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IFCONFIG(8)		  BSD 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 interface
     and/or configure network interface	parameters.  The ifconfig utility must
     be	used at	boot time to define the	network	address	of each	interface
     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 specify
	     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 filter
	     in	the underlying ethernet	hardware is properly reprogrammed.

     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, spec-
	     ifying the	address	family is recommended.	The address or proto-
	     col 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 example,
	     "ed0".

     The following parameters may be set with ifconfig:

     add     Another name for the alias	parameter.  Introduced for compatibil-
	     ity 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 in-
	     terface, 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 effect 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 anycast
	     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 addresses
	     (default).	 This is currently implemented for mapping between
	     DARPA Internet addresses and IEEE 802 48-bit MAC addresses	(Eth-
	     ernet, 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 re-
	     quests.

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

     broadcast
	     (Inet only.)  Specify the address to use to represent broadcasts
	     to	the network.  The default broadcast address is the address
	     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 in-
	     terface.  If possible, the	interface will be reset	to disable re-
	     ception 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.

     ipdst   This is used to specify an	Internet host who is willing to	re-
	     ceive IP packets encapsulating IPX	packets	bound for a remote
	     network.  An apparent point to point link is constructed, and the
	     address specified will be taken as	the IPX	address	and network of
	     the destination.

     maclabel label
	     If	Mandatory Access Control support is enabled in the kernel, set
	     the MAC label to label.

     media type
	     If	the driver supports the	media selection	system,	set the	media
	     type of the interface to type.  Some interfaces support the mutu-
	     ally exclusive use	of one of several different physical media
	     connectors.  For example, a 10Mb/s	Ethernet interface might sup-
	     port the use of either AUI	or twisted pair	connectors.  Setting
	     the media type to "10base5/AUI" would change the currently	active
	     connector to the AUI port.	 Setting it to "10baseT/UTP" would ac-
	     tivate 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	speci-
	     fied 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 complete	list
	     of	available options.

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

     mode mode
	     If	the driver supports the	media selection	system,	set the	speci-
	     fied operating mode on the	interface to mode.  For	IEEE 802.11
	     wireless interfaces that support multiple operating modes this
	     directive is used to select between 802.11a ("11a"), 802.11b
	     ("11b"), and 802.11g ("11g") operating modes.

     name name
	     Set the interface name to name.

     rxcsum, txcsum
	     If	the driver supports user-configurable checksum offloading, en-
	     able receive (or transmit)	checksum offloading on the interface.
	     Some drivers may not be able to enable these flags	independently
	     of	each other, so setting one may also set	the other.  The	driver
	     will offload as much checksum work	as it can reliably support,
	     the exact level of	offloading varies between drivers.

     -rxcsum, -txcsum
	     If	the driver supports user-configurable checksum offloading,
	     disable receive (or transmit) checksum offloading on the inter-
	     face.  These settings may not always be independent of each
	     other.

     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 des-
	     tination address for IP tunnel interfaces (gif(4)).  The argu-
	     ments 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 output un-
	     less the interface	is renamed or destroyed	in the same ifconfig
	     invocation.

     destroy
	     Destroy the specified network pseudo-device.

     plumb   Another name for the create parameter.  Included for Solaris com-
	     patibility.

     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	encap-
	     sulation 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 inter-
	     face'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 inter-
	     face, the existing	association must be cleared first.

	     Note: if the hardware tagging capability is set on	the parent in-
	     terface, the vlan(4) pseudo interface's behavior changes: the
	     vlan(4) interface recognizes that the parent interface supports
	     insertion and extraction of VLAN tags on its own (usually in
	     firmware) and that	it should pass packets to and from the parent
	     unaltered.

     -vlandev iface
	     If	the driver is a	vlan(4)	pseudo device, disassociate the	physi-
	     cal 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.

     vlanmtu, vlanhwtag
	     If	the driver offers user-configurable VLAN support, enable re-
	     ception of	extended frames	or tag processing in hardware, respec-
	     tively.  Note that	this must be issued on a physical interface
	     associated	with vlan(4), not on a vlan(4) interface itself.

     -vlanmtu, -vlanhwtag
	     If	the driver offers user-configurable VLAN support, disable re-
	     ception of	extended frames	or tag processing in hardware, respec-
	     tively.

     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 favorable;
	     metrics are counted as addition hops to the destination network
	     or	host.

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

     netmask mask
	     (Inet only.)  Specify how much of the address to reserve for sub-
	     dividing networks into sub-networks.  The mask includes the net-
	     work part of the local address and	the subnet part, which is
	     taken from	the host field of the address.	The mask can be	speci-
	     fied 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	contains 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 network portion,	and
	     the subnet	field should be	contiguous with	the network portion.

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

     prefixlen len
	     (Inet6 only.)  Specify that len bits are reserved for subdividing
	     networks into sub-networks.  The len must be integer, and for
	     syntactical reason	it must	be between 0 to	128.  It is almost al-
	     ways 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 information.

     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 net-
	     masks.

     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, how-
	     ever, they	are in general used to select special modes of opera-
	     tion.  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.

     monitor
	     Put the interface in monitor mode.	 No packets are	transmitted,
	     and received packets are discarded	after bpf(4) processing.

     -monitor
	     Take the interface	out of monitor mode.

     up	     Mark an interface "up".  This may be used to enable an interface
	     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 compat-
	     ibility.

     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.  Setting
	     the channel to 0 will give	you the	default	for your adaptor.
	     Many adaptors ignore this setting unless you are in ad-hoc	mode.

     authmode mode
	     For IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces, set the desired authentica-
	     tion 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.

     protmode technique
	     For IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces operating in 11g, use the
	     specified technique for protecting	OFDM frames in a mixed 11b/11g
	     network.  The set of valid	techniques is "off", "cts" (CTS	to
	     self), and	"rtscts" (RTS/CTS).  Technique names are case insensi-
	     tive.

     rtsthreshold length
	     For IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces, set the threshold for	which
	     transmitted frames	are preceded by	transmission of	an RTS control
	     frame.  The length	argument is the	frame size in bytes and	must
	     be	in the range 1 to 2312.	 Not all adaptors support setting the
	     RTS threshold.

     txpower power
	     For IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces, set the power	used to	trans-
	     mit frames.  The power argument is	a unitless value in the	range
	     0 to 100 that is interpreted by drivers to	derive a device-spe-
	     cific value.  Out of range	values are truncated.  Typically only
	     a few discreet power settings are available and the driver	will
	     use the setting closest to	the specified value.  Not all adaptors
	     support changing the transmit power.

     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".	The "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 connections.  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	either
	     5 or 13 characters	(40 or 104 bits) depending of the local	net-
	     work and the capabilities of the adaptor.	It may be specified
	     either as a plain string or as a string of	hexadecimal digits
	     proceeded by `0x'.	 For maximum portability, hex keys are recom-
	     mended; the mapping of text keys to WEP encryption	is usually
	     driver-specific.  In particular, the Windows drivers do this map-
	     ping 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	standard temporary
	     keys and any others will be adaptor specific keys such as perma-
	     nent 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 compati-
	     bility.

     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 in-
     terface when no optional parameters are supplied.	If a protocol family
     is	specified, ifconfig will report	only the details specific to that pro-
     tocol family.

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

     If	the -m flag is passed before an	interface name,	ifconfig will display
     the capability list and all of the	supported media	for the	specified in-
     terface.  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 mutually
     exclusive with all	other flags and	commands.

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

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 requested
     address is	unknown, or the	user is	not privileged and tried to alter an
     interface's configuration.

BUGS
     Basic IPv6	node operation requires	a link-local address on	each interface
     configured	for IPv6.  Normally, such an address is	automatically config-
     ured by the kernel	on each	interface added	to the system; this behaviour
     may be disabled by	setting	the sysctl MIB variable
     net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal to 0.

     If	you delete such	an address using ifconfig, the kernel may act very
     oddly.  Do	this at	your own risk.

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

HISTORY
     The ifconfig utility appeared in 4.2BSD.

BSD				 July 26, 2004				   BSD

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | NOTES | DIAGNOSTICS | BUGS | SEE ALSO | HISTORY

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