Name

rtnetlink, NETLINK_ROUTE — Linux IPv4 routing socket

Synopsis

#include <asm/types.h>
#include <linux/netlink.h>
#include <linux/rtnetlink.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
rtnetlink_socket = socket(   PF_NETLINK,
  int   socket_type,
    NETLINK_ROUTE);

DESCRIPTION

Rtnetlink allows the kernel's routing tables to be read and altered. It is used within the kernel to communicate between various subsystems, though this usage is not documented here, and for communication with user-space programs. Network routes, ip addresses, link parameters, neighbor setups, queueing disciplines, traffic classes and packet classifiers may all be controlled through NETLINK_ROUTE sockets. It is based on netlink messages, see netlink(7) for more information.

Routing Attributes

Some rtnetlink messages have optional attributes after the initial header:

struct rtattr {
  unsigned short   rta_len;
/* Length of option */
  unsigned short   rta_type;
/* Type of option */
/* Data follows */
};

These attributes should be only manipulated using the RTA_* macros or libnetlink, see rtnetlink(3).

Messages

Rtnetlink consists of these message types (in addition to standard netlink messages):

RTM_NEWLINK, RTM_DELLINK, RTM_GETLINK

Create, remove or get information about a specific network interface. These messages contain an ifinfomsg structure followed by a series of rtattr structures.

struct ifinfomsg {
  unsigned char   ifi_family;
/* AF_UNSPEC */
  unsigned short   ifi_type;
/* Device type */
  int   ifi_index;
/* Interface index */
  unsigned int   ifi_flags;
/* Device flags  */
  unsigned int   ifi_change;
/* change mask */
};

ifi_flags contains the device flags, see netdevice(7); ifi_index is the unique interface index, ifi_change is reserved for future use and should be always set to 0xFFFFFFFF.

Routing attributes
rta_type value type description
IFLA_UNSPEC - unspecified.
IFLA_ADDRESS hardware address interface L2 address
IFLA_BROADCAST hardware address L2 broadcast address.
IFLA_IFNAME asciiz string Device name.
IFLA_MTU unsigned int MTU of the device.
IFLA_LINK int Link type.
IFLA_QDISC asciiz string Queueing discipline.
IFLA_STATS see below Interface Statistics.

The value type for IFLA_STATS is struct net_device_stats.

RTM_NEWADDR, RTM_DELADDR, RTM_GETADDR

Add, remove or receive information about an IP address associated with an interface. In Linux 2.2 an interface can carry multiple IP addresses, this replaces the alias device concept in 2.0. In Linux 2.2 these messages support IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. They contain an ifaddrmsg structure, optionally followed by rtaddr routing attributes.

struct ifaddrmsg {
  unsigned char   ifa_family;
/* Address type */
  unsigned char   ifa_prefixlen;
/* Prefixlength of address */
  unsigned char   ifa_flags;
/* Address flags */
  unsigned char   ifa_scope;
/* Address scope */
  int   ifa_index;
/* Interface index */
};

ifa_family is the address family type (currently AF_INET or AF_INET6), ifa_prefixlen is the length of the address mask of the address if defined for the family (like for IPv4), ifa_scope is the address scope, ifa_index is the interface index of the interface the address is associated with. ifa_flags is a flag word of IFA_F_SECONDARY for secondary address (old alias interface), IFA_F_PERMANENT for a permanent address set by the user and other undocumented flags.

Attributes
rta_type value type description
IFA_UNSPEC - unspecified.
IFA_ADDRESS raw protocol address interface address
IFA_LOCAL raw protocol address local address
IFA_LABEL asciiz string name of the interface
IFA_BROADCAST raw protocol address broadcast address.
IFA_ANYCAST raw protocol address anycast address
IFA_CACHEINFO struct ifa_cacheinfo Address information.
RTM_NEWROUTE, RTM_DELROUTE, RTM_GETROUTE

Create, remove or receive information about a network route. These messages contain an rtmsg structure with an optional sequence of rtattr structures following. For RTM_GETROUTE setting rtm_dst_len and rtm_src_len to 0 means you get all entries for the specified routing table. For the other fields except rtm_table and rtm_protocol 0 is the wildcard.

struct rtmsg {
  unsigned char   rtm_family;
/* Address family of route */
  unsigned char   rtm_dst_len;
/* Length of source */
  unsigned char   rtm_src_len;
/* Length of destination */
  unsigned char   rtm_tos;
/* TOS filter */
  unsigned char   rtm_table;
/* Routing table ID */
  unsigned char   rtm_protocol;
/* Routing protocol; see below */
  unsigned char   rtm_scope;
/* See below */
  unsigned char   rtm_type;
/* See below */
  unsigned int   rtm_flags;  
};
rtm_type Route type
RTN_UNSPEC unknown route
RTN_UNICAST a gateway or direct route
RTN_LOCAL a local interface route
RTN_BROADCAST a local broadcast route (sent as a broadcast)
RTN_ANYCAST a local broadcast route (sent as a unicast)
RTN_MULTICAST a multicast route
RTN_BLACKHOLE a packet dropping route
RTN_UNREACHABLE an unreachable destination
RTN_PROHIBIT a packet rejection route
RTN_THROW continue routing lookup in another table
RTN_NAT a network address translation rule
RTN_XRESOLVE refer to an external resolver (not implemented)
rtm_protocol Route origin.
RTPROT_UNSPEC unknown
RTPROT_REDIRECT by an ICMP redirect (currently unused)
RTPROT_KERNEL by the kernel
RTPROT_BOOT during boot
RTPROT_STATIC by the administrator

Values larger than RTPROT_STATIC are not interpreted by the kernel, they are just for user information. They may be used to tag the source of a routing information or to distinguish between multiple routing daemons. See <linux/rtnetlink.h> for the routing daemon identifiers which are already assigned.

rtm_scope is the distance to the destination:

RT_SCOPE_UNIVERSE global route
RT_SCOPE_SITE interior route in the local autonomous system
RT_SCOPE_LINK route on this link
RT_SCOPE_HOST route on the local host
RT_SCOPE_NOWHERE destination doesn't exist

The values between RT_SCOPE_UNIVERSE and RT_SCOPE_SITE are available to the user.

The rtm_flags have the following meanings:

RTM_F_NOTIFY if the route changes, notify the user via rtnetlink
RTM_F_CLONED route is cloned from another route
RTM_F_EQUALIZE a multipath equalizer (not yet implemented)

rtm_table specifies the routing table

RT_TABLE_UNSPEC an unspecified routing table
RT_TABLE_DEFAULT the default table
RT_TABLE_MAIN the main table
RT_TABLE_LOCAL the local table

The user may assign arbitrary values between RT_TABLE_UNSPEC and RT_TABLE_DEFAULT.

Attributes
rta_type value type description
RTA_UNSPEC - ignored.
RTA_DST protocol address Route destination address.
RTA_SRC protocol address Route source address.
RTA_IIF int Input interface index.
RTA_OIF int Output interface index.
RTA_GATEWAY protocol address The gateway of the route
RTA_PRIORITY int Priority of route.
RTA_PREFSRC    
RTA_METRICS int Route metric
RTA_MULTIPATH    
RTA_PROTOINFO    
RTA_FLOW    
RTA_CACHEINFO    

Fill these values in!

RTM_NEWNEIGH, RTM_DELNEIGH, RTM_GETNEIGH

Add, remove or receive information about a neighbor table entry (e.g., an ARP entry). The message contains an ndmsg structure.

struct ndmsg {
  unsigned char   ndm_family;  
  int   ndm_ifindex;
/* Interface index */
  __u16   ndm_state;
/* State */
  __u8   ndm_flags;
/* Flags */
  __u8   ndm_type;  
};
struct nda_cacheinfo {
  __u32   ndm_confirmed;  
  __u32   ndm_used;  
  __u32   ndm_updated;  
  __u32   ndm_refcnt;  
};

ndm_state is a bit mask of the following states:

NUD_INCOMPLETE a currently resolving cache entry
NUD_REACHABLE a confirmed working cache entry
NUD_STALE an expired cache entry
NUD_DELAY an entry waiting for a timer
NUD_PROBE a cache entry that is currently reprobed
NUD_FAILED an invalid cache entry
NUD_NOARP a device with no destination cache
NUD_PERMANENT a static entry

Valid ndm_flags are:

NTF_PROXY a proxy arp entry
NTF_ROUTER an IPv6 router

The rtaddr struct has the following meanings for the rta_type field:

NDA_UNSPEC unknown type
NDA_DST a neighbor cache n/w layer destination address
NDA_LLADDR a neighbor cache link layer address
NDA_CACHEINFO cache statistics.

If the rta_type field is NDA_CACHEINFO then a struct nda_cacheinfo header follows

RTM_NEWRULE, RTM_DELRULE, RTM_GETRULE

Add, delete or retrieve a routing rule. Carries a struct rtmsg

RTM_NEWQDISC, RTM_DELQDISC, RTM_GETQDISC

Add, remove or get a queueing discipline. The message contains a struct tcmsg and may be followed by a series of attributes.

struct tcmsg {
  unsigned char   tcm_family;  
  int   tcm_ifindex;
/* interface index */
  __u32   tcm_handle;
/* Qdisc handle */
  __u32   tcm_parent;
/* Parent qdisc */
  __u32   tcm_info;  
};
Attributes
rta_type value type Description
TCA_UNSPEC - unspecified
TCA_KIND asciiz string Name of queueing discipline
TCA_OPTIONS byte sequence Qdisc-specific options follow
TCA_STATS struct tc_stats Qdisc statistics.
TCA_XSTATS qdisc specific Module-specific statistics.
TCA_RATE struct tc_estimator Rate limit.

In addition various other qdisc module specific attributes are allowed. For more information see the appropriate include files.

RTM_NEWTCLASS, RTM_DELTCLASS, RTM_GETTCLASS

Add, remove or get a traffic class. These messages contain a struct tcmsg as described above.

RTM_NEWTFILTER, RTM_DELTFILTER, RTM_GETTFILTER

Add, remove or receive information about a traffic filter. These messages contain a struct tcmsg as described above.

VERSIONS

rtnetlink is a new feature of Linux 2.2.

BUGS

This manual page is incomplete.

SEE ALSO

cmsg(3), rtnetlink(3), ip(7), netlink(7)

COLOPHON

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 remove the line above, 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.
Based on the original comments from Alexey Kuznetsov, written with
help from Matthew Wilcox.
$Id: rtnetlink.7,v 1.8 2000/01/22 01:55:04 freitag Exp $