NETINTRO(4) | Device Drivers Manual | NETINTRO(4) |
netintro
—
introduction to networking facilities
#include
<sys/socket.h>
#include <net/route.h>
#include <net/if.h>
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.
Network interfaces may be collected together into interface
groups. An interface group is a container that can be used generically when
referring to any interface related by some criteria. When an action is
performed on an interface group, such as packet filtering by the
pf(4) subsystem, the operation
will be applied to each member interface in the group, if supported by the
subsystem. The ifconfig(8)
utility can be used to view and assign membership of an interface to an
interface group with the group
modifier.
The system currently supports the Internet protocols (IPv4 and IPv6), MPLS, and a few others. Raw socket interfaces are provided to the IP protocol layer of the Internet. Consult the appropriate manual pages in this section for more information regarding the support for each protocol family.
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 a finer, more specific structure, generally renaming the variant, which is discussed in the protocol family manual page alluded to above.
struct sockaddr { u_int8_t sa_len; /* total length */ sa_family_t sa_family; /* address family */ char sa_data[14]; /* actually longer */ };
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_LOCAL 1 /* local to host */ #define AF_INET 2 /* internetwork: UDP, TCP, etc. */ #define AF_INET6 24 /* IPv6 */ #define AF_MPLS 33 /* Multiprotocol Label Switching */
The sa_data field contains the actual address value. Note that it may be longer than 14 bytes.
OpenBSD 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)s used in earlier releases.
This facility is described in route(4).
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(2) is made on a socket
(typically of type SOCK_DGRAM
) in the desired
domain. Most of the requests take an ifreq structure
pointer as their parameter. This structure is as follows:
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; short ifru_flags; int ifru_metric; uint64_t ifru_media; caddr_t ifru_data; } 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_flags ifr_ifru.ifru_flags /* flags */ #define ifr_metric ifr_ifru.ifru_metric /* metric */ #define ifr_mtu ifr_ifru.ifru_metric /* mtu (overload) */ #define ifr_hardmtu ifr_ifru.ifru_metric /* hardmtu (overload) */ #define ifr_media ifr_ifru.ifru_media /* media options */ #define ifr_rdomainid ifr_ifru.ifru_metric /* VRF instance (overload) */ #define ifr_vnetid ifr_ifru.ifru_metric /* Virtual Net Id (overload) */ #define ifr_ttl ifr_ifru.ifru_metric /* tunnel TTL (overload) */ #define ifr_data ifr_ifru.ifru_data /* for use by interface */ };
The supported ioctl(2) requests are:
SIOCSIFADDR
struct ifreq *This call has been deprecated and superseded by the
SIOCAIFADDR
call, described below.
SIOCSIFDSTADDR
struct ifreq *This call has been deprecated and superseded by the
SIOCAIFADDR
call, described below.
SIOCSIFBRDADDR
struct ifreq *This call has been deprecated and superseded by the
SIOCAIFADDR
call, described below.
SIOCGIFADDR
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFDSTADDR
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFBRDADDR
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFDESCR
struct ifreq *SIOCSIFDESCR
struct ifreq *IFDESCRSIZE
.SIOCSIFFLAGS
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFFLAGS
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFXFLAGS
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFMTU
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFHARDMTU
struct ifreq *SIOCSIFMEDIA
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFMEDIA
struct ifmediareq *struct ifmediareq { char ifm_name[IFNAMSIZ]; /* if name, e.g. "en0" */ uint64_t ifm_current; /* current media options */ uint64_t ifm_mask; /* don't care mask */ uint64_t ifm_status; /* media status */ uint64_t ifm_active; /* active options */ int ifm_count; /* #entries in ifm_ulist array */ uint64_t *ifm_ulist; /* media words */ };
See ifmedia(4) for interpreting this value.
SIOCSIFMETRIC
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFMETRIC
struct ifreq *SIOCSIFPRIORITY
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFPRIORITY
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFRDOMAIN
struct ifreq *SIOCAIFADDR
struct ifaliasreq *Rather than making separate calls to set destination or broadcast addresses, or network masks (now an integral feature of multiple protocols), a separate structure, ifaliasreq, is used to specify all three facets simultaneously (see below). One would use a slightly tailored version of this structure specific to each family (replacing each sockaddr by one of the family-specific type). One should always set the length of a sockaddr, as described in ioctl(2).
The ifaliasreq structure is as follows:
struct ifaliasreq { char ifra_name[IFNAMSIZ]; /* if name, e.g. "en0" */ struct sockaddr ifra_addr; struct sockaddr ifra_dstaddr; #define ifra_broadaddr ifra_dstaddr struct sockaddr ifra_mask; };
SIOCDIFADDR
struct ifreq *SIOCGIFCONF
struct ifconf *Alternately, if the ifc_len passed in is
set to 0, SIOCGIFCONF
will set
ifc_len to the size that
ifc_buf needs to be to fit the entire
configuration list and will not fill in the other parameters. This is
useful for determining the exact size that ifc_buf
needs to be in advance. Note, however, that this is an extension that
not all operating systems support.
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 ret'd */ };
SIOCIFCREATE
struct ifreq *SIOCIFDESTROY
struct ifreq *SIOCIFGCLONERS
struct if_clonereq *IFNAMSIZ
-sized strings
that can 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.
The if_clonereq structure is as follows:
struct if_clonereq { int ifcr_total; /* total cloners (out) */ int ifcr_count; /* room for this many in user buf */ char *ifcr_buffer; /* buffer for cloner names */ };
SIOCAIFGROUP
struct ifgroupreq *struct ifg_req { char ifgrq_group[IFNAMSIZ]; }; struct ifgroupreq { char ifgr_name[IFNAMSIZ]; u_int ifgr_len; union { char ifgru_group[IFNAMSIZ]; struct ifg_req *ifgru_groups; } ifgr_ifgru; #define ifgr_group ifgr_ifgru.ifgru_group #define ifgr_groups ifgr_ifgru.ifgru_groups };
SIOCGIFGROUP
struct ifgroupreq *Alternately, if the ifgr_len passed in
is set to 0, SIOCGIFGROUP
will set
ifgr_len to the size that
ifgr_groups needs to be to fit the entire group
list and will not fill in the other parameters. This is useful for
determining the exact size that ifgr_groups needs
to be in advance.
SIOCDIFGROUP
struct ifgroupreq *netstat(1), ioctl(2), socket(2), arp(4), bridge(4), ifmedia(4), inet(4), intro(4), ip(4), ip6(4), lo(4), mpe(4), pf(4), tcp(4), udp(4), hosts(5), networks(5), bgpd(8), config(8), ifconfig(8), mrouted(8), netstart(8), ospfd(8), ripd(8), route(8)
The netintro
manual appeared in
4.3BSD-Tahoe.
September 11, 2015 | OpenBSD-5.9 |