netdevice — Low level access to Linux network devices
#include <sys/ioctl.h> #include <net/if.h>
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 sockaddr ifr_addr; struct sockaddr ifr_dstaddr; struct sockaddr ifr_broadaddr; struct sockaddr ifr_netmask; struct sockaddr ifr_hwaddr; short ifr_flags; int ifr_ifindex; int ifr_metric; int ifr_mtu; struct ifmap ifr_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.
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 bit mask 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 implemented; 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
privileged operation.
SIOCGIFMAP
, SIOCSIFMAP
Get or set the interface's hardware parameters
using ifr_map
. Setting the
parameters 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 filters 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
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 not an
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.
Strictly speaking, 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).
glibc 2.1 is missing the ifr_newname
macro in
<
net/if.h
>
Add the following to your program as a workaround:
#ifndef ifr_newname #define ifr_newname ifr_ifru.ifru_slave #endif
This page is part of release 2.79 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, and information about reporting
bugs, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
t Don't change the first line, it tells man that tbl is needed. This man page is Copyright (C) 1999 Andi Kleen <akmuc.de>. Permission is granted to distribute possibly modified copies of this page provided the header is included verbatim, and in case of nontrivial modification author and date of the modification is added to the header. $Id: netdevice.7,v 1.10 2000/08/17 10:09:54 ak Exp $ Modified, 2004-11-25, mtk, formatting and a few wording fixes |