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32 .\" @(#)netstat.1 8.8 (Berkeley) 4/18/94
40 .Nd show network status
44 command symbolically displays the contents of various network-related
46 There are a number of output formats,
47 depending on the options for the information presented.
48 .Bl -tag -width indent
53 .Op Fl f Ar protocol_family | Fl p Ar protocol
58 Display a list of active sockets
59 (protocol control blocks)
60 for each network protocol,
68 show the address of a protocol control block (PCB)
69 associated with a socket; used for debugging.
73 show the state of all sockets;
74 normally sockets used by server processes are not shown.
78 show the size of the various listen queues.
79 The first count shows the number of unaccepted connections,
80 the second count shows the amount of unaccepted incomplete connections,
81 and the third count is the maximum number of queued connections.
85 show network addresses as numbers (as with
87 but show ports symbolically.
90 is present display full socket buffer statistics for each internet socket.
94 .Fl i | I Ar interface
96 .Op Fl f Ar address_family
101 Show the state of all network interfaces or a single
103 which have been auto-configured
104 (interfaces statically configured into a system, but not
105 located at boot time are not shown).
108 after an interface name indicates that the interface is
112 is also present, multicast addresses currently in use are shown
113 for each Ethernet interface and for each IP interface address.
114 Multicast addresses are shown on separate lines following the interface
115 address with which they are associated.
118 is also present, show the number of bytes in and out.
121 is also present, show the number of dropped packets.
124 is also present, print all counters in human readable form.
127 is also present, show the contents of watchdog timers.
130 is also present, print interface names using a wider field size.
135 .Op Fl I Ar interface
144 display the information regarding packet
145 traffic on all configured network interfaces
150 is also present, show the number of dropped packets.
156 .Op Fl f Ar protocol_family | Fl p Ar protocol
161 Display system-wide statistics for each network protocol,
163 .Ar protocol_family ,
168 is repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed.
171 is also present, reset statistic counters after displaying them.
175 .Fl i | I Ar interface Fl s
176 .Op Fl f Ar protocol_family | Fl p Ar protocol
181 Display per-interface statistics for each network protocol,
183 .Ar protocol_family ,
194 Show statistics recorded by the memory management routines
196 The network manages a private pool of memory buffers.
201 .Op Fl I Ar interface
204 Show statistics about
207 This includes information like
208 how many packets have been matched, dropped and received by the
209 bpf device, also information about current buffer sizes and device
216 .Op Fl f Ar address_family
221 Display the contents of all routing tables,
222 or a routing table for a particular
227 show the contents of the internal Patricia tree
228 structures; used for debugging.
232 show protocol-cloned routes
233 (routes generated by an
236 normally these routes are not shown.
254 Display routing statistics.
257 is repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed.
263 .Op Fl f Ar address_family
268 Display the contents of the multicast virtual interface tables,
269 and multicast forwarding caches.
270 Entries in these tables will appear only when the kernel is
271 actively forwarding multicast sessions.
272 This option is applicable only to the
282 .Op Fl f Ar address_family
287 Show multicast routing statistics.
290 is repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed.
293 Some options have the general meaning:
295 .It Fl f Ar address_family , Fl p Ar protocol
296 Limit display to those records
301 The following address families and protocols are recognized:
303 .Bl -tag -width ".Cm netgraph , ng Pq Dv AF_NETGRAPH" -compact
306 .It Cm inet Pq Dv AF_INET
307 .Cm divert , icmp , igmp , ip , ipsec , pim, sctp , tcp , udp
308 .It Cm inet6 Pq Dv AF_INET6
309 .Cm icmp6 , ip6 , ipsec6 , rip6 , tcp , udp
310 .It Cm pfkey Pq Dv PF_KEY
312 .It Cm atalk Pq Dv AF_APPLETALK
314 .It Cm netgraph , ng Pq Dv AF_NETGRAPH
316 .It Cm ipx Pq Dv AF_IPX
318 .\".It Cm ns Pq Dv AF_NS
319 .\".Cm idp , ns_err , spp
320 .\".It Cm iso Pq Dv AF_ISO
321 .\".Cm clnp , cltp , esis , tp
322 .It Cm unix Pq Dv AF_UNIX
323 .It Cm link Pq Dv AF_LINK
326 The program will complain if
328 is unknown or if there is no statistics routine for it.
330 Extract values associated with the name list from the specified core
331 instead of the default
334 Extract the name list from the specified system instead of the default,
335 which is the kernel image the system has booted from.
337 Show network addresses and ports as numbers.
340 attempts to resolve addresses and ports,
341 and display them symbolically.
343 In certain displays, avoid truncating addresses even if this causes
344 some fields to overflow.
347 The default display, for active sockets, shows the local
348 and remote addresses, send and receive queue sizes (in bytes), protocol,
349 and the internal state of the protocol.
350 Address formats are of the form
354 if a socket's address specifies a network but no specific host address.
355 When known, the host and network addresses are displayed symbolically
356 according to the databases
361 If a symbolic name for an address is unknown, or if
364 option is specified, the address is printed numerically, according
365 to the address family.
366 For more information regarding
374 addresses and ports appear as
377 The interface display provides a table of cumulative
378 statistics regarding packets transferred, errors, and collisions.
379 The network addresses of the interface
380 and the maximum transmission unit
384 The routing table display indicates the available routes and their status.
385 Each route consists of a destination host or network, and a gateway to use
386 in forwarding packets.
387 The flags field shows a collection of information about the route stored
389 The individual flags are discussed in more detail in the
394 The mapping between letters and flags is:
395 .Bl -column ".Li W" ".Dv RTF_WASCLONED"
396 .It Li 1 Ta Dv RTF_PROTO1 Ta "Protocol specific routing flag #1"
397 .It Li 2 Ta Dv RTF_PROTO2 Ta "Protocol specific routing flag #2"
398 .It Li 3 Ta Dv RTF_PROTO3 Ta "Protocol specific routing flag #3"
399 .It Li B Ta Dv RTF_BLACKHOLE Ta "Just discard pkts (during updates)"
400 .It Li b Ta Dv RTF_BROADCAST Ta "The route represents a broadcast address"
401 .It Li C Ta Dv RTF_CLONING Ta "Generate new routes on use"
402 .It Li c Ta Dv RTF_PRCLONING Ta "Protocol-specified generate new routes on use"
403 .It Li D Ta Dv RTF_DYNAMIC Ta "Created dynamically (by redirect)"
404 .It Li G Ta Dv RTF_GATEWAY Ta "Destination requires forwarding by intermediary"
405 .It Li H Ta Dv RTF_HOST Ta "Host entry (net otherwise)"
406 .It Li L Ta Dv RTF_LLINFO Ta "Valid protocol to link address translation"
407 .It Li M Ta Dv RTF_MODIFIED Ta "Modified dynamically (by redirect)"
408 .It Li R Ta Dv RTF_REJECT Ta "Host or net unreachable"
409 .It Li S Ta Dv RTF_STATIC Ta "Manually added"
410 .It Li U Ta Dv RTF_UP Ta "Route usable"
411 .It Li W Ta Dv RTF_WASCLONED Ta "Route was generated as a result of cloning"
412 .It Li X Ta Dv RTF_XRESOLVE Ta "External daemon translates proto to link address"
415 Direct routes are created for each
416 interface attached to the local host;
417 the gateway field for such entries shows the address of the outgoing interface.
418 The refcnt field gives the
419 current number of active uses of the route.
421 protocols normally hold on to a single route for the duration of
422 a connection while connectionless protocols obtain a route while sending
423 to the same destination.
424 The use field provides a count of the number of packets
425 sent using that route.
426 The interface entry indicates the network interface utilized for the route.
434 interval argument, it displays a running count of statistics related to
436 An obsolescent version of this option used a numeric parameter
437 with no option, and is currently supported for backward compatibility.
438 By default, this display summarizes information for all interfaces.
439 Information for a specific interface may be displayed with the
449 option represent the underlying parameters of the bpf peer.
451 represented as a single lower case letter.
452 The mapping between the letters and flags in order of appearance are:
454 .It Li p Ta Set if listening promiscuously
455 .It Li i Ta Dv BIOCIMMEDIATE No has been set on the device
456 .It Li f Ta Dv BIOCGHDRCMPLT No status: source link addresses are being
458 .It Li s Ta Dv BIOCGSEESENT No status: see packets originating locally and
459 remotely on the interface.
460 .It Li a Ta Packet reception generates a signal
461 .It Li l Ta Dv BIOCLOCK No status: descriptor has been locked
464 For more information about these flags, please refer to
471 to output all the information recorded about data
472 stored in the socket buffers.
474 .Bl -column ".Li R-MBUF"
475 .It Li R-MBUF Ta Number of mbufs in the receive queue.
476 .It Li S-MBUF Ta Number of mbufs in the send queue.
477 .It Li R-CLUS Ta Number of clusters, of any type, in the receive
479 .It Li S-CLUS Ta Number of clusters, of any type, in the send queue.
480 .It Li R-HIWA Ta Receive buffer high water mark, in bytes.
481 .It Li S-HIWA Ta Send buffer high water mark, in bytes.
482 .It Li R-LOWA Ta Receive buffer low water mark, in bytes.
483 .It Li S-LOWA Ta Send buffer low water mark, in bytes.
484 .It Li R-BCNT Ta Receive buffer byte count.
485 .It Li S-BCNT Ta Send buffer byte count.
486 .It Li R-BMAX Ta Maximum bytes that can be used in the receive buffer.
487 .It Li S-BMAX Ta Maximum bytes that can be used in the send buffer.
513 IPv6 support was added by WIDE/KAME project.
515 The notion of errors is ill-defined.