Sortix nightly manual
This manual documents Sortix nightly, a development build that has not been officially released. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
| IFCONFIG(8) | System Manager's Manual | IFCONFIG(8) | 
NAME
ifconfig —
    configure network interface
SYNOPSIS
| ifconfig | [interface] | 
| ifconfig | interface [protocol [configuration new-value ...] ...] | 
| ifconfig | -l[interface
      [protocol
      [configuration]]] | 
| ifconfig | -linterface
      protocol [configuration ...]
      ... | 
DESCRIPTION
ifconfig can both write the current
    configuration of if(4) network
    interface devices as well as update the configuration of a network
    interface. By default the configuration of every network interface is
    written. If the interface argument is given, only the
    configuration of that network interface is written.
If an interface is specified along with further operands, the configuration of the network interface is updated by iterating over the remaining operands: Naming a protocol makes it the current protocol, naming a configuration sets it within the current protocol to the subsequent new-value operand.
The options are as follows:
- -l
- Write the current value of each specified
      configuration rather than setting a new value. The
      new-value argument is no longer passed.
    If only an interface and a protocol is specified, list the names of each configuration of that protocol on the network interface. If only an interface is specified, list the names of each protocol on the network interface. If no interface is specified, list the names of each network interface. 
The interface argument can be the name or the path of an interface, or a specifier uniquely matching an interface:
- ether:mac
- Local ether(4) address.
- etherhw:mac
- Hardware ether(4) address.
- inet:ip
- Local inet(4) address.
- id:num
- Network interface integer index.
The link protocol
    provides information about the network interface. The following
    configurations are supported:
- up
- yes if the link is up and no otherwise. (read-only)
- type
- The type of the network interface, either ether or loopback. (read-only)
- id
- The network interface integer index. (read-only)
- name
- The name of the network interface. (read-only)
The loopback
    protocol
    (lo(4)) has no configuration.
The ether protocol
    (Ethernet, ether(4)) has the
    following configurations:
- address
- The local address in ether(4) address notation, or default to use the hardware address.
- hwaddress
- The hardware address in ether(4) address notation. (read-only)
The inet protocol
    (Internet Protocol version 4,
    inet(4)) has the following
    configurations:
EXIT STATUS
ifconfig will exit 0 on success and
    non-zero otherwise.
EXAMPLES
$ ifconfig if0: link up yes type ether id 2 ether address 00:00:5e:00:53:ff hwaddress 00:00:5e:00:53:ff inet address 192.0.2.2 router 192.0.2.1 subnet 255.255.255.0 lo0: link up yes type loopback id 1 loopback inet address 127.0.0.1 router 0.0.0.0 subnet 255.0.0.0 $ ifconfig if0 if0: link up yes type ether id 2 ether address 00:00:5e:00:53:ff hwaddress 00:00:5e:00:53:ff inet address 192.0.2.2 router 192.0.2.1 subnet 255.255.255.0 $ ifconfig if0 inet address 198.51.100.2 router 198.51.100.1 $ ifconfig if0 ether address 00:00:5e:00:53:42 inet address 198.51.100.3 $ ifconfig -l if0 lo0 $ ifconfig -l if0 link ether inet $ ifconfig -l if0 inet address router subnet $ ifconfig -l if0 inet address 198.51.100.3 $ ifconfig -l if0 inet address subnet ether address link id 198.51.100.3 255.255.255.0 00:00:5e:00:53:42 42 $ ifconfig -l etherhw:00:00:5e:00:53:ff link name if0
SEE ALSO
CAVEATS
ether(4) network interfaces with the inet(4) protocol are commonly automatically configured by dhclient(8). Disable dhclient(8) before manually configuring inet(4) on such interfaces to avoid the manual configuration being overwritten, or configure dhclient(8) to set your desired network interface configuration in the first place.
| July 4, 2021 | Sortix 1.1.0-dev | 
