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IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE .\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL .\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS .\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) .\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT .\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY .\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF .\" SUCH DAMAGE. .\" .\" From: @(#)inet.4 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/5/93 .\" $FreeBSD: releng/12.2/share/man/man4/inet.4 337788 2018-08-14 17:36:21Z jtl $ .\" .Dd August 14, 2018 .Dt INET 4 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm inet .Nd Internet protocol family .Sh SYNOPSIS .In sys/types.h .In netinet/in.h .Sh DESCRIPTION The Internet protocol family is a collection of protocols layered atop the .Em Internet Protocol .Pq Tn IP transport layer, and utilizing the Internet address format. The Internet family provides protocol support for the .Dv SOCK_STREAM , SOCK_DGRAM , and .Dv SOCK_RAW socket types; the .Dv SOCK_RAW interface provides access to the .Tn IP protocol. .Sh ADDRESSING Internet addresses are four byte quantities, stored in network standard format (on little endian machines, such as the .Tn alpha , .Tn amd64 and .Tn i386 these are word and byte reversed). The include file .In netinet/in.h defines this address as a discriminated union. .Pp Sockets bound to the Internet protocol family utilize the following addressing structure, .Bd -literal -offset indent struct sockaddr_in { uint8_t sin_len; sa_family_t sin_family; in_port_t sin_port; struct in_addr sin_addr; char sin_zero[8]; }; .Ed .Pp Sockets may be created with the local address .Dv INADDR_ANY to affect .Dq wildcard matching on incoming messages. The address in a .Xr connect 2 or .Xr sendto 2 call may be given as .Dv INADDR_ANY to mean .Dq this host . The distinguished address .Dv INADDR_BROADCAST is allowed as a shorthand for the broadcast address on the primary network if the first network configured supports broadcast. .Sh PROTOCOLS The Internet protocol family is comprised of the .Tn IP network protocol, Internet Control Message Protocol .Pq Tn ICMP , Internet Group Management Protocol .Pq Tn IGMP , Transmission Control Protocol .Pq Tn TCP , and User Datagram Protocol .Pq Tn UDP . .Tn TCP is used to support the .Dv SOCK_STREAM abstraction while .Tn UDP is used to support the .Dv SOCK_DGRAM abstraction. A raw interface to .Tn IP is available by creating an Internet socket of type .Dv SOCK_RAW . The .Tn ICMP message protocol is accessible from a raw socket. .Pp The .Nm address on an interface consist of the address itself, the netmask, either broadcast address in case of a broadcast interface or peers address in case of point-to-point interface. The following .Xr ioctl 2 commands are provided for a datagram socket in the Internet domain: .Pp .Bl -tag -width ".Dv SIOCGIFBRDADDR" -offset indent -compact .It Dv SIOCAIFADDR Add address to an interface. The command requires .Ft struct in_aliasreq as argument. .It Dv SIOCDIFADDR Delete address from an interface. The command requires .Ft struct ifreq as argument. .It Dv SIOCGIFADDR .It Dv SIOCGIFBRDADDR .It Dv SIOCGIFDSTADDR .It Dv SIOCGIFNETMASK Return address information from interface. The returned value is in .Ft struct ifreq . This way of address information retrieval is obsoleted, a preferred way is to use .Xr getifaddrs 3 API. .El .Ss MIB Variables A number of variables are implemented in the net.inet branch of the .Xr sysctl 3 MIB. In addition to the variables supported by the transport protocols (for which the respective manual pages may be consulted), the following general variables are defined: .Bl -tag -width IPCTL_ACCEPTSOURCEROUTE .It Dv IPCTL_FORWARDING .Pq ip.forwarding Boolean: enable/disable forwarding of IP packets. Defaults to off. .It Dv IPCTL_SENDREDIRECTS .Pq ip.redirect Boolean: enable/disable sending of ICMP redirects in response to .Tn IP packets for which a better, and for the sender directly reachable, route and next hop is known. Defaults to on. .It Dv IPCTL_DEFTTL .Pq ip.ttl Integer: default time-to-live .Pq Dq TTL to use for outgoing .Tn IP packets. .It Dv IPCTL_ACCEPTSOURCEROUTE .Pq ip.accept_sourceroute Boolean: enable/disable accepting of source-routed IP packets (default false). .It Dv IPCTL_SOURCEROUTE .Pq ip.sourceroute Boolean: enable/disable forwarding of source-routed IP packets (default false). .It Va ip.process_options Integer: control IP options processing. By setting this variable to 0, all IP options in the incoming packets will be ignored, and the packets will be passed unmodified. By setting to 1, IP options in the incoming packets will be processed accordingly. By setting to 2, an .Tn ICMP .Dq "prohibited by filter" message will be sent back in response to incoming packets with IP options. Default is 1. This .Xr sysctl 8 variable affects packets destined for a local host as well as packets forwarded to some other host. .It Va ip.rfc6864 Boolean: control IP IDs generation behaviour. True value enables RFC6864 support, which specifies that IP ID field of .Em atomic datagrams can be set to any value. The .Fx implementation sets it to zero. Enabled by default. .It Va ip.random_id Boolean: control IP IDs generation behaviour. Setting this .Xr sysctl 8 to 1 causes the ID field in .Em non-atomic IP datagrams (or all IP datagrams, if .Va ip.rfc6864 is disabled) to be randomized instead of incremented by 1 with each packet generated. This closes a minor information leak which allows remote observers to determine the rate of packet generation on the machine by watching the counter. At the same time, on high-speed links, it can decrease the ID reuse cycle greatly. Default is 0 (sequential IP IDs). IPv6 flow IDs and fragment IDs are always random. .It Va ip.maxfrags Integer: maximum number of fragments the host will accept and simultaneously hold across all reassembly queues in all VNETs. If set to 0, reassembly is disabled. If set to -1, this limit is not applied. This limit is recalculated when the number of mbuf clusters is changed. This is a global limit. .It Va ip.maxfragpackets Integer: maximum number of fragmented packets the host will accept and simultaneously hold in the reassembly queue for a particular VNET. 0 means that the host will not accept any fragmented packets for that VNET. \-1 means that the host will not apply this limit for that VNET. This limit is recalculated when the number of mbuf clusters is changed. This is a per-VNET limit. .It Va ip.maxfragbucketsize Integer: maximum number of reassembly queues per bucket. Fragmented packets are hashed to buckets. Each bucket has a list of reassembly queues. The system must compare the incoming packets to the existing reassembly queues in the bucket to find a matching reassembly queue. To preserve system resources, the system limits the number of reassembly queues allowed in each bucket. This limit is recalculated when the number of mbuf clusters is changed or when the value of .Va ip.maxfragpackets changes. This is a per-VNET limit. .It Va ip.maxfragsperpacket Integer: maximum number of fragments the host will accept and hold in the reassembly queue for a packet. 0 means that the host will not accept any fragmented packets for the VNET. This is a per-VNET limit. .El .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr ioctl 2 , .Xr socket 2 , .Xr getifaddrs 3 , .Xr sysctl 3 , .Xr icmp 4 , .Xr intro 4 , .Xr ip 4 , .Xr ipfirewall 4 , .Xr route 4 , .Xr tcp 4 , .Xr udp 4 , .Xr pfil 9 .Rs .%T "An Introductory 4.3 BSD Interprocess Communication Tutorial" .%B PS1 .%N 7 .Re .Rs .%T "An Advanced 4.3 BSD Interprocess Communication Tutorial" .%B PS1 .%N 8 .Re .Sh HISTORY The .Nm protocol interface appeared in .Bx 4.2 . The .Dq protocol cloning code appeared in .Fx 2.1 . .Sh CAVEATS The Internet protocol support is subject to change as the Internet protocols develop. Users should not depend on details of the current implementation, but rather the services exported.