NAME¶
ip
—
Internet Protocol
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include
<sys/socket.h>
#include
<netinet/in.h>
int
socket
(
AF_INET,
SOCK_RAW,
proto);
DESCRIPTION¶
IP is the transport layer protocol used by the Internet protocol family. Options
may be set at the IP level when using higher-level protocols that are based on
IP (such as TCP and UDP). It may also be accessed through a “raw
socket” when developing new protocols, or special-purpose applications.
There are several IP-level
setsockopt(2) and
getsockopt(2) options.
IP_OPTIONS
may be used to provide IP
options to be transmitted in the IP header of each outgoing packet or to
examine the header options on incoming packets. IP options may be used with
any socket type in the Internet family. The format of IP options to be sent is
that specified by the IP protocol specification (RFC-791), with one exception:
the list of addresses for Source Route options must include the first-hop
gateway at the beginning of the list of gateways. The first-hop gateway
address will be extracted from the option list and the size adjusted
accordingly before use. To disable previously specified options, use a
zero-length buffer:
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_OPTIONS, NULL, 0);
IP_TOS
and
IP_TTL
may be used to set the
type-of-service and time-to-live fields in the IP header for
SOCK_STREAM
,
SOCK_DGRAM
, and certain types of
SOCK_RAW
sockets. For example,
int tos = IPTOS_LOWDELAY; /* see <netinet/ip.h> */
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_TOS, &tos, sizeof(tos));
int ttl = 60; /* max = 255 */
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_TTL, &ttl, sizeof(ttl));
IP_MINTTL
may be used to set the minimum
acceptable TTL a packet must have when received on a socket. All packets with
a lower TTL are silently dropped. This option is only really useful when set
to 255, preventing packets from outside the directly connected networks
reaching local listeners on sockets.
IP_DONTFRAG
may be used to set the Don't
Fragment flag on IP packets. Currently this option is respected only on
udp(4) and raw
ip(4)
sockets, unless the
IP_HDRINCL
option has
been set. On
tcp(4) sockets, the Don't Fragment
flag is controlled by the Path MTU Discovery option. Sending a packet larger
than the MTU size of the egress interface, determined by the destination
address, returns an
EMSGSIZE
error.
If the
IP_RECVDSTADDR
option is enabled on a
SOCK_DGRAM
socket, the
recvmsg(2) call will return the destination IP
address for a UDP datagram. The
msg_control
field in the
msghdr structure points to a
buffer that contains a
cmsghdr structure
followed by the IP address. The
cmsghdr
fields have the following values:
cmsg_len = CMSG_LEN(sizeof(struct in_addr))
cmsg_level = IPPROTO_IP
cmsg_type = IP_RECVDSTADDR
The source address to be used for outgoing UDP datagrams on a socket can be
specified as ancillary data with a type code of
IP_SENDSRCADDR
. The msg_control field in
the msghdr structure should point to a buffer that contains a
cmsghdr structure followed by the IP address.
The cmsghdr fields should have the following values:
cmsg_len = CMSG_LEN(sizeof(struct in_addr))
cmsg_level = IPPROTO_IP
cmsg_type = IP_SENDSRCADDR
The socket should be either bound to
INADDR_ANY
and a local port, and the
address supplied with
IP_SENDSRCADDR
should't be
INADDR_ANY
, or the socket
should be bound to a local address and the address supplied with
IP_SENDSRCADDR
should be
INADDR_ANY
. In the latter case bound
address is overriden via generic source address selection logic, which would
choose IP address of interface closest to destination.
For convenience,
IP_SENDSRCADDR
is defined to
have the same value as
IP_RECVDSTADDR
, so
the
IP_RECVDSTADDR
control message from
recvmsg(2) can be used directly as a control
message for
sendmsg(2).
If the
IP_ONESBCAST
option is enabled on a
SOCK_DGRAM
or a
SOCK_RAW
socket, the destination address of
outgoing broadcast datagrams on that socket will be forced to the undirected
broadcast address,
INADDR_BROADCAST
, before
transmission. This is in contrast to the default behavior of the system, which
is to transmit undirected broadcasts via the first network interface with the
IFF_BROADCAST
flag set.
This option allows applications to choose which interface is used to transmit an
undirected broadcast datagram. For example, the following code would force an
undirected broadcast to be transmitted via the interface configured with the
broadcast address 192.168.2.255:
char msg[512];
struct sockaddr_in sin;
int onesbcast = 1; /* 0 = disable (default), 1 = enable */
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_ONESBCAST, &onesbcast, sizeof(onesbcast));
sin.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr("192.168.2.255");
sin.sin_port = htons(1234);
sendto(s, msg, sizeof(msg), 0, &sin, sizeof(sin));
It is the application's responsibility to set the
IP_TTL
option to an appropriate value in
order to prevent broadcast storms. The application must have sufficient
credentials to set the
SO_BROADCAST
socket
level option, otherwise the
IP_ONESBCAST
option has no effect.
If the
IP_BINDANY
option is enabled on a
SOCK_STREAM
,
SOCK_DGRAM
or a
SOCK_RAW
socket, one can
bind(2) to any address, even one not bound to any
available network interface in the system. This functionality (in conjunction
with special firewall rules) can be used for implementing a transparent proxy.
The
PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY
privilege is
needed to set this option.
If the
IP_RECVTTL
option is enabled on a
SOCK_DGRAM
socket, the
recvmsg(2) call will return the IP TTL (time to
live) field for a UDP datagram. The msg_control field in the msghdr structure
points to a buffer that contains a cmsghdr structure followed by the TTL. The
cmsghdr fields have the following values:
cmsg_len = CMSG_LEN(sizeof(u_char))
cmsg_level = IPPROTO_IP
cmsg_type = IP_RECVTTL
If the
IP_RECVTOS
option is enabled on a
SOCK_DGRAM
socket, the
recvmsg(2) call will return the IP TOS (type of
service) field for a UDP datagram. The msg_control field in the msghdr
structure points to a buffer that contains a cmsghdr structure followed by the
TOS. The cmsghdr fields have the following values:
cmsg_len = CMSG_LEN(sizeof(u_char))
cmsg_level = IPPROTO_IP
cmsg_type = IP_RECVTOS
If the
IP_RECVIF
option is enabled on a
SOCK_DGRAM
socket, the
recvmsg(2) call returns a
struct sockaddr_dl corresponding to the
interface on which the packet was received. The
msg_control field in the
msghdr structure points to a buffer that
contains a
cmsghdr structure followed by the
struct sockaddr_dl. The
cmsghdr fields have the following values:
cmsg_len = CMSG_LEN(sizeof(struct sockaddr_dl))
cmsg_level = IPPROTO_IP
cmsg_type = IP_RECVIF
IP_PORTRANGE
may be used to set the port
range used for selecting a local port number on a socket with an unspecified
(zero) port number. It has the following possible values:
IP_PORTRANGE_DEFAULT
- use the default range of values, normally
IPPORT_HIFIRSTAUTO
through
IPPORT_HILASTAUTO
. This is adjustable
through the sysctl setting:
net.inet.ip.portrange.first and
net.inet.ip.portrange.last.
IP_PORTRANGE_HIGH
- use a high range of values, normally
IPPORT_HIFIRSTAUTO
and
IPPORT_HILASTAUTO
. This is adjustable
through the sysctl setting:
net.inet.ip.portrange.hifirst and
net.inet.ip.portrange.hilast.
IP_PORTRANGE_LOW
- use a low range of ports, which are normally restricted to privileged
processes on UNIX systems. The range is normally
from
IPPORT_RESERVED
- 1 down to
IPPORT_RESERVEDSTART
in descending order. This is
adjustable through the sysctl setting:
net.inet.ip.portrange.lowfirst and
net.inet.ip.portrange.lowlast.
The range of privileged ports which only may be opened by root-owned processes
may be modified by the
net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedlow and
net.inet.ip.portrange.reservedhigh sysctl
settings. The values default to the traditional range, 0 through
IPPORT_RESERVED
- 1 (0 through 1023),
respectively. Note that these settings do not affect and are not accounted for
in the use or calculation of the other
net.inet.ip.portrange values above. Changing
these values departs from
UNIX tradition and has
security consequences that the administrator should carefully evaluate before
modifying these settings.
Ports are allocated at random within the specified port range in order to
increase the difficulty of random spoofing attacks. In scenarios such as
benchmarking, this behavior may be undesirable. In these cases,
net.inet.ip.portrange.randomized can be used
to toggle randomization off. If more than
net.inet.ip.portrange.randomcps ports have
been allocated in the last second, then return to sequential port allocation.
Return to random allocation only once the current port allocation rate drops
below
net.inet.ip.portrange.randomcps for at
least
net.inet.ip.portrange.randomtime
seconds. The default values for
net.inet.ip.portrange.randomcps and
net.inet.ip.portrange.randomtime are 10 port
allocations per second and 45 seconds correspondingly.
Multicast Options¶
IP multicasting is supported only on
AF_INET
sockets of type
SOCK_DGRAM
and
SOCK_RAW
, and only on networks where the
interface driver supports multicasting.
The
IP_MULTICAST_TTL
option changes the
time-to-live (TTL) for outgoing multicast datagrams in order to control the
scope of the multicasts:
u_char ttl; /* range: 0 to 255, default = 1 */
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_MULTICAST_TTL, &ttl, sizeof(ttl));
Datagrams with a TTL of 1 are not forwarded beyond the local network. Multicast
datagrams with a TTL of 0 will not be transmitted on any network, but may be
delivered locally if the sending host belongs to the destination group and if
multicast loopback has not been disabled on the sending socket (see below).
Multicast datagrams with TTL greater than 1 may be forwarded to other networks
if a multicast router is attached to the local network.
For hosts with multiple interfaces, where an interface has not been specified
for a multicast group membership, each multicast transmission is sent from the
primary network interface. The
IP_MULTICAST_IF
option overrides the
default for subsequent transmissions from a given socket:
struct in_addr addr;
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_MULTICAST_IF, &addr, sizeof(addr));
where "addr" is the local IP address of the desired interface or
INADDR_ANY
to specify the default
interface.
To specify an interface by index, an instance of
ip_mreqn may be passed instead. The
imr_ifindex member should be set to the index
of the desired interface, or 0 to specify the default interface. The kernel
differentiates between these two structures by their size.
The use of
IP_MULTICAST_IF is
not recommended, as multicast memberships are
scoped to each individual interface. It is supported for legacy use only by
applications, such as routing daemons, which expect to be able to transmit
link-local IPv4 multicast datagrams (224.0.0.0/24) on multiple interfaces,
without requesting an individual membership for each interface.
An interface's local IP address and multicast capability can be obtained via the
SIOCGIFCONF
and
SIOCGIFFLAGS
ioctls. Normal applications
should not need to use this option.
If a multicast datagram is sent to a group to which the sending host itself
belongs (on the outgoing interface), a copy of the datagram is, by default,
looped back by the IP layer for local delivery. The
IP_MULTICAST_LOOP
option gives the sender
explicit control over whether or not subsequent datagrams are looped back:
u_char loop; /* 0 = disable, 1 = enable (default) */
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_MULTICAST_LOOP, &loop, sizeof(loop));
This option improves performance for applications that may have no more than one
instance on a single host (such as a routing daemon), by eliminating the
overhead of receiving their own transmissions. It should generally not be used
by applications for which there may be more than one instance on a single host
(such as a conferencing program) or for which the sender does not belong to
the destination group (such as a time querying program).
The sysctl setting
net.inet.ip.mcast.loop
controls the default setting of the
IP_MULTICAST_LOOP
socket option for new
sockets.
A multicast datagram sent with an initial TTL greater than 1 may be delivered to
the sending host on a different interface from that on which it was sent, if
the host belongs to the destination group on that other interface. The
loopback control option has no effect on such delivery.
A host must become a member of a multicast group before it can receive datagrams
sent to the group. To join a multicast group, use the
IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP
option:
struct ip_mreq mreq;
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP, &mreq, sizeof(mreq));
where
mreq is the following structure:
struct ip_mreq {
struct in_addr imr_multiaddr; /* IP multicast address of group */
struct in_addr imr_interface; /* local IP address of interface */
}
imr_interface should be set to the IP address
of a particular multicast-capable interface if the host is multihomed. It may
be set to
INADDR_ANY
to choose the default
interface, although this is not recommended; this is considered to be the
first interface corresponding to the default route. Otherwise, the first
multicast-capable interface configured in the system will be used.
Prior to
FreeBSD 7.0, if the
imr_interface member is within the network
range
0.0.0.0/8
, it is treated as an interface index
in the system interface MIB, as per the RIP Version 2 MIB Extension
(RFC-1724). In versions of
FreeBSD since 7.0, this
behavior is no longer supported. Developers should instead use the RFC 3678
multicast source filter APIs; in particular,
MCAST_JOIN_GROUP
.
Up to
IP_MAX_MEMBERSHIPS
memberships may be
added on a single socket. Membership is associated with a single interface;
programs running on multihomed hosts may need to join the same group on more
than one interface.
To drop a membership, use:
struct ip_mreq mreq;
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_DROP_MEMBERSHIP, &mreq, sizeof(mreq));
where
mreq contains the same values as used to
add the membership. Memberships are dropped when the socket is closed or the
process exits.
The IGMP protocol uses the primary IP address of the interface as its identifier
for group membership. This is the first IP address configured on the
interface. If this address is removed or changed, the results are undefined,
as the IGMP membership state will then be inconsistent. If multiple IP aliases
are configured on the same interface, they will be ignored.
This shortcoming was addressed in IPv6; MLDv2 requires that the unique
link-local address for an interface is used to identify an MLDv2 listener.
Source-Specific Multicast Options¶
Since
FreeBSD 8.0, the use of Source-Specific Multicast
(SSM) is supported. These extensions require an IGMPv3 multicast router in
order to make best use of them. If a legacy multicast router is present on the
link,
FreeBSD will simply downgrade to the version of
IGMP spoken by the router, and the benefits of source filtering on the
upstream link will not be present, although the kernel will continue to
squelch transmissions from blocked sources.
Each group membership on a socket now has a filter mode:
MCAST_EXCLUDE
- Datagrams sent to this group are accepted, unless the source is in a list
of blocked source addresses.
MCAST_INCLUDE
- Datagrams sent to this group are accepted only if the source is in a list
of accepted source addresses.
Groups joined using the legacy
IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP
option are placed in
exclusive-mode, and are able to request that certain sources are blocked or
allowed. This is known as the
delta-based API.
To block a multicast source on an existing group membership:
struct ip_mreq_source mreqs;
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_BLOCK_SOURCE, &mreqs, sizeof(mreqs));
where
mreqs is the following structure:
struct ip_mreq_source {
struct in_addr imr_multiaddr; /* IP multicast address of group */
struct in_addr imr_sourceaddr; /* IP address of source */
struct in_addr imr_interface; /* local IP address of interface */
}
imr_sourceaddr should be set to the address of
the source to be blocked.
To unblock a multicast source on an existing group:
struct ip_mreq_source mreqs;
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_UNBLOCK_SOURCE, &mreqs, sizeof(mreqs));
The
IP_BLOCK_SOURCE
and
IP_UNBLOCK_SOURCE
options are
not permitted for inclusive-mode group
memberships.
To join a multicast group in
MCAST_INCLUDE
mode with a single source, or add another source to an existing inclusive-mode
membership:
struct ip_mreq_source mreqs;
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_ADD_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP, &mreqs, sizeof(mreqs));
To leave a single source from an existing group in inclusive mode:
struct ip_mreq_source mreqs;
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_DROP_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP, &mreqs, sizeof(mreqs));
If this is the last accepted source for the group, the membership will be
dropped.
The
IP_ADD_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP
and
IP_DROP_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP
options are
not accepted for exclusive-mode group
memberships. However, both exclusive and inclusive mode memberships support
the use of the
full-state API documented in RFC
3678. For management of source filter lists using this API, please refer to
sourcefilter(3).
The sysctl settings
net.inet.ip.mcast.maxsocksrc and
net.inet.ip.mcast.maxgrpsrc are used to
specify an upper limit on the number of per-socket and per-group source filter
entries which the kernel may allocate.
Raw IP Sockets¶
Raw IP sockets are connectionless, and are normally used with the
sendto(2) and
recvfrom(2) calls, though the
connect(2) call may also be used to fix the
destination for future packets (in which case the
read(2) or
recv(2)
and
write(2) or
send(2) system calls may be used).
If
proto is 0, the default protocol
IPPROTO_RAW
is used for outgoing packets,
and only incoming packets destined for that protocol are received. If
proto is non-zero, that protocol number will
be used on outgoing packets and to filter incoming packets.
Outgoing packets automatically have an IP header prepended to them (based on the
destination address and the protocol number the socket is created with),
unless the
IP_HDRINCL
option has been set.
Incoming packets are received with IP header and options intact, except for
ip_len and
ip_off fields converted to host byte order.
IP_HDRINCL
indicates the complete IP header
is included with the data and may be used only with the
SOCK_RAW
type.
#include <netinet/in_systm.h>
#include <netinet/ip.h>
int hincl = 1; /* 1 = on, 0 = off */
setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IP, IP_HDRINCL, &hincl, sizeof(hincl));
Unlike previous
BSD releases, the program must set all
the fields of the IP header, including the following:
ip->ip_v = IPVERSION;
ip->ip_hl = hlen >> 2;
ip->ip_id = 0; /* 0 means kernel set appropriate value */
ip->ip_off = offset;
The
ip_len and
ip_off fields
must be provided in host byte order. All other
fields must be provided in network byte order. See
byteorder(3) for more information on network byte
order. If the
ip_id field is set to 0 then
the kernel will choose an appropriate value. If the header source address is
set to
INADDR_ANY
, the kernel will choose
an appropriate address.
ERRORS¶
A socket operation may fail with one of the following errors returned:
- [
EISCONN
]
- when trying to establish a connection on a socket which already has one,
or when trying to send a datagram with the destination address specified
and the socket is already connected;
- [
ENOTCONN
]
- when trying to send a datagram, but no destination address is specified,
and the socket has not been connected;
- [
ENOBUFS
]
- when the system runs out of memory for an internal data structure;
- [
EADDRNOTAVAIL
]
- when an attempt is made to create a socket with a network address for
which no network interface exists.
- [
EACCES
]
- when an attempt is made to create a raw IP socket by a non-privileged
process.
The following errors specific to IP may occur when setting or getting IP
options:
- [
EINVAL
]
- An unknown socket option name was given.
- [
EINVAL
]
- The IP option field was improperly formed; an option field was shorter
than the minimum value or longer than the option buffer provided.
The following errors may occur when attempting to send IP datagrams via a
“raw socket” with the
IP_HDRINCL
option set:
- [
EINVAL
]
- The user-supplied ip_len field was not
equal to the length of the datagram written to the socket.
SEE ALSO¶
getsockopt(2),
recv(2),
send(2),
byteorder(3),
icmp(4),
igmp(4),
inet(4),
intro(4),
multicast(4),
sourcefilter(3)
D. Thaler,
B. Fenner, and B. Quinn,
Socket Interface Extensions for Multicast Source
Filters, RFC 3678, Jan
2004.
HISTORY¶
The
ip
protocol appeared in
4.2BSD. The
ip_mreqn
structure appeared in Linux 2.4.
BUGS¶
Before
FreeBSD 10.0 packets received on raw IP sockets
had the
ip_hl subtracted from the
ip_len field.