IPV6(7) manual page
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ipv6 - Linux IPv6 protocol implementation
#include
<sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
tcp6_socket = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
raw6_socket = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_RAW, protocol);
udp6_socket = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_DGRAM, protocol);
Linux
2.2 optionally implements the Internet Protocol, version 6. This man page
contains a description of the IPv6 basic API as implemented by the Linux
kernel and glibc 2.1. The interface is based on the BSD sockets interface;
see socket(7)
.
The IPv6 API aims to be mostly compatible with the IPv4 API
(see ip(7)
). Only differences are described in this man page.
To bind an
AF_INET6 socket to any process, the local address should be copied from
the in6addr_any variable which has in6_addr type. In static initializations,
IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT may also be used, which expands to a constant expression.
Both of them are in network byte order.
The IPv6 loopback address (::1)
is available in the global in6addr_loopback variable. For initializations,
IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK_INIT should be used.
IPv4 connections can be handled with
the v6 API by using the v4-mapped-on-v6 address type; thus a program only
needs to support this API type to support both protocols. This is handled
transparently by the address handling functions in the C library.
IPv4 and
IPv6 share the local port space. When you get an IPv4 connection or packet
to a IPv6 socket, its source address will be mapped to v6 and it will be
mapped to v6.
struct sockaddr_in6 {
sa_family_t sin6_family; /* AF_INET6 */
in_port_t sin6_port; /* port number */
uint32_t sin6_flowinfo; /* IPv6 flow information */
struct in6_addr sin6_addr; /* IPv6 address */
uint32_t sin6_scope_id; /* Scope ID (new in 2.4) */
};
struct in6_addr {
unsigned char s6_addr[16]; /* IPv6 address */
};
sin6_family is always set to AF_INET6; sin6_port is the protocol port
(see sin_port in ip(7)
); sin6_flowinfo is the IPv6 flow identifier; sin6_addr
is the 128-bit IPv6 address. sin6_scope_id is an ID depending on the scope
of the address. It is new in Linux 2.4. Linux supports it only for link-local
addresses, in that case sin6_scope_id contains the interface index (see
netdevice(7)
)
IPv6 supports several address types: unicast to address a
single host, multicast to address a group of hosts, anycast to address
the nearest member of a group of hosts (not implemented in Linux), IPv4-on-IPv6
to address a IPv4 host, and other reserved address types.
The address notation
for IPv6 is a group of 8 4-digit hexadecimal numbers, separated with a aq:aq.
"::" stands for a string of 0 bits. Special addresses are ::1 for loopback
and ::FFFF:<IPv4 address> for IPv4-mapped-on-IPv6.
The port space of IPv6 is
shared with IPv4.
IPv6 supports some protocol-specific socket
options that can be set with setsockopt(2)
and read with getsockopt(2)
.
The socket option level for IPv6 is IPPROTO_IPV6. A boolean integer flag
is zero when it is false, otherwise true.
- IPV6_ADDRFORM
- Turn an AF_INET6
socket into a socket of a different address family. Only AF_INET is currently
supported for that. It is allowed only for IPv6 sockets that are connected
and bound to a v4-mapped-on-v6 address. The argument is a pointer to an integer
containing AF_INET. This is useful to pass v4-mapped sockets as file descriptors
to programs that don’t know how to deal with the IPv6 API.
- IPV6_ADD_MEMBERSHIP,
IPV6_DROP_MEMBERSHIP
- Control membership in multicast groups. Argument is
a pointer to a struct ipv6_mreq.
- IPV6_MTU
- getsockopt(): Retrieve the current
known path MTU of the current socket. Only valid when the socket has been
connected. Returns an integer.
setsockopt(): Set the MTU to be used for
the socket. The MTU is limited by the device MTU or the path MTU when path
MTU discovery is enabled. Argument is a pointer to integer.
- IPV6_MTU_DISCOVER
- Control path-MTU discovery on the socket. See IP_MTU_DISCOVER in ip(7)
for
details.
- IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS
- Set the multicast hop limit for the socket.
Argument is a pointer to an integer. -1 in the value means use the route
default, otherwise it should be between 0 and 255.
- IPV6_MULTICAST_IF
- Set
the device for outgoing multicast packets on the socket. This is allowed
only for SOCK_DGRAM and SOCK_RAW socket. The argument is a pointer to an
interface index (see netdevice(7)
) in an integer.
- IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP
- Control
whether the socket sees multicast packets that it has send itself. Argument
is a pointer to boolean.
- IPV6_RECVPKTINFO (since Linux 2.6.14)
- Set delivery
of the IPV6_PKTINFO control message on incoming datagrams. Such control
messages contain a struct in6_pktinfo, as per RFC 3542. Only allowed for
SOCK_DGRAM or SOCK_RAW sockets. Argument is a pointer to a boolean value
in an integer.
- IPV6_RTHDR, IPV6_AUTHHDR, IPV6_DSTOPTS, IPV6_HOPOPTS, IPV6_FLOWINFO,
IPV6_HOPLIMIT
- Set delivery of control messages for incoming datagrams
containing extension headers from the received packet. IPV6_RTHDR delivers
the routing header, IPV6_AUTHHDR delivers the authentication header, IPV6_DSTOPTS
delivers the destination options, IPV6_HOPOPTS delivers the hop options,
IPV6_FLOWINFO delivers an integer containing the flow ID, IPV6_HOPLIMIT
delivers an integer containing the hop count of the packet. The control
messages have the same type as the socket option. All these header options
can also be set for outgoing packets by putting the appropriate control
message into the control buffer of sendmsg(2)
. Only allowed for SOCK_DGRAM
or SOCK_RAW sockets. Argument is a pointer to a boolean value.
- IPV6_RECVERR
- Control receiving of asynchronous error options. See IP_RECVERR in ip(7)
for details. Argument is a pointer to boolean.
- IPV6_ROUTER_ALERT
- Pass forwarded
packets containing a router alert hop-by-hop option to this socket. Only allowed
for SOCK_RAW sockets. The tapped packets are not forwarded by the kernel,
it is the user’s responsibility to send them out again. Argument is a pointer
to an integer. A positive integer indicates a router alert option value
to intercept. Packets carrying a router alert option with a value field
containing this integer will be delivered to the socket. A negative integer
disables delivery of packets with router alert options to this socket.
- IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS
- Set the unicast hop limit for the socket. Argument is a pointer to an integer.
-1 in the value means use the route default, otherwise it should be between
0 and 255.
- IPV6_V6ONLY (since Linux 2.4.21 and 2.6)
- If this flag is set to
true (nonzero), then the socket is restricted to sending and receiving
IPv6 packets only. In this case, an IPv4 and an IPv6 application can bind
to a single port at the same time.
If this flag is set to false (zero),
then the socket can be used to send and receive packets to and from an
IPv6 address or an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address.
The argument is a pointer to
a boolean value in an integer.
The default value for this flag is defined
by the contents of the file /proc/sys/net/ipv6/bindv6only. The default value
for that file is 0 (false).
- ENODEV
- The user tried to bind(2)
to a
link-local IPv6 address, but the sin6_scope_id in the supplied sockaddr_in6
structure is not a valid interface index.
Linux 2.4 will break binary
compatibility for the sockaddr_in6 for 64-bit hosts by changing the alignment
of in6_addr and adding an additional sin6_scope_id field. The kernel interfaces
stay compatible, but a program including sockaddr_in6 or in6_addr into
other structures may not be. This is not a problem for 32-bit hosts like
i386.
The sin6_flowinfo field is new in Linux 2.4. It is transparently passed/read
by the kernel when the passed address length contains it. Some programs
that pass a longer address buffer and then check the outgoing address length
may break.
The sockaddr_in6 structure is bigger than the generic sockaddr.
Programs that assume that all address types can be stored safely in a struct
sockaddr need to be changed to use struct sockaddr_storage for that instead.
The IPv6 extended API as in RFC 2292 is currently only partly implemented;
although the 2.2 kernel has near complete support for receiving options,
the macros for generating IPv6 options are missing in glibc 2.1.
IPSec support
for EH and AH headers is missing.
Flow label management is not complete
and not documented here.
This man page is not complete.
cmsg(3)
,
ip(7)
RFC 2553: IPv6 BASIC API; Linux tries to be compliant to this. RFC 2460:
IPv6 specification.
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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