DDP(7) manual page
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ddp - Linux AppleTalk protocol implementation
#include
<sys/socket.h>
#include <netatalk/at.h>
ddp_socket = socket(AF_APPLETALK, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
raw_socket = socket(AF_APPLETALK, SOCK_RAW, protocol);
Linux
implements the AppleTalk protocols described in Inside AppleTalk. Only the
DDP layer and AARP are present in the kernel. They are designed to be used
via the netatalk protocol libraries. This page documents the interface for
those who wish or need to use the DDP layer directly.
The communication
between AppleTalk and the user program works using a BSD-compatible socket
interface. For more information on sockets, see socket(7)
.
An AppleTalk socket
is created by calling the socket(2)
function with a AF_APPLETALK socket
family argument. Valid socket types are SOCK_DGRAM to open a ddp socket
or SOCK_RAW to open a raw socket. protocol is the AppleTalk protocol to
be received or sent. For SOCK_RAW you must specify ATPROTO_DDP.
Raw sockets
may be opened only by a process with effective user ID 0 or when the process
has the CAP_NET_RAW capability.
An AppleTalk socket address
is defined as a combination of a network number, a node number, and a port
number.
struct at_addr {
unsigned short s_net;
unsigned char s_node;
};
struct sockaddr_atalk {
sa_family_t sat_family; /* address family */
unsigned char sat_port; /* port */
struct at_addr sat_addr; /* net/node */
};
sat_family is always set to AF_APPLETALK. sat_port contains the port. The
port numbers below 129 are known as reserved ports. Only processes with
the effective user ID 0 or the CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE capability may bind(2)
to these sockets. sat_addr is the host address. The net member of struct
at_addr contains the host network in network byte order. The value of AT_ANYNET
is a wildcard and also implies lqthis network.rq The node member of struct
at_addr contains the host node number. The value of AT_ANYNODE is a wildcard
and also implies lqthis node.rq The value of ATADDR_BCAST is a link local
broadcast address.
No protocol-specific socket options are
supported.
IP supports a set of /proc interfaces to configure
some global AppleTalk parameters. The parameters can be accessed by reading
or writing files in the directory /proc/sys/net/atalk/.
- aarp-expiry-time
- The
time interval (in seconds) before an AARP cache entry expires.
- aarp-resolve-time
- The time interval (in seconds) before an AARP cache entry is resolved.
- aarp-retransmit-limit
- The number of retransmissions of an AARP query before the node is declared
dead.
- aarp-tick-time
- The timer rate (in seconds) for the timer driving AARP.
The default values match the specification and should never need to be
changed.
All ioctls described in socket(7)
apply to DDP.
- EACCES
- The user tried to execute an operation without the necessary permissions.
These include sending to a broadcast address without having the broadcast
flag set, and trying to bind to a reserved port without effective user
ID 0 or CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE.
- EADDRINUSE
- Tried to bind to an address already
in use.
- EADDRNOTAVAIL
- A nonexistent interface was requested or the requested
source address was not local.
- EAGAIN
- Operation on a nonblocking socket would
block.
- EALREADY
- A connection operation on a nonblocking socket is already
in progress.
- ECONNABORTED
- A connection was closed during an accept(2)
.
- EHOSTUNREACH
- No routing table entry matches the destination address.
- EINVAL
- Invalid argument
passed.
- EISCONN
- connect(2)
was called on an already connected socket.
- EMSGSIZE
- Datagram is bigger than the DDP MTU.
- ENODEV
- Network device not available
or not capable of sending IP.
- ENOENT
- SIOCGSTAMP was called on a socket where
no packet arrived.
- ENOMEM and ENOBUFS
- Not enough memory available.
- ENOPKG
- A kernel subsystem was not configured.
- ENOPROTOOPT and EOPNOTSUPP
- Invalid
socket option passed.
- ENOTCONN
- The operation is defined only on a connected
socket, but the socket wasn’t connected.
- EPERM
- User doesn’t have permission
to set high priority, make a configuration change, or send signals to the
requested process or group.
- EPIPE
- The connection was unexpectedly closed
or shut down by the other end.
- ESOCKTNOSUPPORT
- The socket was unconfigured,
or an unknown socket type was requested.
AppleTalk is supported
by Linux 2.0 or higher. The /proc interfaces exist since Linux 2.2.
Be
very careful with the SO_BROADCAST option - it is not privileged in Linux.
It is easy to overload the network with careless sending to broadcast addresses.
The basic AppleTalk socket interface is compatible with netatalk
on BSD-derived systems. Many BSD systems fail to check SO_BROADCAST when
sending broadcast frames; this can lead to compatibility problems.
The raw
socket mode is unique to Linux and exists to support the alternative CAP
package and AppleTalk monitoring tools more easily.
There are too many
inconsistent error values.
The ioctls used to configure routing tables,
devices, AARP tables and other devices are not yet described.
recvmsg(2)
,
sendmsg(2)
, capabilities(7)
, socket(7)
This page is part of release
3.78 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 http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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