netdevice - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


NETDEVICE(7)                        Linux Programmer’s Manual                        NETDEVICE(7)



NAME
       netdevice - Low level access to Linux network devices

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/ioctl.h>
       #include <net/if.h>

DESCRIPTION
       This  man page describes the sockets interface which is used to configure network devices.

       Linux supports some standard ioctls to configure network devices. They can be used on  any
       socket’s file descriptor regardless of the family or type.  They pass an ifreq structure:

       struct ifreq {
           char    ifr_name[IFNAMSIZ];/* Interface name */
           union {
                   struct sockaddrifr_addr;
                   struct sockaddrifr_dstaddr;
                   struct sockaddrifr_broadaddr;
                   struct sockaddrifr_netmask;
                   struct sockaddrifr_hwaddr;
                   short   ifr_flags;
                   int     ifr_ifindex;
                   int     ifr_metric;
                   int     ifr_mtu;
                   struct ifmapifr_map;
                   char    ifr_slave[IFNAMSIZ];
                   char    ifr_newname[IFNAMSIZ];
                   char *  ifr_data;
           };
       };

       struct ifconf {
           int ifc_len;    /* size of buffer */
           union {
                   char *  ifc_buf; /* buffer address */
                   struct ifreq *ifc_req; /* array of structures */
           };
       };

       Normally, the user specifies which device to affect by setting ifr_name to the name of the
       interface. All other members of the structure may share memory.


IOCTLS
       If an ioctl is marked as privileged then using it requires an effective user id  of  0  or
       the CAP_NET_ADMIN capability. If this is not the case EPERM will be returned.


       SIOCGIFNAME
              Given  the  ifr_ifindex, return the name of the interface in ifr_name.  This is the
              only ioctl which returns its result in ifr_name.


       SIOCGIFINDEX
              Retrieve the interface index of the interface into ifr_ifindex.


       SIOCGIFFLAGS, SIOCSIFFLAGS
              Get or set the active flag word of the device.  ifr_flags contains a bitmask of the
              following values:


                                         Device flags
              IFF_UP            Interface is running.
              IFF_BROADCAST     Valid broadcast address set.
              IFF_DEBUG         Internal debugging flag.
              IFF_LOOPBACK      Interface is a loopback interface.
              IFF_POINTOPOINT   Interface is a point-to-point link.
              IFF_RUNNING       Resources allocated.
              IFF_NOARP         No arp protocol, L2 destination address not set.
              IFF_PROMISC       Interface is in promiscuous mode.
              IFF_NOTRAILERS    Avoid use of trailers.
              IFF_ALLMULTI      Receive all multicast packets.
              IFF_MASTER        Master of a load balancing bundle.
              IFF_SLAVE         Slave of a load balancing bundle.
              IFF_MULTICAST     Supports multicast
              IFF_PORTSEL       Is able to select media type via ifmap.
              IFF_AUTOMEDIA     Auto media selection active.
              IFF_DYNAMIC       The  addresses  are lost when the interface goes
                                down.

              Setting the active flag word is a privileged operation, but any  process  may  read
              it.

       SIOCGIFMETRIC, SIOCSIFMETRIC
              Get or set the metric of the device using ifr_metric.  This is currently not imple-
              mented; it sets ifr_metric to 0 if you attempt to read it and returns EOPNOTSUPP if
              you attempt to set it.

       SIOCGIFMTU, SIOCSIFMTU
              Get  or set the MTU (Maximum Transfer Unit) of a device using ifr_mtu.  Setting the
              MTU is a privileged operation. Setting the MTU to too small values may cause kernel
              crashes.

       SIOCGIFHWADDR, SIOCSIFHWADDR
              Get or set the hardware address of a device using ifr_hwaddr.  The hardware address
              is specified in a struct sockaddr.  sa_family contains the  ARPHRD_*  device  type,
              sa_data the L2 hardware address starting from byte 0.  Setting the hardware address
              is a privileged operation.

       SIOCSIFHWBROADCAST
              Set the hardware broadcast address of a device from ifr_hwaddr.  This is  a  privi-
              leged operation.

       SIOCGIFMAP, SIOCSIFMAP
              Get  or set the interface’s hardware parameters using ifr_map.  Setting the parame-
              ters is a privileged operation.

              struct ifmap
              {
                  unsigned long   mem_start;
                  unsigned long   mem_end;
                  unsigned short  base_addr;
                  unsigned char   irq;
                  unsigned char   dma;
                  unsigned char   port;
              };

              The interpretation of the ifmap structure depends on  the  device  driver  and  the
              architecture.

       SIOCADDMULTI, SIOCDELMULTI
              Add  an address to or delete an address from the device’s link layer multicast fil-
              ters using ifr_hwaddr.  These are privileged operations.  See also packet(7) for an
              alternative.

       SIOCGIFTXQLEN, SIOCSIFTXQLEN
              Get  or  set  the  transmit  queue  length of a device using ifr_qlen.  Setting the
              transmit queue length is a privileged operation.

       SIOCSIFNAME
              Changes the name of the interface specified in ifr_name to ifr_newname.  This is  a
              privileged operation. It is only allowed when the interface is not up.

       SIOCGIFCONF
              Return  a  list of interface (transport layer) addresses. This currently means only
              addresses of the AF_INET (IPv4) family for compatibility.  The user passes a ifconf
              structure  as  argument  to  the  ioctl. It contains a pointer to an array of ifreq
              structures in ifc_req and its length in bytes in ifc_len.   The  kernel  fills  the
              ifreqs  with all current L3 interface addresses that are running: ifr_name contains
              the interface name (eth0:1 etc.), ifr_addr the address.  The  kernel  returns  with
              the  actual  length  in  ifc_len.   If  ifc_len is equal to the original length the
              buffer probably has overflowed and you should retry with a bigger buffer to get all
              addresses.   When no error occurs the ioctl returns 0; otherwise -1. Overflow is no
              error.


       Most protocols support their own ioctls to configure protocol specific interface  options.
       See the protocol man pages for a description.  For configuring IP addresses see ip(7).

       In addition some devices support private ioctls. These are not described here.

NOTES
       Strictly seen, SIOCGIFCONF is IP specific and belongs in ip(7).

       The  names of interfaces with no addresses or that don’t have the IFF_RUNNING flag set can
       be found via /proc/net/dev.

       Local IPv6 IP addresses can be found via /proc/net or via rtnetlink(7).

BUGS
       glibc 2.1 is missing the ifr_newname macro in net/if.h. Add the following to your  program
       as workaround:

              #ifndef ifr_newname
              #define ifr_newname     ifr_ifru.ifru_slave
              #endif

SEE ALSO
       ip(7), proc(7), rtnetlink(7)



Linux Man Page                              1999-05-02                               NETDEVICE(7)

Generated by $Id: phpMan.php,v 4.54 2007/08/21 09:05:22 chedong Exp $ Author: Che Dong
On Apache/1.3.33 (Unix) PHP/4.3.10
Under GNU General Public License
2008-08-30 07:41 @38.103.63.61 CrawledBy CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)
Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!