are the last choice.

   Multicasting
     IPv6 multicasting is supported only on AF_INET6 sockets of type SOCK_DGRAM and SOCK_RAW, and
     only on networks where the interface driver supports multicasting.  Socket options (see
     above) that manipulate membership of multicast groups and other multicast options include
     IPV6_MULTICAST_IF, IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS, IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP, IPV6_LEAVE_GROUP, and
     IPV6_JOIN_GROUP.

   Raw Sockets
     Raw IPv6 sockets are connectionless and are normally used with the sendto(2) and recvfrom(2)
     calls, although the connect(2) call may be used to fix the destination address for future
     outgoing packets so that send(2) may instead be used and the bind(2) call may be used to fix
     the source address for future outgoing packets instead of having the kernel choose a source
     address.

     By using connect(2) or bind(2), raw socket input is constrained to only packets with their
     source address matching the socket destination address if connect(2) was used and to packets
     with their destination address matching the socket source address if bind(2) was used.

     If the proto argument to socket(2) is zero, the default protocol (IPPROTO_RAW) is used for
     outgoing packets.  For incoming packets, protocols recognized by kernel are not passed to
     the application socket (e.g., tcp(4) and udp(4)) except for some ICMPv6 messages.  The
     ICMPv6 messages not passed to raw sockets include echo, timestamp, and address mask
     requests.  If proto is non-zero, only packets with this protocol will be passed to the
     socket.

     IPv6 fragments are also not passed to application sockets until they have been reassembled.
     If reception of all packets is desired, link-level access (such as bpf(4)) must be used
     instead.

     Outgoing packets automatically have an IPv6 header prepended to them (based on the
     destination address and the protocol number the socket was created with).  Incoming packets
     are received by an application without the IPv6 header or any extension headers.

     Outgoing packets will be fragmented automatically by the kernel if they are too large.
     Incoming packets will be reassembled before being sent to the raw socket, so packet
     fragments or fragment headers will never be seen on a raw socket.

EXAMPLES

     The following determines the hop limit on the next packet received:

     struct iovec iov[2];
     u_char buf[BUFSIZ];
     struct cmsghdr *cm;
     struct msghdr m;
     int optval;
     bool found;
     u_char data[2048];

     /* Create socket. */

     (void)memset(&m, 0, sizeof(m));
     (void)memset(&iov, 0, sizeof(iov));

     iov[0].iov_base = data;         /* buffer for packet payload */
     iov[0].iov_len = sizeof(data);  /* expected packet length */

     m.msg_name = &from;             /* sockaddr_in6 of peer */
     m.msg_namelen = sizeof(from);
     m.msg_iov = iov;
     m.msg_iovlen = 1;
     m.msg_control = (caddr_t)buf;   /* buffer for control messages */
     m.msg_controllen = sizeof(buf);

     /*
      * Enable the hop limit value from received packets to be
      * returned along with the payload.
      */
     optval = 1;
     if (setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_HOPLIMIT, &optval,
         sizeof(optval)) == -1)
             err(1, "setsockopt");

     found = false;
     do {
             if (recvmsg(s, &m, 0) == -1)
                     err(1, "recvmsg");
             for (cm = CMSG_FIRSTHDR(&m); cm != NULL;
                  cm = CMSG_NXTHDR(&m, cm)) {
                     if (cm->cmsg_level == IPPROTO_IPV6 &&
                         cm->cmsg_type == IPV6_HOPLIMIT &&
                         cm->cmsg_len == CMSG_LEN(sizeof(int))) {
                             found = true;
                             (void)printf("hop limit: %d\n",
                                 *(int *)CMSG_DATA(cm));
                             break;
                     }
             }
     } while (!found);

DIAGNOSTICS

     A socket operation may fail with one of the following errors returned:

     [EISCONN]        when trying to establish a connection on a socket which already has one or
                      when trying to send a datagram with the destination address specified and
                      the socket is already connected.

     [ENOTCONN]       when trying to send a datagram, but no destination address is specified,
                      and the socket has not been connected.

     [ENOBUFS]        when the system runs out of memory for an internal data structure.

     [EADDRNOTAVAIL]  when an attempt is made to create a socket with a network address for which
                      no network interface exists.

     [EACCES]         when an attempt is made to create a raw IPv6 socket by a non-privileged
                      process.

     The following errors specific to IPv6 may occur when setting or getting header options:

     [EINVAL]         An unknown socket option name was given.

     [EINVAL]         An ancillary data object was improperly formed.

SEE ALSO

     getsockopt(2), recv(2), send(2), setsockopt(2), socket(2), CMSG_DATA(3), if_nametoindex(3),
     bpf(4), icmp6(4), inet6(4), ip(4), netintro(4), tcp(4), udp(4)

     W. Stevens and M. Thomas, Advanced Sockets API for IPv6, RFC 2292, February 1998.

     S. Deering and R. Hinden, Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) Specification, RFC 2460,
     December 1998.

     R. Gilligan, S. Thomson, J. Bound, and W. Stevens, Basic Socket Interface Extensions for
     IPv6, RFC 2553, March 1999.

     W. Stevens, B. Fenner, and A. Rudoff, UNIX Network Programming, third edition.

STANDARDS

     Most of the socket options are defined in RFC 2292 or RFC 2553.  The IPV6_V6ONLY socket
     option is defined in RFC 3493 Section 5.3.  The IPV6_PORTRANGE socket option and the
     conflict resolution rule are not defined in the RFCs and should be considered implementation
     dependent.