netlink — Communication between kernel and userspace (PF_NETLINK)
#include <asm/types.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #include <linux/netlink.h>
netlink_socket = socket( |
PF_NETLINK, | |
socket_type, | ||
netlink_family) ; |
Netlink is used to transfer information between kernel and userspace processes. It consists of a standard sockets-based interface for userspace processes and an internal kernel API for kernel modules. The internal kernel interface is not documented in this manual page. There is also an obsolete netlink interface via netlink character devices; this interface is not documented here and is only provided for backwards compatibility.
Netlink is a datagram-oriented service. Both SOCK_RAW
and SOCK_DGRAM
are valid values for socket_type
. However, the
netlink protocol does not distinguish between datagram and
raw sockets.
netlink_family
selects the kernel module or netlink group to communicate
with. The currently assigned netlink families are:
NETLINK_ROUTE
Receives routing and link updates and may be used to modify the routing tables (both IPv4 and IPv6), IP addresses, link parameters, neighbor setups, queueing disciplines, traffic classes and packet classifiers (see rtnetlink(7)).
NETLINK_W1
Messages from 1-wire subsystem.
NETLINK_USERSOCK
Reserved for user-mode socket protocols.
NETLINK_FIREWALL
Transport IPv4 packets from netfilter to userspace.
Used by ip_queue
kernel
module.
NETLINK_INET_DIAG
INET socket monitoring.
NETLINK_NFLOG
Netfilter/iptables ULOG.
NETLINK_XFRM
IPsec.
NETLINK_SELINUX
SELinux event notifications.
NETLINK_ISCSI
Open-iSCSI.
NETLINK_AUDIT
Auditing.
NETLINK_FIB_LOOKUP
Access to FIB lookup from userspace.
NETLINK_CONNECTOR
Kernel connector. See Documentation/connector/*
in the
kernel source for further information.
NETLINK_NETFILTER
Netfilter subsystem.
NETLINK_IP6_FW
Transport IPv6 packets from netfilter to userspace.
Used by ip6_queue
kernel
module.
NETLINK_DNRTMSG
DECnet routing messages.
NETLINK_KOBJECT_UEVENT
Kernel messages to userspace.
NETLINK_GENERIC
Generic netlink family for simplified netlink usage.
Netlink messages consist of a byte stream with one or
multiple nlmsghdr
headers and associated payload. The byte stream should only
be accessed with the standard NLMSG_*
macros. See netlink(3) for further
information.
In multipart messages (multiple nlmsghdr
headers with
associated payload in one byte stream) the first and all
following headers have the NLM_F_MULTI
flag set, except for the last
header which has the type NLMSG_DONE
.
After each nlmsghdr
the payload
follows.
struct nlmsghdr { __u32 nlmsg_len
; /* Length of message including header. */__u16 nlmsg_type
; /* Type of message content. */__u16 nlmsg_flags
; /* Additional flags. */__u32 nlmsg_seq
; /* Sequence number. */__u32 nlmsg_pid
; /* PID of the sending process. */};
nlmsg_type
can be
one of the standard message types: NLMSG_NOOP
message is to be ignored,
NLMSG_ERROR
message signals an
error and the payload contains an nlmsgerr
structure,
NLMSG_DONE
message terminates a
multipart message.
struct nlmsgerr { int error
; /* Negative errno or 0 for acknowledgements */struct nlmsghdr msg
; /* Message header that caused the error */};
A netlink family usually specifies more message types, see
the appropriate manual pages for that, for example, rtnetlink(7) for
NETLINK_ROUTE
.
Standard flag bits in nlmsg_flags
---------------------------------
NLM_F_REQUEST |
Must be set on all request messages. |
NLM_F_MULTI |
The
message is part of a multipart message terminated by
NLMSG_DONE . |
NLM_F_ACK |
Request for an acknowledgment on success. |
NLM_F_ECHO |
Echo this request. |
Additional flag bits for GET requests
-------------------------------------
NLM_F_ROOT |
Return the complete table instead of a single entry. |
NLM_F_MATCH |
Return all entries matching criteria passed in message content. Not implemented yet. |
NLM_F_ATOMIC |
Return an atomic snapshot of the table. |
NLM_F_DUMP |
Convenience macro; equivalent to (NLM_F_ROOT|NLM_F_MATCH). |
Note that NLM_F_ATOMIC
requires the CAP_NET_ADMIN
capability or an effective UID of 0.
Additional flag bits for NEW requests
-------------------------------------
NLM_F_REPLACE |
Replace existing matching object. |
NLM_F_EXCL |
Don't replace if the object already exists. |
NLM_F_CREATE |
Create object if it doesn't already exist. |
NLM_F_APPEND |
Add to the end of the object list. |
nlmsg_seq
and
nlmsg_pid
are used to
track messages. nlmsg_pid
shows the origin of
the message. Note that there isn't a 1:1 relationship between
nlmsg_pid
and the PID
of the process if the message originated from a netlink
socket. See the ADDRESS
FORMATS section for further information.
Both nlmsg_seq
and
nlmsg_pid
are opaque
to netlink core.
Netlink is not a reliable protocol. It tries its best to
deliver a message to its destination(s), but may drop
messages when an out-of-memory condition or other error
occurs. For reliable transfer the sender can request an
acknowledgement from the receiver by setting the NLM_F_ACK
flag. An acknowledgment is an
NLMSG_ERROR
packet with the
error field set to 0. The application must generate
acknowledgements for received messages itself. The kernel
tries to send an NLMSG_ERROR
message for every failed packet. A user process should follow
this convention too.
However, reliable transmissions from kernel to user are impossible in any case. The kernel can't send a netlink message if the socket buffer is full: the message will be dropped and the kernel and the userspace process will no longer have the same view of kernel state. It is up to the application to detect when this happens (via the ENOBUFS error returned by recvmsg(2)) and resynchronize.
The sockaddr_nl
structure
describes a netlink client in user space or in the kernel.
A sockaddr_nl
can
be either unicast (only sent to one peer) or sent to
netlink multicast groups (nl_groups
not equal 0).
struct sockaddr_nl { sa_family_t nl_family
; /* AF_NETLINK */unsigned short nl_pad
; /* Zero. */pid_t nl_pid
; /* Process ID. */__u32 nl_groups
; /* Multicast groups mask. */};
nl_pid
is the
unicast address of netlink socket. It's always 0 if the
destination is in the kernel. For a userspace process,
nl_pid
is usually
the PID of the process owning the destination socket.
However, nl_pid
identifies a netlink socket, not a process. If a process
owns several netlink sockets, then nl_pid
can only be equal to
the process ID for at most one socket. There are two ways
to assign nl_pid
to
a netlink socket. If the application sets nl_pid
before calling
bind(2), then it is up to
the application to make sure that nl_pid
is unique. If the
application sets it to 0, the kernel takes care of
assigning it. The kernel assigns the process ID to the
first netlink socket the process opens and assigns a unique
nl_pid
to every
netlink socket that the process subsequently creates.
nl_groups
is a
bit mask with every bit representing a netlink group
number. Each netlink family has a set of 32 multicast
groups. When bind(2) is called on the
socket, the nl_groups
field in the
sockaddr_nl
should be set to a bit mask of the groups which it wishes
to listen to. The default value for this field is zero
which means that no multicasts will be received. A socket
may multicast messages to any of the multicast groups by
setting nl_groups
to a bit mask of the groups it wishes to send to when it
calls sendmsg(2) or does a
connect(2). Only
processes with an effective UID of 0 or the CAP_NET_ADMIN
capability may send or
listen to a netlink multicast group. Any replies to a
message received for a multicast group should be sent back
to the sending PID and the multicast group.
The socket interface to netlink is a new feature of Linux 2.2.
Linux 2.0 supported a more primitive device based netlink interface (which is still available as a compatibility option). This obsolete interface is not described here.
NETLINK_SELINUX appeared in Linux 2.6.4.
NETLINK_AUDIT appeared in Linux 2.6.6.
NETLINK_KOBJECT_UEVENT appeared in Linux 2.6.10.
NETLINK_W1 and NETLINK_FIB_LOOKUP appeared in Linux 2.6.13.
NETLINK_INET_DIAG, NETLINK_CONNECTOR and NETLINK_NETFILTER appeared in Linux 2.6.14.
NETLINK_GENERIC and NETLINK_ISCSI appeared in Linux 2.6.15.
It is often better to use netlink via libnetlink
or libnl
than via the low-level
kernel interface.
The following example creates a NETLINK_ROUTE
netlink socket which will
listen to the RTMGRP_LINK
(network interface create/delete/up/down events) and
RTMGRP_IPV4_IFADDR
struct sockaddr_nl sa; memset(&sa, 0, sizeof(sa)); snl.nl_family = AF_NETLINK; snl.nl_groups = RTMGRP_LINK | RTMGRP_IPV4_IFADDR; fd = socket(AF_NETLINK, SOCK_RAW, NETLINK_ROUTE); bind(fd, (struct sockaddr*)&sa, sizeof(sa));
The next example demonstrates how to send a netlink message to the kernel (pid 0). Note that application must take care of message sequence numbers in order to reliably track acknowledgements.
struct nlmsghdr *nh; /* The nlmsghdr with payload to send. */ struct sockaddr_nl sa; struct iovec iov = { (void *) nh, nh−>nlmsg_len }; struct msghdr msg; msg = { (void *)&sa, sizeof(sa), &iov, 1, NULL, 0, 0 }; memset(&sa, 0, sizeof(sa)); sa.nl_family = AF_NETLINK; nh−>nlmsg_pid = 0; nh−>nlmsg_seq = ++sequence_number; /* Request an ack from kernel by setting NLM_F_ACK. */ nh−>nlmsg_flags |= NLM_F_ACK; sendmsg(fd, &msg, 0);
And the last example is about reading netlink message.
int len; char buf[4096]; struct iovec iov = { buf, sizeof(buf) }; struct sockaddr_nl sa; struct msghdr msg; struct nlmsghdr *nh; msg = { (void *)&sa, sizeof(sa), &iov, 1, NULL, 0, 0 }; len = recvmsg(fd, &msg, 0); for (nh = (struct nlmsghdr *) buf; NLMSG_OK (nh, len); nh = NLMSG_NEXT (nh, len)) { /* The end of multipart message. */ if (nh−>nlmsg_type == NLMSG_DONE) return; if (nh−>nlmsg_type == NLMSG_ERROR) /* Do some error handling. */ ... /* Continue with parsing payload. */ ... }
cmsg(3), netlink(3), capabilities(7), rtnetlink(7)
ftp://ftp.inr.ac.ru/ip-routing/iproute2* for information about libnetlink.
http://people.suug.ch/~tgr/libnl/ for information about libnl.
RFC 3549 "Linux Netlink as an IP Services Protocol"
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) 1998 by Andi Kleen. Subject to the GPL. Based on the original comments from Alexey Kuznetsov Modified 2005-12-27 by Hasso Tepper <hassoestpak.ee> $Id: netlink.7,v 1.8 2000/06/22 13:23:00 ak Exp $ |