Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)

FreeBSD Manual Pages

  
 
  

home | help
IFCONFIG(8)		    System Manager's Manual		   IFCONFIG(8)

NAME
       ifconfig	-- configure network interface parameters

SYNOPSIS
       ifconfig	  [-L]	 [-m]  interface  [create]  [address_family]  [address
		[dest_address]]	[parameters]
       ifconfig	interface destroy
       ifconfig	-a [-L]	[-d] [-m] [-u] [address_family]
       ifconfig	-l [-d]	[-u] [address_family]
       ifconfig	[-L] [-d] [-m] [-u] [-C]

DESCRIPTION
       The ifconfig utility is used to assign an address to a  network	inter-
       face and/or configure network interface parameters.  The	ifconfig util-
       ity must	be used	at boot	time to	define the network address of each in-
       terface	present	 on  a machine;	it may also be used at a later time to
       redefine	an interface's address or other	operating parameters.

       The following options are available:

       address
	       For the DARPA-Internet family, the address  is  either  a  host
	       name  present  in the host name data base, hosts(5), or a DARPA
	       Internet	 address  expressed  in	 the  Internet	standard  "dot
	       notation".

	       It is also possible to use the CIDR notation (also known	as the
	       slash notation) to include the netmask.	That is, one can spec-
	       ify an address like 192.168.0.1/16.

	       For  "inet6"  family, it	is also	possible to specify the	prefix
	       length  using  the  slash  notation,  like  ::1/128.   See  the
	       prefixlen parameter below for more information.

	       The  link-level	("link")  address  is specified	as a series of
	       colon-separated hex digits.  This can be	used to	e.g. set a new
	       MAC address on an ethernet interface, though the	mechanism used
	       is not ethernet-specific.  If the interface is already up  when
	       this  option  is	used, it will be briefly brought down and then
	       brought back up again in	order to ensure	that the receive  fil-
	       ter  in	the  underlying	 ethernet  hardware is properly	repro-
	       grammed.

       address_family
	       Specify the address family which	affects	interpretation of  the
	       remaining parameters.  Since an interface can receive transmis-
	       sions  in  differing  protocols	with different naming schemes,
	       specifying the address family is	recommended.  The  address  or
	       protocol	 families  currently  supported	 are  "inet", "inet6",
	       "atalk",	"ipx", and "link".  The	default	 is  "inet".   "ether"
	       and "lladdr" are	synonyms for "link".

       dest_address
	       Specify	the address of the correspondent on the	other end of a
	       point to	point link.

       interface
	       This parameter is a string of the form "name unit",  for	 exam-
	       ple, "ed0".

       The following parameters	may be set with	ifconfig:

       add     Another	name for the alias parameter.  Introduced for compati-
	       bility with BSD/OS.

       alias   Establish an additional network	address	 for  this  interface.
	       This is sometimes useful	when changing network numbers, and one
	       wishes  to  accept  packets addressed to	the old	interface.  If
	       the address is on the same subnet as the	first network  address
	       for  this  interface,  a	non-conflicting	netmask	must be	given.
	       Usually 0xffffffff is most appropriate.

       -alias  Remove the network address specified.  This would  be  used  if
	       you incorrectly specified an alias, or it was no	longer needed.
	       If  you	have incorrectly set an	NS address having the side ef-
	       fect of specifying the host portion, removing all NS  addresses
	       will allow you to respecify the host portion.

       anycast
	       (Inet6  only.)	Specify	that the address configured is an any-
	       cast address.  Based on the current specification, only routers
	       may configure anycast addresses.	 Anycast address will  not  be
	       used as source address of any of	outgoing IPv6 packets.

       arp     Enable  the  use	of the Address Resolution Protocol (arp(4)) in
	       mapping between network level  addresses	 and  link  level  ad-
	       dresses	(default).   This is currently implemented for mapping
	       between DARPA Internet addresses	and IEEE 802  48-bit  MAC  ad-
	       dresses (Ethernet, FDDI,	and Token Ring addresses).

       -arp    Disable the use of the Address Resolution Protocol (arp(4)).

       staticarp
	       If  the	Address	 Resolution Protocol is	enabled, the host will
	       only reply to requests for its addresses, and will  never  send
	       any requests.

       -staticarp
	       If  the	Address	 Resolution Protocol is	enabled, the host will
	       perform	normally,  sending  out	 requests  and	listening  for
	       replies.

       broadcast
	       (Inet  only.)   Specify	the address to use to represent	broad-
	       casts to	the network.  The default broadcast address is the ad-
	       dress with a host part of all 1's.

       debug   Enable driver dependent debugging code; usually,	this turns  on
	       extra console error logging.

       -debug  Disable driver dependent	debugging code.

       promisc
	       Put interface into permanently promiscuous mode.

       -promisc
	       Disable permanently promiscuous mode.

       delete  Another name for	the -alias parameter.

       down    Mark  an	interface "down".  When	an interface is	marked "down",
	       the system will not attempt to transmit messages	 through  that
	       interface.  If possible,	the interface will be reset to disable
	       reception  as well.  This action	does not automatically disable
	       routes using the	interface.

       eui64   (Inet6 only.)  Fill interface index (lowermost 64bit of an IPv6
	       address)	automatically.

       media type
	       If the driver supports the media	selection system, set the  me-
	       dia type	of the interface to type.  Some	interfaces support the
	       mutually	exclusive use of one of	several	different physical me-
	       dia connectors.	For example, a 10Mb/s Ethernet interface might
	       support the use of either AUI or	twisted	pair connectors.  Set-
	       ting the	media type to "10base5/AUI" would change the currently
	       active  connector to the	AUI port.  Setting it to "10baseT/UTP"
	       would activate twisted pair.  Refer to the  interfaces'	driver
	       specific	 documentation	or man page for	a complete list	of the
	       available types.

       mediaopt	opts
	       If the driver supports the  media  selection  system,  set  the
	       specified media options on the interface.  The opts argument is
	       a  comma	 delimited  list of options to apply to	the interface.
	       Refer to	the interfaces'	driver specific	man page  for  a  com-
	       plete list of available options.

       -mediaopt opts
	       If  the driver supports the media selection system, disable the
	       specified media options on the interface.

       polling
	       If the driver has user-configurable polling(4) support,	select
	       the polling mode	on the interface.

       -polling
	       If  the driver has user-configurable polling(4) support,	select
	       the interrupt mode on the interface.

       tunnel src_addr dest_addr
	       (IP tunnel devices only.)  Configure the	 physical  source  and
	       destination address for IP tunnel interfaces (gif(4)).  The ar-
	       guments	src_addr  and  dest_addr  are interpreted as the outer
	       source/destination for the encapsulating	IPv4/IPv6 header.

       deletetunnel
	       Unconfigure the physical	source and destination address for  IP
	       tunnel interfaces previously configured with tunnel.

       create  Create  the  specified network pseudo-device.  If the interface
	       is given	without	a unit number, try to create a new device with
	       an arbitrary unit number.  If creation of an  arbitrary	device
	       is  successful, the new device name is printed to standard out-
	       put.

       destroy
	       Destroy the specified network pseudo-device.

       plumb   Another name for	the create parameter.	Included  for  Solaris
	       compatibility.

       unplumb
	       Another	name  for the destroy parameter.  Included for Solaris
	       compatibility.

       vlan vlan_tag
	       If the interface	is a vlan(4) pseudo interface,	set  the  VLAN
	       tag  value to vlan_tag.	This value is a	16-bit number which is
	       used to create an 802.1Q	VLAN header for	packets	sent from  the
	       vlan(4) interface.  Note	that vlan and vlandev must both	be set
	       at the same time.

       vlandev iface
	       If the interface	is a vlan(4) pseudo device, associate physical
	       interface  iface	 with  it.   Packets  transmitted  through the
	       vlan(4) interface will be diverted to  the  specified  physical
	       interface  iface	 with 802.1Q VLAN encapsulation.  Packets with
	       802.1Q encapsulation received by	the parent interface with  the
	       correct	VLAN  tag  will	 be diverted to	the associated vlan(4)
	       pseudo-interface.  The vlan(4) interface	is assigned a copy  of
	       the parent interface's flags and	the parent's ethernet address.
	       The vlandev and vlan must both be set at	the same time.	If the
	       vlan(4)	interface  already has a physical interface associated
	       with it,	this command will fail.	 To change the association  to
	       another	physical  interface,  the existing association must be
	       cleared first.

	       Note: if	the link0 flag is set on the  vlan(4)  interface,  the
	       vlan(4)	pseudo	interface's  behavior changes: the link0 tells
	       the vlan(4) interface that the parent interface supports	inser-
	       tion and	extraction  of	VLAN  tags  on	its  own  (usually  in
	       firmware)  and that it should pass packets to and from the par-
	       ent unaltered.

       -vlandev	iface
	       If the driver is	a  vlan(4)  pseudo  device,  disassociate  the
	       physical	interface iface	from it.  This breaks the link between
	       the  vlan(4)  interface	and  its  parent, clears its VLAN tag,
	       flags and its link address and shuts the	interface down.

       metric n
	       Set the routing metric of the interface to n, default  0.   The
	       routing	metric	is  used  by the routing protocol (routed(8)).
	       Higher metrics have the effect of making	a  route  less	favor-
	       able;  metrics  are counted as addition hops to the destination
	       network or host.

       mtu n   Set the maximum transmission unit of the	interface  to  n,  de-
	       fault is	interface specific.  The MTU is	used to	limit the size
	       of  packets  that are transmitted on an interface.  Not all in-
	       terfaces	support	setting	the  MTU,  and	some  interfaces  have
	       range restrictions.

       netmask mask
	       (Inet  only.)   Specify	how much of the	address	to reserve for
	       subdividing networks into sub-networks.	The mask includes  the
	       network part of the local address and the subnet	part, which is
	       taken  from  the	 host  field  of the address.  The mask	can be
	       specified as a single hexadecimal number	with a	leading	 `0x',
	       with  a dot-notation Internet address, or with a	pseudo-network
	       name listed in the network table	networks(5).   The  mask  con-
	       tains 1's for the bit positions in the 32-bit address which are
	       to  be  used  for the network and subnet	parts, and 0's for the
	       host part.  The mask should contain at least the	standard  net-
	       work  portion,  and  the	subnet field should be contiguous with
	       the network portion.

	       The netmask can also be specified in CIDR  notation  after  the
	       address.	 See the address option	above for more information.

       prefixlen len
	       (Inet6 only.)  Specify that len bits are	reserved for subdivid-
	       ing  networks  into sub-networks.  The len must be integer, and
	       for syntactical reason it must be between 0 to 128.  It is  al-
	       most  always 64 under the current IPv6 assignment rule.	If the
	       parameter is omitted, 64	is used.

	       The prefix can also be specified	using the slash	notation after
	       the address.  See the address option above  for	more  informa-
	       tion.

       range netrange
	       Under  appletalk, set the interface to respond to a netrange of
	       the form	startnet-endnet.  Appletalk uses this  scheme  instead
	       of netmasks though FreeBSD implements it	internally as a	set of
	       netmasks.

       remove  Another name for	the -alias parameter.  Introduced for compati-
	       bility with BSD/OS.

       phase   The  argument  following	 this specifies	the version (phase) of
	       the Appletalk network attached to the interface.	 Values	 of  1
	       or 2 are	permitted.

       link[0-2]
	       Enable  special	processing of the link level of	the interface.
	       These three options are interface specific  in  actual  effect,
	       however,	 they  are  in general used to select special modes of
	       operation.  An example of this is to enable  SLIP  compression,
	       or to select the	connector type for some	Ethernet cards.	 Refer
	       to the man page for the specific	driver for more	information.

       -link[0-2]
	       Disable special processing at the link level with the specified
	       interface.

       up      Mark  an	 interface "up".  This may be used to enable an	inter-
	       face after an "ifconfig down".  It happens  automatically  when
	       setting	the  first  address on an interface.  If the interface
	       was reset when previously marked	down, the hardware will	be re-
	       initialized.

       ssid ssid
	       For IEEE	802.11 wireless	interfaces, set	 the  desired  Service
	       Set  Identifier (aka network name).  The	SSID is	a string up to
	       32 characters in	length and may be specified as either a	normal
	       string or in hexadecimal	when proceeded by `0x'.	 Additionally,
	       the SSID	may be cleared by setting it to	`-'.

       nwid ssid
	       Another name for	the ssid parameter.  Included for NetBSD  com-
	       patibility.

       stationname name
	       For  IEEE 802.11	wireless interfaces, set the name of this sta-
	       tion.  It appears that the station name is not really  part  of
	       the  IEEE 802.11	protocol though	all interfaces seem to support
	       it.  As such it only seems to be	 meaningful  to	 identical  or
	       virtually  identical  equipment.	  Setting  the station name is
	       identical in syntax to setting the SSID.

       station name
	       Another name  for  the  stationname  parameter.	 Included  for
	       BSD/OS compatibility.

       channel number
	       For  IEEE  802.11 wireless interfaces, set the desired channel.
	       Channels	range from 1 to	14, but	the exact selection  available
	       depends	on the region your adaptor was manufactured for.  Set-
	       ting the	channel	to 0 will give you the default for your	 adap-
	       tor.   Many  adaptors ignore this setting unless	you are	in ad-
	       hoc mode.

       authmode	mode
	       For IEEE	802.11 wireless	interfaces, set	the desired  authenti-
	       cation  mode  in	infrastructure mode.  Not all adaptors support
	       all modes.  The set of  valid  modes  is	 "none",  "open",  and
	       "shared".  Modes	are case insensitive.

       powersave
	       For IEEE	802.11 wireless	interfaces, enable powersave mode.

       -powersave
	       For IEEE	802.11 wireless	interfaces, disable powersave mode.

       powersavesleep sleep
	       For IEEE	802.11 wireless	interfaces, set	the desired max	power-
	       save sleep time in milliseconds.

       wepmode mode
	       For  IEEE 802.11	wireless interfaces, set the desired WEP mode.
	       Not all adaptors	support	all modes.  The	set of valid modes  is
	       "off",  "on",  and  "mixed".  "Mixed" mode explicitly tells the
	       adaptor to allow	association with  access  points  which	 allow
	       both  encrypted	and  unencrypted  traffic.  On these adaptors,
	       "on" means that the access point	must only allow	encrypted con-
	       nections.  On other adaptors, "on" is  generally	 another  name
	       for "mixed".  Modes are case insensitive.

       weptxkey	index
	       For IEEE	802.11 wireless	interfaces, set	the WEP	key to be used
	       for transmission.

       wepkey key|index:key
	       For  IEEE 802.11	wireless interfaces, set the selected WEP key.
	       If an index is not given, key 1 is set.	A WEP key will be  ei-
	       ther 5 or 13 characters (40 or 104 bits)	depending of the local
	       network	and the	capabilities of	the adaptor.  It may be	speci-
	       fied either as a	plain string or	as  a  string  of  hexadecimal
	       digits  proceeded  by  `0x'.  For maximum portability, hex keys
	       are recommended;	the mapping of text keys to WEP	encryption  is
	       usually driver-specific.	 In particular,	the Windows drivers do
	       this  mapping  differently to FreeBSD.  A key may be cleared by
	       setting it to `-'.  If WEP is supported then there are at least
	       four keys.  Some	adaptors support more than four	keys.  If that
	       is the case, then the first four	keys (1-4) will	be  the	 stan-
	       dard  temporary	keys  and  any others will be adaptor specific
	       keys such as permanent keys stored in NVRAM.

       wep     Another way of saying wepmode on.  Included for BSD/OS compati-
	       bility.

       -wep    Another way of saying wepmode off.  Included for	BSD/OS compat-
	       ibility.

       nwkey key
	       Another way of saying:

	       "wepmode	on weptxkey 1  wepkey  1:key  wepkey  2:-  wepkey  3:-
	       wepkey 4:-".

	       Included	for NetBSD compatibility.

       nwkey n:k1,k2,k3,k4
	       Another way of saying

	       "wepmode	 on  weptxkey  n  wepkey  1:k1 wepkey 2:k2 wepkey 3:k3
	       wepkey 4:k4".

	       Included	for NetBSD compatibility.

       -nwkey  Another way of saying wepmode off.

	       Included	for NetBSD compatibility.

       The ifconfig utility displays the current configuration for  a  network
       interface when no optional parameters are supplied.  If a protocol fam-
       ily  is	specified,  ifconfig  will report only the details specific to
       that protocol family.

       If the driver does supports the media selection system,	the  supported
       media list will be included in the output.

       If  the	-m flag	is passed before an interface name, ifconfig will dis-
       play the	capability list	and all	of the supported media for the	speci-
       fied  interface.	 If -L flag is supplied, address lifetime is displayed
       for IPv6	addresses, as time offset string.

       Optionally, the -a flag may be used instead of an interface name.  This
       flag instructs ifconfig to display information about all	interfaces  in
       the  system.   The -d flag limits this to interfaces that are down, and
       -u limits this to interfaces that are up.  When no arguments are	given,
       -a is implied.

       The -l flag may be used to list all available interfaces	on the system,
       with no other additional	information.  Use of this flag is mutually ex-
       clusive with all	other flags and	commands, except for -d	(only list in-
       terfaces	that are down) and -u (only list interfaces that are up).

       The -C flag may be used to list all of the interface cloners  available
       on the system, with no additional information.  Use of this flag	is mu-
       tually exclusive	with all other flags and commands.

       Only  the  super-user  may modify the configuration of a	network	inter-
       face.

NOTES
       The media selection system is relatively	new and	only some drivers sup-
       port it (or have	need for it).

DIAGNOSTICS
       Messages	indicating the specified interface does	 not  exist,  the  re-
       quested	address	is unknown, or the user	is not privileged and tried to
       alter an	interface's configuration.

BUGS
       IPv6 link-local addresses are required for several basic	 communication
       between	IPv6 node.  If they are	deleted	by ifconfig manually, the ker-
       nel might show very strange behavior.  So, such	manual	deletions  are
       strongly	discouraged.

SEE ALSO
       netstat(1), netintro(4),	vlan(4), rc(8),	routed(8)

HISTORY
       The ifconfig utility appeared in	4.2BSD.

FreeBSD	4.11			April 11, 2004			   IFCONFIG(8)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=ifconfig&sektion=8&manpath=FreeBSD+4.11-RELEASE>

home | help