IP(3)IP(3)NAME
ip, esp, gre, icmp, icmpv6, ipmux, rudp, tcp, udp - network protocols
over IP
SYNOPSIS
bind -a #Ispec /net
/net/ipifc
/net/ipifc/clone
/net/ipifc/stats
/net/ipifc/n
/net/ipifc/n/status
/net/ipifc/n/ctl
...
/net/arp
/net/bootp
/net/iproute
/net/ipselftab
/net/log
/net/ndb
/net/esp
/net/gre
/net/icmp
/net/icmpv6
/net/ipmux
/net/rudp
/net/tcp
/net/udp
/net/tcp/clone
/net/tcp/stats
/net/tcp/n
/net/tcp/n/data
/net/tcp/n/ctl
/net/tcp/n/local
/net/tcp/n/remote
/net/tcp/n/status
/net/tcp/n/listen
...
DESCRIPTION
The ip device provides the interface to Internet Protocol stacks. Spec
is an integer from 0 to 15 identifying a stack. Each stack implements
IPv4 and IPv6. Each stack is independent of all others: the only
information transfer between them is via programs that mount multiple
stacks. Normally a system uses only one stack. However multiple
stacks can be used for debugging new IP networks or implementing fire‐
walls or proxy services.
All addresses used are 16-byte IPv6 addresses. IPv4 addresses are a
subset of the IPv6 addresses and both standard ASCII formats are
accepted. In binary representation, all v4 addresses start with the 12
bytes, in hex:
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ff ff
Configuring interfaces
Each stack may have multiple interfaces and each interface may have
multiple addresses. The /net/ipifc directory contains a clone file, a
stats file, and numbered subdirectories for each physical interface.
Opening the clone file reserves an interface. The file descriptor
returned from the open(2) will point to the control file, ctl, of the
newly allocated interface. Reading ctl returns a text string repre‐
senting the number of the interface. Writing ctl alters aspects of the
interface. The possible ctl messages are those described under Proto‐
col directories below and these:
bind ether path
Treat the device mounted at path as an Ethernet medium carrying
IP and ARP packets and associate it with this interface. The
kernel will dial(2) path!0x800, path!0x806 and path!0x86dd and
use the connections for IPv4, ARP and IPv6 respectively.
bind pkt
Treat this interface as a packet interface. Assume a user pro‐
gram will read and write the data file to receive and transmit
IP packets to the kernel. This is used by programs such as
ppp(8) to mediate IP packet transfer between the kernel and a
PPP encoded device.
bind netdev path
Treat this interface as a packet interface. The kernel will
open path and read and write the resulting file descriptor to
receive and transmit IP packets.
bind loopback
Treat this interface as a local loopback. Anything written to
it will be looped back.
unbind Disassociate the physical device from an IP interface.
add local [ mask remote mtu proxy ]
try local [ mask remote mtu proxy ]
Add a local IP address to the interface. Try adds the local
address as a tentative address if it's an IPv6 address. The
mask, remote, mtu, and proxy arguments are all optional. The
default mask is the class mask for the local address. The
default remote address is local ANDed with mask. The default
mtu (maximum transmission unit) is 1514 for Ethernet and 4096
for packet media. The mtu is the size in bytes of the largest
packet that this interface can send. Proxy, if specified, means
that this machine should answer ARP requests for the remote
address. Ppp(8) does this to make remote machines appear to be
connected to the local Ethernet.
remove local mask
Remove a local IP address from an interface.
mtu n Set the maximum transfer unit for this device to n. The mtu is
the maximum size of the packet including any medium-specific
headers.
reassemble
Reassemble IP fragments before forwarding to this interface
iprouting n
Allow (n is missing or non-zero) or disallow (n is 0) forwarding
packets between this interface and others.
bridge Enable bridging (see bridge(3)).
promiscuous
Set the interface into promiscuous mode, which makes it accept
all incoming packets, whether addressed to it or not.
connect type
marks the Ethernet packet type as being in use, if not already
in use on this interface. A type of -1 means `all' but appears
to be a no-op.
addmulti Media-addr
Treat the multicast Media-addr on this interface as a local
address.
remmulti Media-addr
Remove the multicast address Media-addr from this interface.
scanbs Make the wireless interface scan for base stations.
headersonly
Set the interface to pass only packet headers, not data too.
add6 v6addr pfx-len [onlink auto validlt preflt]
Add the local IPv6 address v6addr with prefix length pfx-len to
this interface. See RFC 2461 §6.2.1 for more detail. The
remaining arguments are optional:
onlink flag: address is `on-link'
auto flag: autonomous
validlt
valid life-time in seconds
preflt preferred life-time in seconds
ra6 keyword value ...
Set IPv6 router advertisement (RA) parameter keyword's value.
Known keywords and the meanings of their values follow. See RFC
2461 §6.2.1 for more detail. Flags are true iff non-zero.
recvra flag: receive and process RAs.
sendra flag: generate and send RAs.
mflag flag: ``Managed address configuration'', goes into RAs.
oflag flag: ``Other stateful configuration'', goes into RAs.
maxraint
``maximum time allowed between sending unsolicited multi‐
cast'' RAs from the interface, in ms.
minraint
``minimum time allowed between sending unsolicited multi‐
cast'' RAs from the interface, in ms.
linkmtu
``value to be placed in MTU options sent by the router.''
Zero indicates none.
reachtime
sets the Reachable Time field in RAs sent by the router.
``Zero means unspecified (by this router).''
rxmitra
sets the Retrans Timer field in RAs sent by the router.
``Zero means unspecified (by this router).''
ttl default value of the Cur Hop Limit field in RAs sent by
the router. Should be set to the ``current diameter of
the Internet.'' ``Zero means unspecified (by this
router).''
routerlt
sets the Router Lifetime field of RAs sent from the
interface, in ms. Zero means the router is not to be
used as a default router.
Reading the interface's status file returns information about the
interface, one line for each local address on that interface. The
first line has 9 white-space-separated fields: device, mtu, local
address, mask, remote or network address, packets in, packets out,
input errors, output errors. Each subsequent line contains all but the
device and mtu. See readipifc in ip(2).
Routing
The file iproute controls information about IP routing. When read, it
returns one line per routing entry. Each line contains six white-
space-separated fields: target address, target mask, address of next
hop, flags, tag, and interface number. The entry used for routing an
IP packet is the one with the longest mask for which destination
address ANDed with target mask equals the target address. The one-
character flags are:
4 IPv4 route
6 IPv6 route
i local interface
b broadcast address
u local unicast address
m multicast route
p point-to-point route
The tag is an arbitrary, up to 4 character, string. It is normally
used to indicate what routing protocol originated the route.
Writing to /net/iproute changes the route table. The messages are:
flush Remove all routes.
tag string
Associate the tag, string, with all subsequent routes added via
this file descriptor.
add target mask nexthop
Add the route to the table. If one already exists with the same
target and mask, replace it.
remove target mask
Remove a route with a matching target and mask.
route target
Print on the console the route to address target, if any. Pri‐
marily a debugging aid.
Address resolution
The file /net/arp controls information about address resolution. The
kernel automatically updates the v4 ARP and v6 Neighbour Discovery
information for Ethernet interfaces. When read, the file returns one
line per address containing the type of medium, the status of the entry
(OK, WAIT), the IP address, and the medium address. Writing to
/net/arp administers the ARP information. The control messages are:
flush Remove all entries.
add type IP-addr Media-addr
Add an entry or replace an existing one for the same IP address.
del IP-addr
Delete an individual entry.
ARP entries do not time out. The ARP table is a cache with an LRU
replacement policy. The IP stack listens for all ARP requests and, if
the requester is in the table, the entry is updated. Also, whenever a
new address is configured onto an Ethernet, an ARP request is sent to
help update the table on other systems.
Currently, the only medium type is ether.
Debugging and stack information
If any process is holding /net/log open, the IP stack queues debugging
information to it. This is intended primarily for debugging the IP
stack. The information provided is implementation-defined; see the
source for details. Generally, what is returned is error messages
about bad packets.
Writing to /net/log controls debugging. The control messages are:
set arglist
Arglist is a space-separated list of items for which to enable
debugging. The possible items are: ppp, ip, fs, tcp, icmp, udp,
compress, gre, tcpwin, tcprxmt, udpmsg, ipmsg, and esp.
clear arglist
Arglist is a space-separated list of items for which to disable
debugging.
only addr
If addr is non-zero, restrict debugging to only those packets
whose source or destination is that address.
The file /net/ndb can be read or written by programs. It is normally
used by ipconfig(8) to leave configuration information for other pro‐
grams such as dns and cs (see ndb(8)). /net/ndb may contain up to 1024
bytes.
The file /net/ipselftab is a read-only file containing all the IP
addresses considered local. Each line in the file contains three
white-space-separated fields: IP address, usage count, and flags. The
usage count is the number of interfaces to which the address applies.
The flags are the same as for routing entries. Note that the `IPv4
route' flag will never be set.
Protocol directories
The ip device supports IP as well as several protocols that run over
it: TCP, UDP, RUDP, ICMP, GRE, and ESP. TCP and UDP provide the stan‐
dard Internet protocols for reliable stream and unreliable datagram
communication. RUDP is a locally-developed reliable datagram protocol
based on UDP. ICMP is IP's catch-all control protocol used to send low
level error messages and to implement ping(8). GRE is a general encap‐
sulation protocol. ESP is the encapsulation protocol for IPsec. IL
provided a reliable datagram service for communication between Plan 9
machines over IPv4, but is no longer part of the system.
Each protocol is a subdirectory of the IP stack. The top level direc‐
tory of each protocol contains a clone file, a stats file, and subdi‐
rectories numbered from zero to the number of connections opened for
this protocol.
Opening the clone file reserves a connection. The file descriptor
returned from the open(2) will point to the control file, ctl, of the
newly allocated connection. Reading ctl returns a text string repre‐
senting the number of the connection. Connections may be used either
to listen for incoming calls or to initiate calls to other machines.
A connection is controlled by writing text strings to the associated
ctl file. After a connection has been established data may be read
from and written to data. A connection can be actively established
using the connect message (see also dial(2)). A connection can be
established passively by first using an announce message (see dial(2))
to bind to a local port and then opening the listen file (see dial(2))
to receive incoming calls.
The following control messages are supported:
connect ip-address!port!r local
Establish a connection to the remote ip-address and port. If
local is specified, it is used as the local port number. If
local is not specified but !r is, the system will allocate a
restricted port number (less than 1024) for the connection to
allow communication with Unix login and exec services. Other‐
wise a free port number starting at 5000 is chosen. The connect
fails if the combination of local and remote address/port pairs
are already assigned to another port.
announce X
X is a decimal port number or Set the local port number to X and
accept calls to X. If X is accept calls for any port that no
process has explicitly announced. The local IP address cannot
be set. Announce fails if the connection is already announced
or connected.
bind X X is a decimal port number or Set the local port number to X.
This exists to support emulation of BSD sockets by the APE
libraries (see pcc(1)) and is not otherwise used.
ttl n Set the time to live IP field in outgoing packets to n.
tos n Set the service type IP field in outgoing packets to n.
ignoreadvice
Don't break (UDP) connections because of ICMP errors.
addmulti ifc-ip [ mcast-ip ]
Treat ifc-ip on this multicast interface as a local address. If
mcast-ip is present, use it as the interface's multicast
address.
remmulti ip
Remove the address ip from this multicast interface.
Port numbers must be in the range 1 to 32767.
Several files report the status of a connection. The remote and local
files contain the IP address and port number for the remote and local
side of the connection. The status file contains protocol-dependent
information to help debug network connections. On receiving and error
or EOF reading or writing the data file, the err file contains the rea‐
son for error.
A process may accept incoming connections by open(2)ing the listen
file. The open will block until a new connection request arrives.
Then open will return an open file descriptor which points to the con‐
trol file of the newly accepted connection. This procedure will accept
all calls for the given protocol. See dial(2).
TCP
TCP connections are reliable point-to-point byte streams; there are no
message delimiters. A connection is determined by the address and port
numbers of the two ends. TCP ctl files support the following addi‐
tional messages:
hangup close down this TCP connection
keepalive n
turn on keep alive messages. N, if given, is the milliseconds
between keepalives (default 30000).
checksum n
emit TCP checksums of zero if n is zero; otherwise, and by
default, TCP checksums are computed and sent normally.
tcpporthogdefense onoff
onoff of enables the TCP port-hog defense for all TCP connec‐
tions; onoff of disables it. The defense is a solution to
hijacked systems staking out ports as a form of denial-of-ser‐
vice attack. To avoid stateless TCP conversation hogs, ip picks
a TCP sequence number at random for keepalives. If that number
gets acked by the other end, ip shuts down the connection. Some
firewalls, notably ones that perform stateful inspection, dis‐
card such out-of-specification keepalives, so connections
through such firewalls will be killed after five minutes by the
lack of keepalives.
UDP
UDP connections carry unreliable and unordered datagrams. A read from
data will return the next datagram, discarding anything that doesn't
fit in the read buffer. A write is sent as a single datagram.
By default, a UDP connection is a point-to-point link. Either a con‐
nect establishes a local and remote address/port pair or after an
announce, each datagram coming from a different remote address/port
pair establishes a new incoming connection. However, many-to-one
semantics is also possible.
If, after an announce, the message is written to ctl, then all messages
sent to the announced port are received on the announced connection
prefixed with the corresponding structure, declared in <ip.h>:
typedef struct Udphdr Udphdr;
struct Udphdr
{
uchar raddr[16]; /* V6 remote address and port */
uchar laddr[16]; /* V6 local address and port */
uchar ifcaddr[16]; /* V6 interface address (receive only) */
uchar rport[2]; /* remote port */
uchar lport[2]; /* local port */
};
Before a write, a user must prefix a similar structure to each message.
The system overrides the user specified local port with the announced
one. If the user specifies an address that isn't a unicast address in
/net/ipselftab, that too is overridden. Since the prefixed structure
is the same in read and write, it is relatively easy to write a server
that responds to client requests by just copying new data into the mes‐
sage body and then writing back the same buffer that was read.
In this case (writing to the ctl file), no listen nor accept is needed;
otherwise, the usual sequence of announce, listen, accept must be exe‐
cuted before performing I/O on the corresponding data file.
RUDP
RUDP is a reliable datagram protocol based on UDP, currently only for
IPv4. Packets are delivered in order. RUDP does not support listen.
One must write either or followed immediately by to ctl.
Unlike TCP, the reboot of one end of a connection does not force a
closing of the connection. Communications will resume when the
rebooted machine resumes talking. Any unacknowledged packets queued
before the reboot will be lost. A reboot can be detected by reading
the err file. It will contain the message
hangup address!port
where address and port are of the far side of the connection. Retrans‐
mitting a datagram more than 10 times is treated like a reboot: all
queued messages are dropped, an error is queued to the err file, and
the conversation resumes.
RUDP ctl files accept the following messages:
headers
Corresponds to the format of UDP.
hangup IP port
Drop the connection to address IP and port.
randdrop [ percent ]
Randomly drop percent of outgoing packets. Default is 10%.
ICMP
ICMP is a datagram protocol for IPv4 used to exchange control requests
and their responses with other machines' IP implementations. ICMP is
primarily a kernel-to-kernel protocol, but it is possible to generate
`echo request' and read `echo reply' packets from user programs.
ICMPV6
ICMPv6 is the IPv6 equivalent of ICMP. If, after an announce, the mes‐
sage is written to ctl, then before a write, a user must prefix each
message with a corresponding structure, declared in <ip.h>:
/*
* user level icmpv6 with control message "headers"
*/
typedef struct Icmp6hdr Icmp6hdr;
struct Icmp6hdr {
uchar unused[8];
uchar laddr[IPaddrlen]; /* local address */
uchar raddr[IPaddrlen]; /* remote address */
};
In this case (writing to the ctl file), no listen nor accept is needed;
otherwise, the usual sequence of announce, listen, accept must be exe‐
cuted before performing I/O on the corresponding data file.
GRE
GRE is the encapsulation protocol used by PPTP. The kernel implements
just enough of the protocol to multiplex it. Our implementation encap‐
sulates in IPv4, per RFC 1702. Announce is not allowed in GRE, only
connect. Since GRE has no port numbers, the port number in the connect
is actually the 16 bit eproto field in the GRE header.
Reads and writes transfer a GRE datagram starting at the GRE header.
On write, the kernel fills in the eproto field with the port number
specified in the connect message.
ESP
ESP is the Encapsulating Security Payload (RFC 1827, obsoleted by RFC
4303) for IPsec (RFC 4301). We currently implement only tunnel mode,
not transport mode. It is used to set up an encrypted tunnel between
machines. Like GRE, ESP has no port numbers. Instead, the port number
in the connect message is the SPI (Security Association Identifier
(sic)). IP packets are written to and read from data. The kernel
encrypts any packets written to data, appends a MAC, and prefixes an
ESP header before sending to the other end of the tunnel. Received
packets are checked against their MAC's, decrypted, and queued for
reading from data. In the following, secret is the hexadecimal encod‐
ing of a key, without a leading The control messages are:
esp alg secret
Encrypt with the algorithm, alg, using secret as the key. Pos‐
sible algorithms are: null, des_56_cbc, des3_cbc, and eventually
aes_128_cbc, and aes_ctr.
ah alg secret
Use the hash algorithm, alg, with secret as the key for generat‐
ing the MAC. Possible algorithms are: null, hmac_sha1_96,
hmac_md5_96, and eventually aes_xcbc_mac_96.
header Turn on header mode. Every buffer read from data starts with 4
unused bytes, and the first 4 bytes of every buffer written to
data are ignored.
noheader
Turn off header mode.
IP packet filter
The directory /net/ipmux looks like another protocol directory. It is
a packet filter built on top of IP. Each numbered subdirectory repre‐
sents a different filter. The connect messages written to the ctl file
describe the filter. Packets matching the filter can be read on the
data file. Packets written to the data file are routed to an interface
and transmitted.
A filter is a semicolon-separated list of relations. Each relation
describes a portion of a packet to match. The possible relations are:
proto=n
the IP protocol number must be n.
data[n:m]=expr
bytes n through m following the IP packet must match expr.
iph[n:m]=expr
bytes n through m of the IP packet header must match expr.
ifc=expr
the packet must have been received on an interface whose address
matches expr.
src=expr
The source address in the packet must match expr.
dst=expr
The destination address in the packet must match expr.
Expr is of the form:
value
value|value|...
value&mask
value|value&mask
If a mask is given, the relevant field is first ANDed with the mask.
The result is compared against the value or list of values for a match.
In the case of ifc, dst, and src the value is a dot-formatted IP
address and the mask is a dot-formatted IP mask. In the case of data,
iph and proto, both value and mask are strings of 2 hexadecimal digits
representing 8-bit values.
A packet is delivered to only one filter. The filters are merged into
a single comparison tree. If two filters match the same packet, the
following rules apply in order (here '>' means is preferred to):
1) protocol > data > source > destination > interface
2) lower data offsets > higher data offsets
3) longer matches > shorter matches
4) older > younger
So far this has just been used to implement a version of OSPF in
Inferno and 6to4 tunnelling.
Statistics
The stats files are read only and contain statistics useful to network
monitoring.
Reading /net/ipifc/stats returns a list of 19 tagged and newline-sepa‐
rated fields representing:
forwarding status (0 and 2 mean forwarding off,
1 means on)
default TTL
input packets
input header errors
input address errors
packets forwarded
input packets for unknown protocols
input packets discarded
input packets delivered to higher level protocols
output packets
output packets discarded
output packets with no route
timed out fragments in reassembly queue
requested reassemblies
successful reassemblies
failed reassemblies
successful fragmentations
unsuccessful fragmentations
fragments created
Reading /net/icmp/stats returns a list of 26 tagged and newline-sepa‐
rated fields representing:
messages received
bad received messages
unreachables received
time exceededs received
input parameter problems received
source quenches received
redirects received
echo requests received
echo replies received
timestamps received
timestamp replies received
address mask requests received
address mask replies received
messages sent
transmission errors
unreachables sent
time exceededs sent
input parameter problems sent
source quenches sent
redirects sent
echo requests sent
echo replies sent
timestamps sent
timestamp replies sent
address mask requests sent
address mask replies sent
Reading /net/tcp/stats returns a list of 11 tagged and newline-sepa‐
rated fields representing:
maximum number of connections
total outgoing calls
total incoming calls
number of established connections to be reset
number of currently established connections
segments received
segments sent
segments retransmitted
retransmit timeouts
bad received segments
transmission failures
Reading /net/udp/stats returns a list of 4 tagged and newline-separated
fields representing:
datagrams received
datagrams received for bad ports
malformed datagrams received
datagrams sent
Reading /net/gre/stats returns a list of 1 tagged number representing:
header length errors
SEE ALSOdial(2), ip(2), bridge(3), ndb(6), listen(8)
/lib/rfc/rfc2460
IPv6
/lib/rfc/rfc4291
IPv6 address architecture
/lib/rfc/rfc4443
ICMPv6
SOURCE
/sys/src/9/ip
BUGS
Ipmux has not been heavily used and should be considered experimental.
It may disappear in favor of a more traditional packet filter in the
future.
IP(3)