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NAME

       networking — introduction to networking facilities

SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/types.h>
       #include <sys/time.h>
       #include <sys/socket.h>
       #include <net/if.h>
       #include <net/route.h>

DESCRIPTION

       This  section  is  a  general  introduction  to  the  networking  facilities  available  in  the  system.
       Documentation in this part of section 4 is broken up  into  three  areas:  protocol  families  (domains),
       protocols, and network interfaces.

       All  network  protocols are associated with a specific protocol family.  A protocol family provides basic
       services to the protocol implementation to allow it to function within a  specific  network  environment.
       These services may include packet fragmentation and reassembly, routing, addressing, and basic transport.
       A protocol family may support multiple methods of addressing, though the current protocol implementations
       do not.  A protocol family is normally comprised of a number of protocols, one per socket(2) type.  It is
       not  required  that  a  protocol family support all socket types.  A protocol family may contain multiple
       protocols supporting the same socket abstraction.

       A protocol supports one of the socket abstractions detailed in socket(2).  A  specific  protocol  may  be
       accessed  either  by  creating a socket of the appropriate type and protocol family, or by requesting the
       protocol explicitly when creating a socket.  Protocols normally accept only one type of  address  format,
       usually  determined  by  the  addressing  structure inherent in the design of the protocol family/network
       architecture.  Certain semantics of the basic socket abstractions are protocol specific.   All  protocols
       are  expected  to support the basic model for their particular socket type, but may, in addition, provide
       non-standard facilities or extensions to a mechanism.  For example, a protocol supporting the SOCK_STREAM
       abstraction may allow more than one byte of out-of-band data to be transmitted per out-of-band message.

       A network interface is similar to a device interface.  Network interfaces comprise the  lowest  layer  of
       the  networking  subsystem, interacting with the actual transport hardware.  An interface may support one
       or more protocol families and/or address formats.  The SYNOPSIS section of each network  interface  entry
       gives  a  sample  specification  of  the related drivers for use in providing a system description to the
       config(8) program.  The DIAGNOSTICS section lists messages which may appear on the console and/or in  the
       system error log, /var/log/messages (see syslogd(8)), due to errors in device operation.

PROTOCOLS

       The  system  currently supports the Internet protocols, the Xerox Network Systems(tm) protocols, and some
       of the ISO OSI protocols.  Raw socket interfaces are provided to the IP protocol layer of  the  Internet,
       and  to  the  IDP  protocol  of  Xerox NS.  Consult the appropriate manual pages in this section for more
       information regarding the support for each protocol family.

ADDRESSING

       Associated with each protocol family is an address format.  All network addresses  adhere  to  a  general
       structure,  called  a  sockaddr, described below.  However, each protocol imposes finer and more specific
       structure, generally renaming the variant, which is discussed in the protocol family manual page  alluded
       to above.

             struct sockaddr {
                 u_char      sa_len;
                 u_char      sa_family;
                 char        sa_data[14];
             };

       The  field  sa_len  contains the total length of the structure, which may exceed 16 bytes.  The following
       address values for sa_family are known to the system (and additional formats  are  defined  for  possible
       future implementation):

       #define    AF_UNIX      1    /* local to host (pipes, portals) */
       #define    AF_INET      2    /* internetwork: UDP, TCP, etc. */
       #define    AF_NS        6    /* Xerox NS protocols */
       #define    AF_CCITT     10   /* CCITT protocols, X.25 etc */
       #define    AF_HYLINK    15   /* NSC Hyperchannel */
       #define    AF_ISO       18   /* ISO protocols */

ROUTING

       FreeBSD  provides  some  packet routing facilities.  The kernel maintains a routing information database,
       which is used in selecting the appropriate network interface when transmitting packets.

       A user process (or possibly multiple co-operating processes) maintains this database by sending  messages
       over a special kind of socket.  This supplants fixed size ioctl(2) used in earlier releases.

       This facility is described in route(4).

INTERFACES

       Each network interface in a system corresponds to a path through which messages may be sent and received.
       A  network  interface usually has a hardware device associated with it, though certain interfaces such as
       the loopback interface, lo(4), do not.

       The following ioctl(2) calls may be used to manipulate network interfaces.  The  ioctl()  is  made  on  a
       socket  (typically  of type SOCK_DGRAM) in the desired domain.  Most of the requests supported in earlier
       releases take an ifreq structure as its parameter.  This structure has the form

       struct  ifreq {
       #define    IFNAMSIZ    16
           char    ifr_name[IFNAMSIZ];        /* if name, e.g. "en0" */
           union {
               struct    sockaddr ifru_addr;
               struct    sockaddr ifru_dstaddr;
               struct    sockaddr ifru_broadaddr;
               struct    ifreq_buffer ifru_buffer;
               short     ifru_flags[2];
               short     ifru_index;
               int       ifru_metric;
               int       ifru_mtu;
               int       ifru_phys;
               int       ifru_media;
               caddr_t   ifru_data;
               int       ifru_cap[2];
           } ifr_ifru;
       #define ifr_addr      ifr_ifru.ifru_addr      /* address */
       #define ifr_dstaddr   ifr_ifru.ifru_dstaddr   /* other end of p-to-p link */
       #define ifr_broadaddr ifr_ifru.ifru_broadaddr /* broadcast address */
       #define ifr_buffer    ifr_ifru.ifru_buffer    /* user supplied buffer with its length */
       #define ifr_flags     ifr_ifru.ifru_flags[0]  /* flags (low 16 bits) */
       #define ifr_flagshigh ifr_ifru.ifru_flags[1]  /* flags (high 16 bits) */
       #define ifr_metric    ifr_ifru.ifru_metric    /* metric */
       #define ifr_mtu       ifr_ifru.ifru_mtu       /* mtu */
       #define ifr_phys      ifr_ifru.ifru_phys      /* physical wire */
       #define ifr_media     ifr_ifru.ifru_media     /* physical media */
       #define ifr_data      ifr_ifru.ifru_data      /* for use by interface */
       #define ifr_reqcap    ifr_ifru.ifru_cap[0]    /* requested capabilities */
       #define ifr_curcap    ifr_ifru.ifru_cap[1]    /* current capabilities */
       #define ifr_index     ifr_ifru.ifru_index     /* interface index */
       };

       Calls which are now deprecated are:

       SIOCSIFADDR     Set interface address  for  protocol  family.   Following  the  address  assignment,  the
                       “initialization” routine for the interface is called.

       SIOCSIFDSTADDR  Set point to point address for protocol family and interface.

       SIOCSIFBRDADDR  Set broadcast address for protocol family and interface.

       Ioctl()  requests  to  obtain  addresses and requests both to set and retrieve other data are still fully
       supported and use the ifreq structure:

       SIOCGIFADDR     Get interface address for protocol family.

       SIOCGIFDSTADDR  Get point to point address for protocol family and interface.

       SIOCGIFBRDADDR  Get broadcast address for protocol family and interface.

       SIOCSIFCAP      Attempt to set the enabled capabilities field for the  interface  to  the  value  of  the
                       ifr_reqcap  field  of  the  ifreq  structure.   Note  that,  depending  on the particular
                       interface features, some capabilities may appear hard-coded to  enabled,  or  toggling  a
                       capability  may  affect  the  status  of other ones.  The supported capabilities field is
                       read-only, and the ifr_curcap field is unused by this call.

       SIOCGIFCAP      Get the interface capabilities fields.  The values for supported and enabled capabilities
                       will be returned in  the  ifr_reqcap  and  ifr_curcap  fields  of  the  ifreq  structure,
                       respectively.

       SIOCGIFDESCR    Get  the  interface description, returned in the buffer field of ifru_buffer struct.  The
                       user supplied buffer length should be defined in the length field of  ifru_buffer  struct
                       passed  in  as parameter, and the length would include the terminating nul character.  If
                       there is not enough space to hold the interface length, no copy would  be  done  and  the
                       buffer  field  of  ifru_buffer  would  be  set to NULL.  The kernel will store the buffer
                       length in the  length  field  upon  return,  regardless  whether  the  buffer  itself  is
                       sufficient to hold the data.

       SIOCSIFDESCR    Set  the  interface  description  to the value of the buffer field of ifru_buffer struct,
                       with length field specifying its length (counting the terminating nul).

       SIOCSIFFLAGS    Set interface flags field.  If the interface is  marked  down,  any  processes  currently
                       routing  packets through the interface are notified; some interfaces may be reset so that
                       incoming packets are no  longer  received.   When  marked  up  again,  the  interface  is
                       reinitialized.

       SIOCGIFFLAGS    Get interface flags.

       SIOCSIFMETRIC   Set interface routing metric.  The metric is used only by user-level routers.

       SIOCGIFMETRIC   Get interface metric.

       SIOCIFCREATE    Attempt to create the specified interface.  If the interface name is given without a unit
                       number  the  system will attempt to create a new interface with an arbitrary unit number.
                       On successful return the ifr_name field will contain the new interface name.

       SIOCIFDESTROY   Attempt to destroy the specified interface.

       There are two requests that make use of a new structure:

       SIOCAIFADDR     An interface may have more than one address associated with it in some  protocols.   This
                       request  provides  a  means to add additional addresses (or modify characteristics of the
                       primary address if the default address for the address family is specified).  Rather than
                       making separate calls to set destination or broadcast addresses, or network masks (now an
                       integral feature of multiple protocols) a separate structure is used to specify all three
                       facets simultaneously (see below).  One would use a slightly  tailored  version  of  this
                       struct  specific  to  each  family (replacing each sockaddr by one of the family-specific
                       type).  Where the sockaddr itself is larger than the default size, one  needs  to  modify
                       the ioctl() identifier itself to include the total size, as described in ioctl().

       SIOCDIFADDR     This  requests  deletes the specified address from the list associated with an interface.
                       It also uses the ifaliasreq structure to allow for the possibility of protocols  allowing
                       multiple   masks   or   destination  addresses,  and  also  adopts  the  convention  that
                       specification of the default address means to delete the first address for the  interface
                       belonging to the address family in which the original socket was opened.

       SIOCGIFCONF     Get  interface configuration list.  This request takes an ifconf structure (see below) as
                       a value-result parameter.  The ifc_len field should be initially set to the size  of  the
                       buffer  pointed  to  by  ifc_buf.  On return it will contain the length, in bytes, of the
                       configuration list.

       SIOCIFGCLONERS  Get list of clonable interfaces.  This request takes an if_clonereq structure (see below)
                       as a value-result parameter.  The ifcr_count  field  should  be  set  to  the  number  of
                       IFNAMSIZ  sized  strings  that  can  be  fit in the buffer pointed to by ifcr_buffer.  On
                       return, ifcr_total will be set to the  number  of  clonable  interfaces  and  the  buffer
                       pointed to by ifcr_buffer will be filled with the names of clonable interfaces aligned on
                       IFNAMSIZ boundaries.

       /*
       * Structure used in SIOCAIFCONF request.
       */
       struct ifaliasreq {
               char    ifra_name[IFNAMSIZ];   /* if name, e.g. "en0" */
               struct  sockaddr        ifra_addr;
               struct  sockaddr        ifra_broadaddr;
               struct  sockaddr        ifra_mask;
       };

       /*
       * Structure used in SIOCGIFCONF request.
       * Used to retrieve interface configuration
       * for machine (useful for programs which
       * must know all networks accessible).
       */
       struct ifconf {
           int   ifc_len;              /* size of associated buffer */
           union {
               caddr_t    ifcu_buf;
               struct     ifreq *ifcu_req;
           } ifc_ifcu;
       #define ifc_buf ifc_ifcu.ifcu_buf /* buffer address */
       #define ifc_req ifc_ifcu.ifcu_req /* array of structures returned */
       };

       /* Structure used in SIOCIFGCLONERS request. */
       struct if_clonereq {
               int     ifcr_total;     /* total cloners (out) */
               int     ifcr_count;     /* room for this many in user buffer */
               char    *ifcr_buffer;   /* buffer for cloner names */
       };

       /* Structure used in SIOCGIFDESCR and SIOCSIFDESCR requests */
       struct ifreq_buffer {
               size_t  length;         /* length of the buffer */
               void   *buffer;         /* pointer to userland space buffer */
       };

SEE ALSO

       ioctl(2), socket(2), intro(4), config(8), routed(8), ifnet(9)

HISTORY

       The netintro manual appeared in 4.3BSD-Tahoe.

Debian                                           April 14, 2010                                      NETINTRO(4)