| NETINTRO(4) | Device Drivers Manual | NETINTRO(4) | 
netintro —
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <net/route.h>
#include <net/if.h>
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 normally comprises 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(1) 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.
struct sockaddr {
	u_char	sa_len;
    	u_char	sa_family;
    	char	sa_data[14];
};
The field sa_len contains the total length of the 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_NS 6 /* Xerox NS protocols */ #define AF_CCITT 10 /* CCITT protocols, X.25 etc */ #define AF_HYLINK 15 /* NSC Hyperchannel */ #define AF_INET6 24 /* internetwork, v6: UDP, TCP, etc. */
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) used in earlier releases.
This facility is described in route(4).
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 supported in earlier releases take an
    ifreq structure as its parameter. This structure has
    the form
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;
        void   *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_space     ifr_ifru.ifru_space     /* sockaddr_storage */
#define ifr_flags     ifr_ifru.ifru_flags   /* flags */
#define ifr_metric    ifr_ifru.ifru_metric  /* metric */
#define ifr_mtu       ifr_ifru.ifru_mtu       /* mtu */
#define ifr_dlt       ifr_ifru.ifru_dlt       /* data link type (DLT_*) */
#define ifr_value     ifr_ifru.ifru_value     /* generic value */
#define ifr_media     ifr_ifru.ifru_metric    /* media options (overload) */
#define ifr_data      ifr_ifru.ifru_data    /* for use by interface */
#define ifr_buf       ifr_ifru.ifru_b.b_buf   /* new interface ioctls */
#define ifr_buflen    ifr_ifru.ifru_b.b_buflen
#define ifr_index     ifr_ifru.ifru_value     /* interface index */
};
Calls which are now deprecated are:
SIOCSIFADDRSIOCSIFDSTADDRSIOCSIFBRDADDRioctl(2) requests to obtain addresses and requests both to set and retrieve other data are still fully supported and use the ifreq structure:
SIOCGIFADDRSIOCGIFDSTADDRSIOCGIFBRDADDRSIOCSIFFLAGSSIOCGIFFLAGSSIOCSIFMETRICSIOCGIFMETRICSIOCGIFINDEXThere are two requests that make use of a new structure:
SIOCAIFADDRSIOCDIFADDRSIOCGIFALIASRequest making use of the ifconf structure:
SIOCGIFCONF
/*
* Structure used in SIOC[AD]IFADDR request.
*/
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;
};
/*
* Structure used in SIOCGIFCONF request.
* Used to retrieve interface configuration
* for machine (useful for programs which
* must know all networks accessible).
*/
struct ifconf {
    int   ifc_len;		/* size of associated buffer */
    union {
        void    *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 returned */
};
netintro manual appeared in
  4.3BSD-Tahoe.
| August 2, 2018 | NetBSD 9.4 |