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@@ -1,8 +1,5 @@
-
-
-
System Administration Commands ifconfig(1M)
NAME
@@ -15,11 +12,11 @@
[auth_algs authentication algorithm] [encr_algs encryption algorithm]
[encr_auth_algs authentication algorithm] [auto-revarp]
[broadcast address] [deprecated | -deprecated]
[preferred | -preferred] [destination dest_address]
[ether [address]] [failover | -failover] [group
- [name | ""]] [index if_index] [metric n] [modlist]
+ [name | ""]] [index if_index] [ipmp] [metric n] [modlist]
[modinsert mod_name@pos] [modremove mod_name@pos]
[mtu n] [netmask mask] [plumb] [unplumb] [private
| -private] [nud | -nud] [set [address] [/netmask]]
[standby | -standby] [subnet subnet_address] [tdst
tunnel_dest_address] [token address/prefix_length]
@@ -79,16 +76,12 @@
The following options are supported:
addif address
Create the next unused logical interface on the speci-
- fied physical interface. If the physical interface is
- part of a multipathing group, the logical interface can
- be added to a different physical interface in the same
- group.
+ fied physical interface.
-
all-zones
Make the interface available to every shared-IP zone on
the system. The appropriate zone to which to deliver
data is determined using the tnzonecfg database. This
@@ -138,10 +131,11 @@
-arp
Disable the use of the ARP on a physical interface.
+ ARP cannot be disabled on an IPMP IP interface.
auth_algs authentication algorithm
For a tunnel, enable IPsec AH with the authentication
@@ -477,11 +471,11 @@
ether [ address ]
If no address is given and the user is root or has suf-
- ficient privileges to open the underlying device, then
+ ficient privileges to open the underlying datalink, then
display the current Ethernet address information.
Otherwise, if the user is root or has sufficient
privileges, set the Ethernet address of the interfaces
to address. The address is an Ethernet address
@@ -492,63 +486,70 @@
Some, though not all, Ethernet interface cards have
their own addresses. To use cards that do not have their
own addresses, refer to section 3.2.3(4) of the IEEE
802.3 specification for a definition of the locally
- administered address space. The use of multipathing
- groups should be restricted to those cards with their
- own addresses (see MULTIPATHING GROUPS).
+ administered address space. Note that all IP interfaces
+ in an IPMP group must have unique hardware addresses;
+ see *in.mpathd(1M)*.
-failover
- Mark the logical interface as a non-failover interface.
- Addresses assigned to non-failover logical interfaces
- will not failover when the interface fails. Status
- display shows NOFAILOVER as part of flags.
+ Set *NOFAILOVER* on the logical interface. This makes
+ the associated address available for use by *in.mpathd*
+ to perform probe-based failure detection for the
+ associated physical IP interface. As a side effect,
+ *DEPRECATED* will also be set on the logical interface.
+ This operation is not permitted on an IPMP IP interface.
failover
- Mark the logical interface as a failover interface. An
- address assigned to such an interface will failover when
- the interface fails. Status display does not show
- NOFAILOVER as part of flags.
+ Clear *NOFAILOVER* on the logical interface. This is
+ the default. These logical interfaces are subject to
+ migration when brought up (see IP MULTIPATHING GROUPS).
- group [ name |""]
+ group [ name | "" ]
- Insert the logical interface in the multipathing group
- specified by name. To delete an interface from a group,
+ When applied to a physical interface, it places the
+ interface into the named group. If the group does not
+ exist, it will be created, along with one or more IPMP
+ IP interfaces (for IPv4, IPv6, or both). Any *UP*
+ addresses that are not also marked *NOFAILOVER* are
+ subject to migration to the IPMP IP interface (see IP
+ MULTIPATHING GROUPS). Specifying a group name of *""*
+ removes the physical IP interface from the group.
+ When applied to a physical IPMP IP interface, it renames
+ the IPMP group to have the new name. If the name
+ already exists, or a name of *""* is specified, it
+ fails. Renaming IPMP groups is discouraged. Instead,
+ the IPMP IP interface should be given a meaningful name
+ when it is created via the *ipmp* subcommand, which the
+ system will also use as the IPMP group name.
-SunOS 5.11 Last change: 21 Jan 2007 8
-
-
-
-
-
-
-System Administration Commands ifconfig(1M)
-
-
-
- use a null string "". When invoked on the logical inter-
- face with id zero, the status display shows the group
- name.
-
-
index n
Change the interface index for the interface. The value
of n must be an interface index (if_index) that is not
used on another interface. if_index will be a non-zero
positive number that uniquely identifies the network
interface on the system.
+ ipmp
+
+ Create an IPMP IP interface with the specified name. An
+ interface must be separately created for use by IPv4 and
+ IPv6. The *address_family* parameter controls whether
+ the command applies to IPv4 or IPv6 (IPv4 if
+ unspecified). All IPMP IP interfaces have the *IPMP*
+ flag set.
+
metric n
Set the routing metric of the interface to n; if no
value is specified, the default is 0. The routing metric
is used by the routing protocol. Higher metrics have the
@@ -737,22 +738,25 @@
on a point-to-point physical interface.
plumb
- Open the device associated with the physical interface
- name and set up the streams needed for IP to use the
- device. When used with a logical interface name, this
- command is used to create a specific named logical
- interface. An interface must be separately plumbed for
- use by IPv4 and IPv6. The address_family parameter con-
- trols whether the ifconfig command applies to IPv4 or
- IPv6.
+ For a physical IP interface, open the datalink
+ associated with the physical interface name and set up
+ the plumbing needed for IP to use the datalink. When
+ used with a logical interface name, this command is used
+ to create a specific named logical interface on an
+ existing physical IP interface.
- Before an interface has been plumbed, the interface will
- not show up in the output of the ifconfig -a command.
+ An interface must be separately plumbed for IPv4 and
+ IPv6 according to the *address_family* parameter (IPv4
+ if unspecified). Before an interface has been plumbed,
+ it will not be shown by *ifconfig -a*.
+ Note that IPMP IP interfaces are not tied to a specific
+ datalink and are instead created with the *ipmp*
+ subcommand.
private
Tells the in.routed routing daemon that a specified log-
ical interface should not be advertised.
@@ -764,27 +768,27 @@
removeif address
Remove the logical interface on the physical interface
- specified that matches the address specified. When the
- interface is part of a multipathing group, the logical
- interface will be removed from the physical interface in
- the group that holds the address.
+ specified that matches the address specified.
-
router
Enable IP forwarding on the interface. When enabled, the
- interface is marked ROUTER, and IP packets can be for-
- warded to and from the interface.
+ interface is marked *ROUTER*, and IP packets can be for-
+ warded to and from the interface. Enabling *ROUTER* on
+ any IP interface in an IPMP group applies the flag to
+ all IP interfaces in that IPMP group.
-router
Disable IP forwarding on the interface. IP packets are
- not forwarded to and from the interface.
+ not forwarded to and from the interface. Disabling
+ *ROUTER* on any IP interface in an IPMP group disables
+ it on all IP interfaces in that IPMP group.
SunOS 5.11 Last change: 21 Jan 2007 12
@@ -803,28 +807,23 @@
interface.
standby
- Marks the physical interface as a standby interface. If
- the interface is marked STANDBY and is part of the mul-
- tipathing group, the interface will not be selected to
- send out packets unless some other interface in the
- group has failed and the network access has been failed
- over to this standby interface.
+ Mark the physical IP interface as a *STANDBY* interface.
+ If an interface is marked *STANDBY* and is part of an
+ IPMP group, the interface will not be used for data
+ traffic unless another interface in the IPMP group
+ becomes unusable. When a *STANDBY* interface is
+ functional but not being used for data traffic, it will
+ also be marked *INACTIVE*. This operation is not
+ permitted on an IPMP IP interface.
- The status display shows "STANDBY, INACTIVE" indicating
- that that the interface is a standby and is also inac-
- tive. IFF_INACTIVE will be cleared when some other
- interface belonging to the same multipathing group fails
- over to this interface. Once a failback happens, the
- status display will return to INACTIVE.
-
-standby
- Turns off standby on this interface.
+ Clear *STANDBY* on this interface. This is the default.
subnet
Set the subnet address for an interface.
@@ -892,24 +891,30 @@
ifconfig.
unplumb
- Close the device associated with this physical interface
- name and any streams that ifconfig set up for IP to use
- the device. When used with a logical interface name, the
- logical interface is removed from the system. After this
- command is executed, the device name will no longer
- appear in the output of ifconfig -a.
+ For a physical or IPMP interface, remove all associated
+ logical IP interfaces and tear down any plumbing needed
+ for IP to use the interface. For an IPMP IP interface,
+ this command will fail if the group is not empty. For a
+ logical interface, the logical interface is removed.
+ An interface must be separately unplumbed for IPv4 and
+ IPv6 according to the *address_family* parameter (IPv4
+ if unspecified). Upon success, the interface name will
+ no longer appear in the output of *ifconfig -a*.
+
up
- Mark a logical interface "up". This happens automati-
- cally when assigning the first address to a logical
- interface. The up option enables an interface after an
- ifconfig down, which reinitializes the hardware.
+ Mark a logical interface *UP*. As a result, the IP
+ module will accept packets destined to the associated
+ address (unless the address is zero), along with any
+ associated multicast and broadcast IP addresses.
+ Similarly, the IP module will allow packets to be sent
+ with the associated address as a source address.
usesrc [ name | none ]
Specify a physical interface to be used for source
@@ -971,21 +976,17 @@
interfaces, it is coarser-grained than the usesrc
option. It will be overridden by usesrc and setsrc
(route subcommand), in that order.
The use of the usesrc option is mutually exclusive of
- the IP multipathing ifconfig options, group and standby.
- That is, if an interface is already part of a IP mul-
- tipathing group or specified as a standby interface,
- then it cannot be specified with a usesrc option, and
- vice-versa. For more details on IP multipathing, see
- in.mpathd(1M) and the .
+ the IPMP *group* and *standby* subcommands. That is, if
+ an interface is already part of a IPMP group or
+ specified as a *STANDBY* interface, then it cannot be
+ specified with a usesrc option, and vice-versa.
-
-
SunOS 5.11 Last change: 21 Jan 2007 15
@@ -1236,46 +1237,32 @@
CoS
This interface supports some form of Class of Service
(CoS) marking. An example is the 802.1D user priority
- marking supported on VLAN interfaces.
+ marking supported on VLAN interfaces. For IPMP IP
+ interfaces, this will only be set if all interfaces in
+ the group have CoS set.
DEPRECATED
This address is deprecated. This address will not be
used as a source address for outbound packets unless
-
-
-
-SunOS 5.11 Last change: 21 Jan 2007 19
-
-
-
-
-
-
-System Administration Commands ifconfig(1M)
-
-
-
there are no other addresses on this interface or an
application has explicitly bound to this address. An
- IPv6 deprecated address will eventually be deleted when
- not used, whereas an IPv4 deprecated address is often
- used with IP network multipathing IPv4 test addresses,
- which are determined by the setting of the NOFAILOVER
- flag. Further, the DEPRECATED flag is part of the stan-
- dard mechanism for renumbering in IPv6.
+ IPv6 deprecated address is part of the standard
+ mechanism for renumbering in IPv6 and will eventually be
+ deleted when not used. For both IPv4 and IPv6,
+ *DEPRECATED* is also set on all *NOFAILOVER* addresses,
+ though this may change in a future release.
+ DHCPRUNNING
- DHCP
+ The logical interface is managed by *dhcpagent(1M)*.
- DHCP is used to manage this address.
-
DUPLICATE
The logical interface has been disabled because the IP
address configured on the interface is a duplicate. Some
other node on the network is using this address. If the
@@ -1290,14 +1277,18 @@
CATE flag.
FAILED
- The interface has failed. New addresses cannot be
- created on this interface. If this interface is part of
- an IP network multipathing group, a failover will occur
- to another interface in the group, if possible
+ The *in.mpathd* daemon has determined that the interface
+ has failed. *FAILED* interfaces will not be used to
+ send or receive IP data traffic. If this is set on a
+ physical IP interface in an IPMP group, IP data traffic
+ will continue to flow over other usable IP interfaces in
+ the IPMP group. If this is set on an IPMP IP interface,
+ the entire group has failed and no data traffic can be
+ sent or received over any interfaces in that group.
FIXEDMTU
The MTU has been set using the -mtu option. This flag is
@@ -1307,44 +1298,29 @@
MTU changes.
INACTIVE
- Indicates that the interface is not currently being used
- for regular traffic by the system. New addresses cannot
+ The physical interface is functioning but is not used to
+ send or receive data traffic according to administrative
+ policy. This flag is initially set by the *standby*
+ subcommand and is subsequently controlled by
+ *in.mpathd*. It also set when *FAILBACK=no* mode is
+ enabled (see *in.mpathd(1M)*) to indicate that the IP
+ interface has repaired but is not being used.
+ IPMP
-SunOS 5.11 Last change: 21 Jan 2007 20
+ Indicates that this is an IPMP IP interface.
-
-
-
-
-System Administration Commands ifconfig(1M)
-
-
-
- be created on this interface. The flag is set automati-
- cally on standby interfaces. It can also be set when the
- system detects that a failed interface has been repaired
- and FAILBACK=no is configured in /etc/default/mpathd.
- The flag is cleared when the interface fails or when a
- failover to that interface occurs.
-
-
LOOPBACK
Indicates that this is the loopback interface.
- MIP
-
- Indicates that mobile IP controls this interface.
-
-
MULTI_BCAST
Indicates that the broadcast address is used for multi-
cast on this interface.
@@ -1364,13 +1340,13 @@
to IPv4.
NOFAILOVER
- This address will not failover if the interface fails.
- IP network multipathing test addresses must be marked
- nofailover.
+ The address associated with this logical interface is
+ available to *in.mpathd* for probe-based failure
+ detection of the associated physical IP interface.
NOLOCAL
The interface has no address , just an on-link subnet.
@@ -1417,15 +1393,13 @@
RIP-2 also does not advertise this address.
OFFLINE
- Indicates that the interface has been offlined. New
- addresses cannot be created on this interface. Inter-
- faces in an IP network multipathing group are offlined
- prior to removal and replacement using dynamic reconfi-
- guration.
+ The interface is offline and thus cannot send or receive
+ IP data traffic. This is only set on IP interfaces in
+ an IPMP group. See *if_mpadm(1M)* and *cfgadm(1M)*.
POINTOPOINT
Indicates that the address is a point-to-point link.
@@ -1471,24 +1445,23 @@
the interface.
RUNNING
- Indicates that the required resources for an interface
+ Indicates that the required resources for an i nterface
are allocated. For some interfaces this also indicates
- that the link is up.
+ that the link is up. For IPMP IP interfaces, *RUNNING*
+ is set as long as one IP interface in the group is
+ active.
STANDBY
- Indicates that this is a standby interface to be used on
- failures. Only interfaces in an IP network multipathing
- group should be designated as standby interfaces. If
- this interface is part of a IP network multipathing
- group, the interface will not be selected to send out
- packets unless some other interface in the group fails
- over to it.
+ Indicates that this physical interface will not be used
+ for data traffic unless another interface in the IPMP
+ group becomes unusable. The *INACTIVE* and *FAILED*
+ flags indicate whether it is actively being used.
TEMPORARY
Indicates that this is a temporary IPv6 address as
@@ -1502,18 +1475,19 @@
tem
UP
- Indicates that the interface is up, that is, all the
- routing entries and the like for this interface have
- been set up.
+ Indicates that the logical interface (and the associated
+ physical interface) is up. The IP module will accept
+ packets destined to UP addresses (unless the address is
+ zero), along with any associated multicast and broadcast
+ IP addresses. Similarly, the IP module will allow
+ packets to be sent with an UP address as a source
+ address.
-
-
-
SunOS 5.11 Last change: 21 Jan 2007 23
@@ -1527,11 +1501,11 @@
Indicates that the physical interface has no underlying
hardware. It is not possible to transmit or receive
packets through a virtual interface. These interfaces
are useful for configuring local addresses that can be
- used on multiple interfaces. (See also the -usesrc
+ used on multiple interfaces. (See also the *usesrc*
option.)
XRESOLV
@@ -1598,35 +1572,88 @@
sical interface. So, for example, the logical interface
eri0:1 can only be configured after the physical interface
eri0 has been plumbed.
- To delete a logical interface, use the -unplumb or -removeif
- options. For example,
+ To delete a logical interface, use the *unplumb* or
+ *removeif* options. For example,
example% ifconfig eri0:1 down unplumb
+ will delete the logical interface *eri0:1*.
+IP MULTIPATHING GROUPS
+ Physical interfaces that share the same IP broadcast domain
+ _must_ be collected into a single IP Multipathing (IPMP)
+ group using the *group* subcommand. Each IPMP group has an
+ associated IPMP IP interface, which can either be explicitly
+ created (the preferred method) by using the *ipmp*
+ subcommand or implicitly created by *ifconfig* in response
+ to placing an IP interface into a new IPMP group.
+ Implicitly-created IPMP interfaces will be named ipmp_N_
+ where _N_ is the lowest integer that doesn't conflict with
+ an existing IP interface name or IPMP group name.
- will delete the logical interface eri0:1.
+ Each IPMP IP interface is created with a matching IPMP group
+ name, though it can be changed using the *group* subcommand.
+ Each IPMP IP interface hosts a set of highly-available IP
+ addresses. These addresses will remain reachable so long as
+ at least one interface in the group is active, where
+ "active" is defined as having at least one UP address and
+ having *INACTIVE*, *FAILED*, and *OFFLINE* clear. IP
+ addresses hosted on the IPMP IP interface may either be
+ configured statically or configured through DHCP via the
+ *dhcp* subcommand.
-MULTIPATHING GROUPS
- Physical interfaces that share the same IP broadcast domain
- can be collected into a multipathing group using the group
- keyword. Interfaces assigned to the same multipathing group
- are treated as equivalent and outgoing traffic is spread
- across the interfaces on a per-IP-destination basis. In
- addition, individual interfaces in a multipathing group are
- monitored for failures; the addresses associated with failed
- interfaces are automatically transferred to other function-
- ing interfaces within the group.
+ Interfaces assigned to the same IPMP group are treated as
+ equivalent and monitored for failure by *in.mpathd*.
+ Provided that active interfaces in the group remain, IP
+ interface failures (and any subsequent repairs) are handled
+ transparently to sockets-based applications. IPMP is also
+ integrated with the Dynamic Reconfiguration framework (see
+ *cfgadm(1M)*), which enables network adapters to be replaced
+ transparently to sockets-based applications.
+ The IP module automatically load-spreads all outbound
+ traffic across all active interfaces in an IPMP group.
+ Similarly, all *UP* addresses hosted on the IPMP IP
+ interface and will be distributed across the active
+ interfaces to promote inbound load-spreading. The
+ *ipmpstat(1M)* utility allows many aspects of the IPMP
+ subsystem to be observed, including the current binding of
+ IP data addresses to IP interfaces.
- For more details on IP multipathing, see in.mpathd(1M) and
- the . See netstat(1M) for per-IP-destination information.
+ When an interface is placed into an IPMP group, any *UP*
+ logical interfaces are "migrated" to the IPMP IP interface
+ for use by the group, unless:
+ * The logical interface is marked *NOFAILOVER*
+ * The logical interface hosts an IPv6 link-local address.
+ * The logical interface hosts an IPv4 0.0.0.0 address.
+
+ Likewise, once an interface is in a group, if changes are
+ made to a logical interface such that it is *UP* and not
+ exempted by one of the conditions above, it will also
+ migrate to the associated IPMP IP interface. Logical
+ interfaces never migrate back, even if the physical
+ interface that contributed the address is removed from the
+ group.
+
+ Each interface placed into an IPMP group may be optionally
+ configured with a "test" address that *in.mpathd* will use
+ for probe-based failure detection; see *in.mpathd(1M)*.
+ These addresses must be marked *NOFAILOVER* (using the
+ *-failover* subcommand) prior to being marked *UP*. Test
+ addresses may also be acquired through DHCP via the *dhcp*
+ subcommand.
+
+ For more background on IPMP, please see the "IPMP
+ Administrative Overview" and "IPMP Configuration Tasks"
+ chapters of the administrator documentation.
+
+
CONFIGURING IPV6 INTERFACES
When an IPv6 physical interface is plumbed and configured
"up" with ifconfig, it is automatically assigned an IPv6
link-local address for which the last 64 bits are calculated
from the MAC address of the interface.
@@ -2095,11 +2122,11 @@
have usesrc set on them.
The following command, using the none keyword, undoes the
- effect of the preceding ifconfig usersrc command.
+ effect of the preceding *ifconfig* *usesrc* command.
example% ifconfig qfe2 usesrc none
@@ -2327,11 +2354,11 @@
|_______________________________________|______________________________|
SEE ALSO
dhcpinfo(1), dhcpagent(1M), in.mpathd(1M), in.ndpd(1M),
- in.routed(1M), ipsecconf(1M), ndd(1M), netstat(1M),
+ in.routed(1M), ipmpstat(1M), ipsecconf(1M), netstat(1M),
zoneadm(1M), zonecfg(1M), ethers(3SOCKET),
gethostbyname(3NSL), getnetbyname(3SOCKET), hosts(4),
inet_type(4), ndpd.conf(4), netmasks(4), networks(4),
nsswitch.conf(4), attributes(5), privileges(5), zones(5),
arp(7P), ipsecah(7P), ipsecesp(7P), tun(7M)