TCP(7) manual page
Table of Contents
tcp - TCP protocol
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <netinet/tcp.h>
tcp_socket = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
This
is an implementation of the TCP protocol defined in RFC 793, RFC 1122 and
RFC 2001 with the NewReno and SACK extensions. It provides a reliable, stream-oriented,
full-duplex connection between two sockets on top of ip(7)
, for both v4
and v6 versions. TCP guarantees that the data arrives in order and retransmits
lost packets. It generates and checks a per-packet checksum to catch transmission
errors. TCP does not preserve record boundaries.
A newly created TCP socket
has no remote or local address and is not fully specified. To create an
outgoing TCP connection use connect(2)
to establish a connection to another
TCP socket. To receive new incoming connections, first bind(2)
the socket
to a local address and port and then call listen(2)
to put the socket into
the listening state. After that a new socket for each incoming connection
can be accepted using accept(2)
. A socket which has had accept(2)
or connect(2)
successfully called on it is fully specified and may transmit data. Data
cannot be transmitted on listening or not yet connected sockets.
Linux
supports RFC 1323 TCP high performance extensions. These include Protection
Against Wrapped Sequence Numbers (PAWS), Window Scaling and Timestamps.
Window scaling allows the use of large (> 64K) TCP windows in order to support
links with high latency or bandwidth. To make use of them, the send and
receive buffer sizes must be increased. They can be set globally with the
/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_wmem and /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_rmem files, or on
individual sockets by using the SO_SNDBUF and SO_RCVBUF socket options
with the setsockopt(2)
call.
The maximum sizes for socket buffers declared
via the SO_SNDBUF and SO_RCVBUF mechanisms are limited by the values in
the /proc/sys/net/core/rmem_max and /proc/sys/net/core/wmem_max files. Note
that TCP actually allocates twice the size of the buffer requested in the
setsockopt(2)
call, and so a succeeding getsockopt(2)
call will not return
the same size of buffer as requested in the setsockopt(2)
call. TCP uses
the extra space for administrative purposes and internal kernel structures,
and the /proc file values reflect the larger sizes compared to the actual
TCP windows. On individual connections, the socket buffer size must be set
prior to the listen(2)
or connect(2)
calls in order to have it take effect.
See socket(7)
for more information.
TCP supports urgent data. Urgent data
is used to signal the receiver that some important message is part of the
data stream and that it should be processed as soon as possible. To send
urgent data specify the MSG_OOB option to send(2)
. When urgent data is received,
the kernel sends a SIGURG signal to the process or process group that has
been set as the socket "owner" using the SIOCSPGRP or FIOSETOWN ioctls
(or the POSIX.1-2001-specified fcntl(2)
F_SETOWN operation). When the SO_OOBINLINE
socket option is enabled, urgent data is put into the normal data stream
(a program can test for its location using the SIOCATMARK ioctl described
below), otherwise it can be received only when the MSG_OOB flag is set
for recv(2)
or recvmsg(2)
.
Linux 2.4 introduced a number of changes for
improved throughput and scaling, as well as enhanced functionality. Some
of these features include support for zero-copy sendfile(2)
, Explicit Congestion
Notification, new management of TIME_WAIT sockets, keep-alive socket options
and support for Duplicate SACK extensions.
TCP is built on
top of IP (see ip(7)
). The address formats defined by ip(7)
apply to TCP.
TCP supports point-to-point communication only; broadcasting and multicasting
are not supported.
System-wide TCP parameter settings can
be accessed by files in the directory /proc/sys/net/ipv4/. In addition,
most IP /proc interfaces also apply to TCP; see ip(7)
. Variables described
as Boolean take an integer value, with a nonzero value ("true") meaning
that the corresponding option is enabled, and a zero value ("false") meaning
that the option is disabled.
- tcp_abc (Integer; default: 0; since Linux 2.6.15)
- Control the Appropriate Byte Count (ABC), defined in RFC 3465. ABC is a
way of increasing the congestion window (cwnd) more slowly in response
to partial acknowledgments. Possible values are:
- 0
- increase cwnd once per
acknowledgment (no ABC)
- 1
- increase cwnd once per acknowledgment of full
sized segment
- 2
- allow increase cwnd by two if acknowledgment is of two segments
to compensate for delayed acknowledgments.
- tcp_abort_on_overflow (Boolean;
default: disabled; since Linux 2.4)
- Enable resetting connections if the
listening service is too slow and unable to keep up and accept them. It
means that if overflow occurred due to a burst, the connection will recover.
Enable this option only if you are really sure that the listening daemon
cannot be tuned to accept connections faster. Enabling this option can harm
the clients of your server.
- tcp_adv_win_scale (integer; default: 2; since
Linux 2.4)
- Count buffering overhead as bytes/2^tcp_adv_win_scale, if tcp_adv_win_scale
is greater than 0; or bytes-bytes/2^(-tcp_adv_win_scale), if tcp_adv_win_scale
is less than or equal to zero.
The socket receive buffer space is shared
between the application and kernel. TCP maintains part of the buffer as
the TCP window, this is the size of the receive window advertised to the
other end. The rest of the space is used as the "application" buffer, used
to isolate the network from scheduling and application latencies. The tcp_adv_win_scale
default value of 2 implies that the space used for the application buffer
is one fourth that of the total.
- tcp_allowed_congestion_control (String;
default: see text; since Linux 2.4.20)
- Show/set the congestion control algorithm
choices available to unprivileged processes (see the description of the
TCP_CONGESTION socket option). The items in the list are separated by white
space and terminated by a newline character. The list is a subset of those
listed in tcp_available_congestion_control. The default value for this list
is "reno" plus the default setting of tcp_congestion_control.
- tcp_autocorking
(Boolean; default: enabled; since Linux 3.14)
- If this option is enabled,
the kernel tries to coalesce small writes (from consecutive write(2)
and
sendmsg(2)
calls) as much as possible, in order to decrease the total number
of sent packets. Coalescing is done if at least one prior packet for the
flow is waiting in Qdisc queues or device transmit queue. Applications can
still use the TCP_CORK socket option to obtain optimal behavior when they
know how/when to uncork their sockets.
- tcp_available_congestion_control
(String; read-only; since Linux 2.4.20)
- Show a list of the congestion-control
algorithms that are registered. The items in the list are separated by white
space and terminated by a newline character. This list is a limiting set
for the list in tcp_allowed_congestion_control. More congestion-control algorithms
may be available as modules, but not loaded.
- tcp_app_win (integer; default:
31; since Linux 2.4)
- This variable defines how many bytes of the TCP window
are reserved for buffering overhead.
A maximum of (window/2^tcp_app_win,
mss) bytes in the window are reserved for the application buffer. A value
of 0 implies that no amount is reserved.
- tcp_base_mss (Integer; default:
512; since Linux 2.6.17)
- The initial value of search_low to be used by the
packetization layer Path MTU discovery (MTU probing). If MTU probing is
enabled, this is the initial MSS used by the connection.
- tcp_bic (Boolean;
default: disabled; Linux 2.4.27/2.6.6 to 2.6.13)
- Enable BIC TCP congestion control
algorithm. BIC-TCP is a sender-side only change that ensures a linear RTT
fairness under large windows while offering both scalability and bounded
TCP-friendliness. The protocol combines two schemes called additive increase
and binary search increase. When the congestion window is large, additive
increase with a large increment ensures linear RTT fairness as well as
good scalability. Under small congestion windows, binary search increase
provides TCP friendliness.
- tcp_bic_low_window (integer; default: 14; Linux
2.4.27/2.6.6 to 2.6.13)
- Set the threshold window (in packets) where BIC TCP starts
to adjust the congestion window. Below this threshold BIC TCP behaves the
same as the default TCP Reno.
- tcp_bic_fast_convergence (Boolean; default:
enabled; Linux 2.4.27/2.6.6 to 2.6.13)
- Force BIC TCP to more quickly respond
to changes in congestion window. Allows two flows sharing the same connection
to converge more rapidly.
- tcp_congestion_control (String; default: see text;
since Linux 2.4.13)
- Set the default congestion-control algorithm to be used
for new connections. The algorithm "reno" is always available, but additional
choices may be available depending on kernel configuration. The default
value for this file is set as part of kernel configuration.
- tcp_dma_copybreak
(integer; default: 4096; since Linux 2.6.24)
- Lower limit, in bytes, of the
size of socket reads that will be offloaded to a DMA copy engine, if one
is present in the system and the kernel was configured with the CONFIG_NET_DMA
option.
- tcp_dsack (Boolean; default: enabled; since Linux 2.4)
- Enable RFC 2883
TCP Duplicate SACK support.
- tcp_ecn (Boolean; default: disabled; since Linux
2.4)
- Enable RFC 2884 Explicit Congestion Notification. When enabled, connectivity
to some destinations could be affected due to older, misbehaving routers
along the path causing connections to be dropped.
- tcp_fack (Boolean; default:
enabled; since Linux 2.2)
- Enable TCP Forward Acknowledgement support.
- tcp_fin_timeout
(integer; default: 60; since Linux 2.2)
- This specifies how many seconds
to wait for a final FIN packet before the socket is forcibly closed. This
is strictly a violation of the TCP specification, but required to prevent
denial-of-service attacks. In Linux 2.2, the default value was 180.
- tcp_frto
(integer; default: 0; since Linux 2.4.21/2.6)
- Enable F-RTO, an enhanced recovery
algorithm for TCP retransmission timeouts (RTOs). It is particularly beneficial
in wireless environments where packet loss is typically due to random radio
interference rather than intermediate router congestion. See RFC 4138 for
more details.
This file can have one of the following values:
- 0
- Disabled.
- 1
- The basic version F-RTO algorithm is enabled.
- 2
- Enable SACK-enhanced F-RTO
if flow uses SACK. The basic version can be used also when SACK is in use
though in that case scenario(s) exists where F-RTO interacts badly with
the packet counting of the SACK-enabled TCP flow.
- Before Linux 2.6.22, this
parameter was a Boolean value,
- supporting just values 0 and 1 above.
- tcp_frto_response
(integer; default: 0; since Linux 2.6.22)
- When F-RTO has detected that a TCP
retransmission timeout was spurious (i.e, the timeout would have been avoided
had TCP set a longer retransmission timeout), TCP has several options concerning
what to do next. Possible values are:
- 0
- Rate halving based; a smooth and
conservative response, results in halved congestion window (cwnd) and slow-start
threshold (ssthresh) after one RTT.
- 1
- Very conservative response; not recommended
because even though being valid, it interacts poorly with the rest of Linux
TCP; halves cwnd and ssthresh immediately.
- 2
- Aggressive response; undoes
congestion-control measures that are now known to be unnecessary (ignoring
the possibility of a lost retransmission that would require TCP to be more
cautious); cwnd and ssthresh are restored to the values prior to timeout.
- tcp_keepalive_intvl (integer; default: 75; since Linux 2.4)
- The number
of seconds between TCP keep-alive probes.
- tcp_keepalive_probes (integer;
default: 9; since Linux 2.2)
- The maximum number of TCP keep-alive probes
to send before giving up and killing the connection if no response is obtained
from the other end.
- tcp_keepalive_time (integer; default: 7200; since Linux
2.2)
- The number of seconds a connection needs to be idle before TCP begins
sending out keep-alive probes. Keep-alives are sent only when the SO_KEEPALIVE
socket option is enabled. The default value is 7200 seconds (2 hours). An
idle connection is terminated after approximately an additional 11 minutes
(9 probes an interval of 75 seconds apart) when keep-alive is enabled.
Note
that underlying connection tracking mechanisms and application timeouts
may be much shorter.
- tcp_low_latency (Boolean; default: disabled; since
Linux 2.4.21/2.6)
- If enabled, the TCP stack makes decisions that prefer lower
latency as opposed to higher throughput. It this option is disabled, then
higher throughput is preferred. An example of an application where this
default should be changed would be a Beowulf compute cluster.
- tcp_max_orphans
(integer; default: see below; since Linux 2.4)
- The maximum number of orphaned
(not attached to any user file handle) TCP sockets allowed in the system.
When this number is exceeded, the orphaned connection is reset and a warning
is printed. This limit exists only to prevent simple denial-of-service attacks.
Lowering this limit is not recommended. Network conditions might require
you to increase the number of orphans allowed, but note that each orphan
can eat up to ~64K of unswappable memory. The default initial value is set
equal to the kernel parameter NR_FILE. This initial default is adjusted
depending on the memory in the system.
- tcp_max_syn_backlog (integer; default:
see below; since Linux 2.2)
- The maximum number of queued connection requests
which have still not received an acknowledgement from the connecting client.
If this number is exceeded, the kernel will begin dropping requests. The
default value of 256 is increased to 1024 when the memory present in the
system is adequate or greater (>= 128Mb), and reduced to 128 for those systems
with very low memory (<= 32Mb). It is recommended that if this needs to be
increased above 1024, TCP_SYNQ_HSIZE in include/net/tcp.h be modified to
keep TCP_SYNQ_HSIZE*16<=tcp_max_syn_backlog, and the kernel be recompiled.
- tcp_max_tw_buckets (integer; default: see below; since Linux 2.4)
- The maximum
number of sockets in TIME_WAIT state allowed in the system. This limit exists
only to prevent simple denial-of-service attacks. The default value of NR_FILE*2
is adjusted depending on the memory in the system. If this number is exceeded,
the socket is closed and a warning is printed.
- tcp_moderate_rcvbuf (Boolean;
default: enabled; since Linux 2.4.17/2.6.7)
- If enabled, TCP performs receive
buffer auto-tuning, attempting to automatically size the buffer (no greater
than tcp_rmem[2]) to match the size required by the path for full throughput.
- tcp_mem (since Linux 2.4)
- This is a vector of 3 integers: [low, pressure,
high]. These bounds, measured in units of the system page size, are used
by TCP to track its memory usage. The defaults are calculated at boot time
from the amount of available memory. (TCP can only use low memory for this,
which is limited to around 900 megabytes on 32-bit systems. 64-bit systems
do not suffer this limitation.)
- low
- TCP doesn’t regulate its memory allocation
when the number of pages it has allocated globally is below this number.
- pressure
- When the amount of memory allocated by TCP exceeds this number
of pages, TCP moderates its memory consumption. This memory pressure state
is exited once the number of pages allocated falls below the low mark.
- high
- The maximum number of pages, globally, that TCP will allocate. This value
overrides any other limits imposed by the kernel.
- tcp_mtu_probing (integer;
default: 0; since Linux 2.6.17)
- This parameter controls TCP Packetization-Layer
Path MTU Discovery. The following values may be assigned to the file:
- 0
- Disabled
- 1
- Disabled by default, enabled when an ICMP black hole detected
- 2
- Always
enabled, use initial MSS of tcp_base_mss.
- tcp_no_metrics_save (Boolean;
default: disabled; since Linux 2.6.6)
- By default, TCP saves various connection
metrics in the route cache when the connection closes, so that connections
established in the near future can use these to set initial conditions.
Usually, this increases overall performance, but it may sometimes cause
performance degradation. If tcp_no_metrics_save is enabled, TCP will not
cache metrics on closing connections.
- tcp_orphan_retries (integer; default:
8; since Linux 2.4)
- The maximum number of attempts made to probe the other
end of a connection which has been closed by our end.
- tcp_reordering (integer;
default: 3; since Linux 2.4)
- The maximum a packet can be reordered in a
TCP packet stream without TCP assuming packet loss and going into slow
start. It is not advisable to change this number. This is a packet reordering
detection metric designed to minimize unnecessary back off and retransmits
provoked by reordering of packets on a connection.
- tcp_retrans_collapse
(Boolean; default: enabled; since Linux 2.2)
- Try to send full-sized packets
during retransmit.
- tcp_retries1 (integer; default: 3; since Linux 2.2)
- The
number of times TCP will attempt to retransmit a packet on an established
connection normally, without the extra effort of getting the network layers
involved. Once we exceed this number of retransmits, we first have the network
layer update the route if possible before each new retransmit. The default
is the RFC specified minimum of 3.
- tcp_retries2 (integer; default: 15; since
Linux 2.2)
- The maximum number of times a TCP packet is retransmitted in
established state before giving up. The default value is 15, which corresponds
to a duration of approximately between 13 to 30 minutes, depending on the
retransmission timeout. The RFC 1122 specified minimum limit of 100 seconds
is typically deemed too short.
- tcp_rfc1337 (Boolean; default: disabled;
since Linux 2.2)
- Enable TCP behavior conformant with RFC 1337. When disabled,
if a RST is received in TIME_WAIT state, we close the socket immediately
without waiting for the end of the TIME_WAIT period.
- tcp_rmem (since Linux
2.4)
- This is a vector of 3 integers: [min, default, max]. These parameters
are used by TCP to regulate receive buffer sizes. TCP dynamically adjusts
the size of the receive buffer from the defaults listed below, in the range
of these values, depending on memory available in the system.
- min
- minimum
size of the receive buffer used by each TCP socket. The default value is
the system page size. (On Linux 2.4, the default value is 4K, lowered to
PAGE_SIZE bytes in low-memory systems.) This value is used to ensure that
in memory pressure mode, allocations below this size will still succeed.
This is not used to bound the size of the receive buffer declared using
SO_RCVBUF on a socket.
- default
- the default size of the receive buffer for
a TCP socket. This value overwrites the initial default buffer size from
the generic global net.core.rmem_default defined for all protocols. The default
value is 87380 bytes. (On Linux 2.4, this will be lowered to 43689 in low-memory
systems.) If larger receive buffer sizes are desired, this value should
be increased (to affect all sockets). To employ large TCP windows, the net.ipv4.tcp_window_scaling
must be enabled (default).
- max
- the maximum size of the receive buffer used
by each TCP socket. This value does not override the global net.core.rmem_max.
This is not used to limit the size of the receive buffer declared using
SO_RCVBUF on a socket. The default value is calculated using the formula
max(87380, min(4MB, tcp_mem[1]*PAGE_SIZE/128))
(On Linux 2.4, the default is 87380*2 bytes, lowered to 87380 in low-memory
systems).
- tcp_sack (Boolean; default: enabled; since Linux 2.2)
- Enable RFC 2018
TCP Selective Acknowledgements.
- tcp_slow_start_after_idle (Boolean; default:
enabled; since Linux 2.6.18)
- If enabled, provide RFC 2861 behavior and time
out the congestion window after an idle period. An idle period is defined
as the current RTO (retransmission timeout). If disabled, the congestion
window will not be timed out after an idle period.
- tcp_stdurg (Boolean;
default: disabled; since Linux 2.2)
- If this option is enabled, then use
the RFC 1122 interpretation of the TCP urgent-pointer field. According
to this interpretation, the urgent pointer points to the last byte of urgent
data. If this option is disabled, then use the BSD-compatible interpretation
of the urgent pointer: the urgent pointer points to the first byte after
the urgent data. Enabling this option may lead to interoperability problems.
- tcp_syn_retries (integer; default: 5; since Linux 2.2)
- The maximum number
of times initial SYNs for an active TCP connection attempt will be retransmitted.
This value should not be higher than 255. The default value is 5, which
corresponds to approximately 180 seconds.
- tcp_synack_retries (integer; default:
5; since Linux 2.2)
- The maximum number of times a SYN/ACK segment for a
passive TCP connection will be retransmitted. This number should not be
higher than 255.
- tcp_syncookies (Boolean; since Linux 2.2)
- Enable TCP syncookies.
The kernel must be compiled with CONFIG_SYN_COOKIES. Send out syncookies
when the syn backlog queue of a socket overflows. The syncookies feature
attempts to protect a socket from a SYN flood attack. This should be used
as a last resort, if at all. This is a violation of the TCP protocol, and
conflicts with other areas of TCP such as TCP extensions. It can cause problems
for clients and relays. It is not recommended as a tuning mechanism for
heavily loaded servers to help with overloaded or misconfigured conditions.
For recommended alternatives see tcp_max_syn_backlog, tcp_synack_retries,
and tcp_abort_on_overflow.
- tcp_timestamps (Boolean; default: enabled; since
Linux 2.2)
- Enable RFC 1323 TCP timestamps.
- tcp_tso_win_divisor (integer;
default: 3; since Linux 2.6.9)
- This parameter controls what percentage of
the congestion window can be consumed by a single TCP Segmentation Offload
(TSO) frame. The setting of this parameter is a tradeoff between burstiness
and building larger TSO frames.
- tcp_tw_recycle (Boolean; default: disabled;
since Linux 2.4)
- Enable fast recycling of TIME_WAIT sockets. Enabling this
option is not recommended for devices communicating with the general Internet
or using NAT (Network Address Translation). Since some NAT gateways pass
through IP timestamp values, one IP can appear to have non-increasing timestamps.
See RFC 1323 (PAWS), RFC 6191.
- tcp_tw_reuse (Boolean; default: disabled;
since Linux 2.4.19/2.6)
- Allow to reuse TIME_WAIT sockets for new connections
when it is safe from protocol viewpoint. It should not be changed without
advice/request of technical experts.
- tcp_vegas_cong_avoid (Boolean; default:
disabled; Linux 2.2 to 2.6.13)
- Enable TCP Vegas congestion avoidance algorithm.
TCP Vegas is a sender-side only change to TCP that anticipates the onset
of congestion by estimating the bandwidth. TCP Vegas adjusts the sending
rate by modifying the congestion window. TCP Vegas should provide less packet
loss, but it is not as aggressive as TCP Reno.
- tcp_westwood (Boolean;
default: disabled; Linux 2.4.26/2.6.3 to 2.6.13)
- Enable TCP Westwood+ congestion
control algorithm. TCP Westwood+ is a sender-side only modification of the
TCP Reno protocol stack that optimizes the performance of TCP congestion
control. It is based on end-to-end bandwidth estimation to set congestion
window and slow start threshold after a congestion episode. Using this estimation,
TCP Westwood+ adaptively sets a slow start threshold and a congestion window
which takes into account the bandwidth used at the time congestion is experienced.
TCP Westwood+ significantly increases fairness with respect to TCP Reno
in wired networks and throughput over wireless links.
- tcp_window_scaling
(Boolean; default: enabled; since Linux 2.2)
- Enable RFC 1323 TCP window
scaling. This feature allows the use of a large window (> 64K) on a TCP connection,
should the other end support it. Normally, the 16 bit window length field
in the TCP header limits the window size to less than 64K bytes. If larger
windows are desired, applications can increase the size of their socket
buffers and the window scaling option will be employed. If tcp_window_scaling
is disabled, TCP will not negotiate the use of window scaling with the
other end during connection setup.
- tcp_wmem (since Linux 2.4)
- This is a
vector of 3 integers: [min, default, max]. These parameters are used by
TCP to regulate send buffer sizes. TCP dynamically adjusts the size of the
send buffer from the default values listed below, in the range of these
values, depending on memory available.
- min
- Minimum size of the send buffer
used by each TCP socket. The default value is the system page size. (On Linux
2.4, the default value is 4K bytes.) This value is used to ensure that in
memory pressure mode, allocations below this size will still succeed. This
is not used to bound the size of the send buffer declared using SO_SNDBUF
on a socket.
- default
- The default size of the send buffer for a TCP socket.
This value overwrites the initial default buffer size from the generic
global /proc/sys/net/core/wmem_default defined for all protocols. The default
value is 16K bytes. If larger send buffer sizes are desired, this value
should be increased (to affect all sockets). To employ large TCP windows,
the /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_window_scaling must be set to a nonzero value
(default).
- max
- The maximum size of the send buffer used by each TCP socket.
This value does not override the value in /proc/sys/net/core/wmem_max. This
is not used to limit the size of the send buffer declared using SO_SNDBUF
on a socket. The default value is calculated using the formula
max(65536,
min(4MB, tcp_mem[1]*PAGE_SIZE/128))
(On Linux 2.4, the default value is 128K bytes, lowered 64K depending
on low-memory systems.)
- tcp_workaround_signed_windows (Boolean; default:
disabled; since Linux 2.6.26)
- If enabled, assume that no receipt of a window-scaling
option means that the remote TCP is broken and treats the window as a signed
quantity. If disabled, assume that the remote TCP is not broken even if
we do not receive a window scaling option from it.
To set
or get a TCP socket option, call getsockopt(2)
to read or setsockopt(2)
to write the option with the option level argument set to IPPROTO_TCP. Unless
otherwise noted, optval is a pointer to an int. In addition, most IPPROTO_IP
socket options are valid on TCP sockets. For more information see ip(7)
.
- TCP_CONGESTION (since Linux 2.6.13)
- The argument for this option is a string.
This option allows the caller to set the TCP congestion control algorithm
to be used, on a per-socket basis. Unprivileged processes are restricted
to choosing one of the algorithms in tcp_allowed_congestion_control (described
above). Privileged processes (CAP_NET_ADMIN) can choose from any of the
available congestion-control algorithms (see the description of tcp_available_congestion_control
above).
- TCP_CORK (since Linux 2.2)
- If set, don’t send out partial frames.
All queued partial frames are sent when the option is cleared again. This
is useful for prepending headers before calling sendfile(2)
, or for throughput
optimization. As currently implemented, there is a 200 millisecond ceiling
on the time for which output is corked by TCP_CORK. If this ceiling is reached,
then queued data is automatically transmitted. This option can be combined
with TCP_NODELAY only since Linux 2.5.71. This option should not be used in
code intended to be portable.
- TCP_DEFER_ACCEPT (since Linux 2.4)
- Allow
a listener to be awakened only when data arrives on the socket. Takes an
integer value (seconds), this can bound the maximum number of attempts
TCP will make to complete the connection. This option should not be used
in code intended to be portable.
- TCP_INFO (since Linux 2.4)
- Used to collect
information about this socket. The kernel returns a struct tcp_info as defined
in the file /usr/include/linux/tcp.h. This option should not be used in code
intended to be portable.
- TCP_KEEPCNT (since Linux 2.4)
- The maximum number
of keepalive probes TCP should send before dropping the connection. This
option should not be used in code intended to be portable.
- TCP_KEEPIDLE
(since Linux 2.4)
- The time (in seconds) the connection needs to remain
idle before TCP starts sending keepalive probes, if the socket option SO_KEEPALIVE
has been set on this socket. This option should not be used in code intended
to be portable.
- TCP_KEEPINTVL (since Linux 2.4)
- The time (in seconds) between
individual keepalive probes. This option should not be used in code intended
to be portable.
- TCP_LINGER2 (since Linux 2.4)
- The lifetime of orphaned FIN_WAIT2
state sockets. This option can be used to override the system-wide setting
in the file /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_fin_timeout for this socket. This is
not to be confused with the socket(7)
level option SO_LINGER. This option
should not be used in code intended to be portable.
- TCP_MAXSEG
- The maximum
segment size for outgoing TCP packets. In Linux 2.2 and earlier, and in Linux
2.6.28 and later, if this option is set before connection establishment,
it also changes the MSS value announced to the other end in the initial
packet. Values greater than the (eventual) interface MTU have no effect.
TCP will also impose its minimum and maximum bounds over the value provided.
- TCP_NODELAY
- If set, disable the Nagle algorithm. This means that segments
are always sent as soon as possible, even if there is only a small amount
of data. When not set, data is buffered until there is a sufficient amount
to send out, thereby avoiding the frequent sending of small packets, which
results in poor utilization of the network. This option is overridden by
TCP_CORK; however, setting this option forces an explicit flush of pending
output, even if TCP_CORK is currently set.
- TCP_QUICKACK (since Linux 2.4.4)
- Enable quickack mode if set or disable quickack mode if cleared. In quickack
mode, acks are sent immediately, rather than delayed if needed in accordance
to normal TCP operation. This flag is not permanent, it only enables a switch
to or from quickack mode. Subsequent operation of the TCP protocol will
once again enter/leave quickack mode depending on internal protocol processing
and factors such as delayed ack timeouts occurring and data transfer. This
option should not be used in code intended to be portable.
- TCP_SYNCNT (since
Linux 2.4)
- Set the number of SYN retransmits that TCP should send before
aborting the attempt to connect. It cannot exceed 255. This option should
not be used in code intended to be portable.
- TCP_USER_TIMEOUT (since Linux
2.6.37)
- This option takes an unsigned int as an argument. When the value
is greater than 0, it specifies the maximum amount of time in milliseconds
that transmitted data may remain unacknowledged before TCP will forcibly
close the corresponding connection and return ETIMEDOUT to the application.
If the option value is specified as 0, TCP will to use the system default.
Increasing user timeouts allows a TCP connection to survive extended periods
without end-to-end connectivity. Decreasing user timeouts allows applications
to "fail fast", if so desired. Otherwise, failure may take up to 20 minutes
with the current system defaults in a normal WAN environment.
This option
can be set during any state of a TCP connection, but is only effective
during the synchronized states of a connection (ESTABLISHED, FIN-WAIT-1,
FIN-WAIT-2, CLOSE-WAIT, CLOSING, and LAST-ACK). Moreover, when used with the
TCP keepalive (SO_KEEPALIVE) option, TCP_USER_TIMEOUT will override keepalive
to determine when to close a connection due to keepalive failure.
The option
has no effect on when TCP retransmits a packet, nor when a keepalive probe
is sent.
This option, like many others, will be inherited by the socket
returned by accept(2)
, if it was set on the listening socket.
Further details
on the user timeout feature can be found in RFC 793 and RFC 5482 ("TCP User
Timeout Option").
- TCP_WINDOW_CLAMP (since Linux 2.4)
- Bound the size of the
advertised window to this value. The kernel imposes a minimum size of SOCK_MIN_RCVBUF/2.
This option should not be used in code intended to be portable.
TCP provides limited support for out-of-band data, in the form of (a single
byte of) urgent data. In Linux this means if the other end sends newer out-of-band
data the older urgent data is inserted as normal data into the stream (even
when SO_OOBINLINE is not set). This differs from BSD-based stacks.
Linux uses
the BSD compatible interpretation of the urgent pointer field by default.
This violates RFC 1122, but is required for interoperability with other
stacks. It can be changed via /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_stdurg.
It is possible
to peek at out-of-band data using the recv(2)
MSG_PEEK flag.
Since version
2.4, Linux supports the use of MSG_TRUNC in the flags argument of recv(2)
(and recvmsg(2)
). This flag causes the received bytes of data to be discarded,
rather than passed back in a caller-supplied buffer. Since Linux 2.4.4, MSG_TRUNC
also has this effect when used in conjunction with MSG_OOB to receive out-of-band
data.
The following ioctl(2)
calls return information in value. The
correct syntax is:
int value;error = ioctl(tcp_socket, ioctl_type, &value);
ioctl_type is one
of the following:
- SIOCINQ
- Returns the amount of queued unread data in the
receive buffer. The socket must not be in LISTEN state, otherwise an error
(EINVAL) is returned. SIOCINQ is defined in <linux/sockios.h>. Alternatively,
you can use the synonymous FIONREAD, defined in <sys/ioctl.h>.
- SIOCATMARK
- Returns
true (i.e., value is nonzero) if the inbound data stream is at the urgent
mark.
If the SO_OOBINLINE socket option is set, and SIOCATMARK returns
true, then the next read from the socket will return the urgent data. If
the SO_OOBINLINE socket option is not set, and SIOCATMARK returns true,
then the next read from the socket will return the bytes following the
urgent data (to actually read the urgent data requires the recv(MSG_OOB)
flag).
Note that a read never reads across the urgent mark. If an application
is informed of the presence of urgent data via select(2)
(using the exceptfds
argument) or through delivery of a SIGURG signal, then it can advance up
to the mark using a loop which repeatedly tests SIOCATMARK and performs
a read (requesting any number of bytes) as long as SIOCATMARK returns false.
- SIOCOUTQ
- Returns the amount of unsent data in the socket send queue. The
socket must not be in LISTEN state, otherwise an error (EINVAL) is returned.
SIOCOUTQ is defined in <linux/sockios.h>. Alternatively, you can use the
synonymous TIOCOUTQ, defined in <sys/ioctl.h>.
When a network
error occurs, TCP tries to resend the packet. If it doesn’t succeed after
some time, either ETIMEDOUT or the last received error on this connection
is reported.
Some applications require a quicker error notification. This
can be enabled with the IPPROTO_IP level IP_RECVERR socket option. When
this option is enabled, all incoming errors are immediately passed to the
user program. Use this option with care -- it makes TCP less tolerant to routing
changes and other normal network conditions.
- EAFNOTSUPPORT
- Passed
socket address type in sin_family was not AF_INET.
- EPIPE
- The other end closed
the socket unexpectedly or a read is executed on a shut down socket.
- ETIMEDOUT
- The other end didn’t acknowledge retransmitted data after some time.
Any
errors defined for ip(7)
or the generic socket layer may also be returned
for TCP.
Support for Explicit Congestion Notification, zero-copy
sendfile(2)
, reordering support and some SACK extensions (DSACK) were introduced
in 2.4. Support for forward acknowledgement (FACK), TIME_WAIT recycling,
and per-connection keepalive socket options were introduced in 2.3.
Not
all errors are documented.
IPv6 is not described.
accept(2)
, bind(2)
, connect(2)
, getsockopt(2)
,
listen(2)
, recvmsg(2)
, sendfile(2)
, sendmsg(2)
, socket(2)
, ip(7)
, socket(7)
RFC 793 for the TCP specification.
RFC 1122 for the TCP requirements and a description of the Nagle algorithm.
RFC 1323 for TCP timestamp and window scaling options.
RFC 1337 for a description of TIME_WAIT assassination hazards.
RFC 3168 for a description of Explicit Congestion Notification.
RFC 2581 for TCP congestion control algorithms.
RFC 2018 and RFC 2883 for SACK and extensions to SACK.
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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