xref: /dragonfly/usr.bin/netstat/netstat.1 (revision 2d8a3be7)
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32.\"	@(#)netstat.1	8.8 (Berkeley) 4/18/94
33.\" $FreeBSD: src/usr.bin/netstat/netstat.1,v 1.22.2.13 2003/05/03 22:10:02 keramida Exp $
34.\" $DragonFly: src/usr.bin/netstat/netstat.1,v 1.3 2003/08/24 23:16:53 hsu Exp $
35.\"
36.Dd September 7, 2001
37.Dt NETSTAT 1
38.Os
39.Sh NAME
40.Nm netstat
41.Nd show network status
42.Sh DESCRIPTION
43The
44.Nm
45command symbolically displays the contents of various network-related
46data structures.
47There are a number of output formats,
48depending on the options for the information presented.
49.Bl -tag -width indent
50.It Xo
51.Bk -words
52.Nm
53.Op Fl AaLlnSW
54.Op Fl f Ar protocol_family | Fl p Ar protocol
55.Op Fl M Ar core
56.Op Fl N Ar system
57.Ek
58.Xc
59Display a list of active sockets
60(protocol control blocks)
61for each network protocol,
62for a particular
63.Ar protocol_family ,
64or for a single
65.Ar protocol .
66If
67.Fl A
68is also present,
69show the address of a protocol control block (PCB)
70associated with a socket; used for debugging.
71If
72.Fl a
73is also present,
74show the state of all sockets;
75normally sockets used by server processes are not shown.
76If
77.Fl L
78is also present,
79show the size of the various listen queues.
80The first count shows the number of unaccepted connections,
81the second count shows the amount of unaccepted incomplete connections,
82and the third count is the maximum number of queued connections.
83If
84.Fl S
85is also present,
86show network addresses as numbers (as with
87.Fl n )
88but show ports symbolically.
89.It Xo
90.Bk -words
91.Nm
92.Fl i | I Ar interface
93.Op Fl abdnt
94.Op Fl f Ar address_family
95.Op Fl M Ar core
96.Op Fl N Ar system
97.Ek
98.Xc
99Show the state of all network interfaces or a single
100.Ar interface
101which have been auto-configured
102(interfaces statically configured into a system, but not
103located at boot time are not shown).
104An asterisk
105.Pq Dq Li *
106after an interface name indicates that the interface is
107.Dq down .
108If
109.Fl a
110is also present, multicast addresses currently in use are shown
111for each Ethernet interface and for each IP interface address.
112Multicast addresses are shown on separate lines following the interface
113address with which they are associated.
114If
115.Fl b
116is also present, show the number of bytes in and out.
117If
118.Fl d
119is also present, show the number of dropped packets.
120If
121.Fl t
122is also present, show the contents of watchdog timers.
123.It Xo
124.Bk -words
125.Nm
126.Fl w Ar wait
127.Op Fl I Ar interface
128.Op Fl d
129.Op Fl M Ar core
130.Op Fl N Ar system
131.Ek
132.Xc
133At intervals of
134.Ar wait
135seconds,
136display the information regarding packet
137traffic on all configured network interfaces
138or a single
139.Ar interface .
140If
141.Fl d
142is also present, show the number of dropped packets.
143.It Xo
144.Bk -words
145.Nm
146.Fl s Op Fl s
147.Op Fl z
148.Op Fl f Ar protocol_family | Fl p Ar protocol
149.Op Fl M Ar core
150.Op Fl N Ar system
151.Ek
152.Xc
153Display system-wide statistics for each network protocol,
154for a particular
155.Ar protocol_family ,
156or for a single
157.Ar protocol .
158If
159.Fl s
160is repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed.
161If
162.Fl z
163is also present, reset statistic counters after displaying them.
164.It Xo
165.Bk -words
166.Nm
167.Fl i | I Ar interface Fl s
168.Op Fl f Ar protocol_family | Fl p Ar protocol
169.Op Fl M Ar core
170.Op Fl N Ar system
171.Ek
172.Xc
173Display per-interface statistics for each network protocol,
174for a particular
175.Ar protocol_family ,
176or for a single
177.Ar protocol .
178.It Xo
179.Bk -words
180.Nm
181.Fl m
182.Op Fl M Ar core
183.Op Fl N Ar system
184.Ek
185.Xc
186Show statistics recorded by the memory management routines
187.Pq Xr mbuf 9 .
188The network manages a private pool of memory buffers.
189.It Xo
190.Bk -words
191.Nm
192.Fl r
193.Op Fl AalnW
194.Op Fl f Ar address_family
195.Op Fl M Ar core
196.Op Fl N Ar system
197.Ek
198.Xc
199Display the contents of all routing tables,
200or a routing table for a particular
201.Ar address_family .
202If
203.Fl A
204is also present,
205show the contents of the internal Patricia tree
206structures; used for debugging.
207If
208.Fl a
209is also present,
210show protocol-cloned routes
211(routes generated by an
212.Dv RTF_PRCLONING
213parent route);
214normally these routes are not shown.
215When
216.Fl W
217or
218.Fl l
219is also present,
220show the path MTU
221for each route.
222.It Xo
223.Bk -words
224.Nm
225.Fl rs
226.Op Fl s
227.Op Fl M Ar core
228.Op Fl N Ar system
229.Ek
230.Xc
231Display routing statistics.
232If
233.Fl s
234is repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed.
235.It Xo
236.Bk -words
237.Nm
238.Fl g
239.Op Fl lW
240.Op Fl f Ar address_family
241.Op Fl M Ar core
242.Op Fl N Ar system
243.Ek
244.Xc
245Show information related to multicast (group address) routing.
246By default, show the IP Multicast virtual-interface and routing tables.
247.It Xo
248.Bk -words
249.Nm
250.Fl gs
251.Op Fl s
252.Op Fl f Ar address_family
253.Op Fl M Ar core
254.Op Fl N Ar system
255.Ek
256.Xc
257Show multicast routing statistics.
258If
259.Fl s
260is repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed.
261.El
262.Pp
263Some options have the general meaning:
264.Bl -tag -width flag
265.It Fl f Ar address_family , Fl p Ar protocol
266Limit display to those records
267of the specified
268.Ar address_family
269or a single
270.Ar protocol .
271The following address families and protocols are recognized:
272.Pp
273.Bl -tag -width ".Cm netgraph , ng Pq Dv AF_NETGRAPH" -compact
274.It Em Family
275.Em Protocols
276.It Cm inet Pq Dv AF_INET
277.Cm bdg , divert , icmp , igmp , ip , ipsec , pim , tcp , udp
278.It Cm inet6 Pq Dv AF_INET6
279.Cm bdg , icmp6 , ip6 , ipsec6 , rip6 , tcp , udp
280.It Cm pfkey Pq Dv PF_KEY
281.Cm pfkey
282.It Cm atalk Pq Dv AF_APPLETALK
283.Cm ddp
284.It Cm netgraph , ng Pq Dv AF_NETGRAPH
285.Cm ctrl , data
286.It Cm ipx Pq Dv AF_IPX
287.Cm ipx , spx
288.\".It Cm ns Pq Dv AF_NS
289.\".Cm idp , ns_err , spp
290.\".It Cm iso Pq Dv AF_ISO
291.\".Cm clnp , cltp , esis , tp
292.It Cm unix Pq Dv AF_UNIX
293.It Cm link Pq Dv AF_LINK
294.El
295.Pp
296The program will complain if
297.Ar protocol
298is unknown or if there is no statistics routine for it.
299.It Fl l
300The
301.Fl l
302option is equivalent to
303.Fl W .
304.It Fl M
305Extract values associated with the name list from the specified core
306instead of the default
307.Pa /dev/kmem .
308.It Fl N
309Extract the name list from the specified system instead of the default,
310which is the kernel image the system has booted from.
311.It Fl n
312Show network addresses and ports as numbers.
313Normally
314.Nm
315attempts to resolve addresses and ports,
316and display them symbolically.
317.It Fl W
318In certain displays, avoid truncating addresses even if this causes
319some fields to overflow.
320.El
321.Pp
322The default display, for active sockets, shows the local
323and remote addresses, send and receive queue sizes (in bytes), protocol,
324and the internal state of the protocol.
325Address formats are of the form
326.Dq host.port
327or
328.Dq network.port
329if a socket's address specifies a network but no specific host address.
330When known, the host and network addresses are displayed symbolically
331according to the databases
332.Xr hosts 5
333and
334.Xr networks 5 ,
335respectively.
336If a symbolic name for an address is unknown, or if
337the
338.Fl n
339option is specified, the address is printed numerically, according
340to the address family.
341For more information regarding
342the Internet IPv4
343.Dq dot format ,
344refer to
345.Xr inet 3 .
346Unspecified,
347or
348.Dq wildcard ,
349addresses and ports appear as
350.Dq Li * .
351.Pp
352The interface display provides a table of cumulative
353statistics regarding packets transferred, errors, and collisions.
354The network addresses of the interface
355and the maximum transmission unit
356.Pq Dq mtu
357are also displayed.
358.Pp
359The routing table display indicates the available routes and their status.
360Each route consists of a destination host or network, and a gateway to use
361in forwarding packets.
362The flags field shows a collection of information about the route stored
363as binary choices.
364The individual flags are discussed in more detail in the
365.Xr route 8
366and
367.Xr route 4
368manual pages.
369The mapping between letters and flags is:
370.Bl -column ".Li W" ".Dv RTF_WASCLONED"
371.It Li 1 Ta Dv RTF_PROTO1 Ta "Protocol specific routing flag #1"
372.It Li 2 Ta Dv RTF_PROTO2 Ta "Protocol specific routing flag #2"
373.It Li 3 Ta Dv RTF_PROTO3 Ta "Protocol specific routing flag #3"
374.It Li B Ta Dv RTF_BLACKHOLE Ta "Just discard pkts (during updates)"
375.It Li b Ta Dv RTF_BROADCAST Ta "The route represents a broadcast address"
376.It Li C Ta Dv RTF_CLONING Ta "Generate new routes on use"
377.It Li c Ta Dv RTF_PRCLONING Ta "Protocol-specified generate new routes on use"
378.It Li D Ta Dv RTF_DYNAMIC Ta "Created dynamically (by redirect)"
379.It Li G Ta Dv RTF_GATEWAY Ta "Destination requires forwarding by intermediary"
380.It Li H Ta Dv RTF_HOST Ta "Host entry (net otherwise)"
381.It Li L Ta Dv RTF_LLINFO Ta "Valid protocol to link address translation"
382.It Li M Ta Dv RTF_MODIFIED Ta "Modified dynamically (by redirect)"
383.It Li R Ta Dv RTF_REJECT Ta "Host or net unreachable"
384.It Li S Ta Dv RTF_STATIC Ta "Manually added"
385.It Li U Ta Dv RTF_UP Ta "Route usable"
386.It Li W Ta Dv RTF_WASCLONED Ta "Route was generated as a result of cloning"
387.It Li X Ta Dv RTF_XRESOLVE Ta "External daemon translates proto to link address"
388.El
389.Pp
390Direct routes are created for each
391interface attached to the local host;
392the gateway field for such entries shows the address of the outgoing interface.
393The refcnt field gives the
394current number of active uses of the route.
395Connection oriented
396protocols normally hold on to a single route for the duration of
397a connection while connectionless protocols obtain a route while sending
398to the same destination.
399The use field provides a count of the number of packets
400sent using that route.
401The interface entry indicates the network interface utilized for the route.
402.Pp
403When
404.Nm
405is invoked with the
406.Fl w
407option and a
408.Ar wait
409interval argument, it displays a running count of statistics related to
410network interfaces.
411An obsolescent version of this option used a numeric parameter
412with no option, and is currently supported for backward compatibility.
413By default, this display summarizes information for all interfaces.
414Information for a specific interface may be displayed with the
415.Fl I
416option.
417.Sh SEE ALSO
418.Xr fstat 1 ,
419.Xr nfsstat 1 ,
420.Xr ps 1 ,
421.Xr sockstat 1 ,
422.Xr inet 4 ,
423.Xr route 4 ,
424.Xr unix 4 ,
425.Xr hosts 5 ,
426.Xr networks 5 ,
427.Xr protocols 5 ,
428.Xr services 5 ,
429.Xr iostat 8 ,
430.Xr route 8 ,
431.Xr trpt 8 ,
432.Xr vmstat 8 ,
433.Xr mbuf 9
434.Sh HISTORY
435The
436.Nm
437command appeared in
438.Bx 4.2 .
439.Pp
440IPv6 support was added by WIDE/KAME project.
441.Sh BUGS
442The notion of errors is ill-defined.
443