Manpages - netdevice.7

Table of Contents

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. Most of them 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;
      };
  };

AF_INET6 is an exception. It passes an in6_ifreq structure:

  struct in6_ifreq {
      struct in6_addr     ifr6_addr;
      u32                 ifr6_prefixlen;
      int                 ifr6_ifindex; /* Interface index */
  };

Normally, the user specifies which device to affect by setting ifr_name to the name of the interface or ifr6_ifindex to the index 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 bit mask of the following values:

TABLE

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

SIOCGIFPFLAGS, SIOCSIFPFLAGS
Get or set extended (private) flags for the device. ifr_flags contains a bit mask of the following values:

TABLE

Setting the extended (private) interface flags is a privileged operation.

SIOCGIFADDR, SIOCSIFADDR, SIOCDIFADDR
Get, set, or delete the address of the device using ifr_addr, or ifr6_addr with ifr6_prefixlen. Setting or deleting the interface address is a privileged operation. For compatibility, SIOCGIFADDR returns only AF_INET addresses, SIOCSIFADDR accepts AF_INET and AF_INET6 addresses, and SIOCDIFADDR deletes only AF_INET6 addresses. A AF_INET address can be deleted by setting it to zero via SIOCSIFADDR.
SIOCGIFDSTADDR, SIOCSIFDSTADDR
Get or set the destination address of a point-to-point device using ifr_dstaddr. For compatibility, only AF_INET addresses are accepted or returned. Setting the destination address is a privileged operation.
SIOCGIFBRDADDR, SIOCSIFBRDADDR
Get or set the broadcast address for a device using ifr_brdaddr. For compatibility, only AF_INET addresses are accepted or returned. Setting the broadcast address is a privileged operation.
SIOCGIFNETMASK, SIOCSIFNETMASK
Get or set the network mask for a device using ifr_netmask. For compatibility, only AF_INET addresses are accepted or returned. Setting the network mask is a privileged operation.
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 allowed only when the interface is not up.
SIOCGIFCONF

Return a list of interface (network layer) addresses. This currently means only addresses of the AF_INET (IPv4) family for compatibility. Unlike the others, this ioctl passes an ifconf structure:

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

If ifc_req is NULL, SIOCGIFCONF returns the necessary buffer size in bytes for receiving all available addresses in ifc_len. Otherwise, ifc_req contains a pointer to an array of ifreq structures to be filled with all currently active L3 interface addresses. ifc_len contains the size of the array in bytes. Within each ifreq structure, ifr_name will receive the interface name, and ifr_addr the address. The actual number of bytes transferred is returned in ifc_len.

If the size specified by ifc_len is insufficient to store all the addresses, the kernel will skip the exceeding ones and return success. There is no reliable way of detecting this condition once it has occurred. It is therefore recommended to either determine the necessary buffer size beforehand by calling SIOCGIFCONF with ifc_req set to NULL, or to retry the call with a bigger buffer whenever ifc_len upon return differs by less than sizeof(struct ifreq) from its original value.

If an error occurs accessing the ifconf or ifreq structures, EFAULT will be returned.

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

SIOCGIFCONF and the other ioctls that accept or return only AF_INET socket addresses are IP-specific and perhaps should rather be documented 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.

AF_INET6 IPv6 addresses can be read from /proc/net/if_inet6 or via rtnetlink*(7). Adding a new IPv6 address and deleting an existing IPv6 address can be done via *SIOCSIFADDR and SIOCDIFADDR or via *rtnetlink*(7). Retrieving or changing destination IPv6 addresses of a point-to-point interface is possible only via *rtnetlink*(7).

BUGS

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

SEE ALSO

*proc*(5), *capabilities*(7), *ip*(7), *rtnetlink*(7)

COLOPHON

This page is part of release 5.13 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Author: dt

Created: 2022-02-20 Sun 09:43