ref: c116550e6a41572796e4db65e4f6acbcb3d9d6f8
dir: /man/3/ether/
.TH ETHER 3 .SH NAME ether \- Ethernet device .SH SYNOPSIS .nf .BI "bind -a #l" n " /net" .BI /net/ether n /clone .BI /net/ether n /[0-7] .BI /net/ether n /[0-7]/data .BI /net/ether n /[0-7]/ctl .BI /net/ether n /[0-7]/stats .BI /net/ether n /[0-7]/type .BI /net/ether n /[0-7]/ifstats .fi .SH DESCRIPTION The Ethernet device .BI #l n serves a three-level directory representing a physical Ethernet interface: AMD LANCE, 3Com 3C509, 3Com 3C905, Intel 82557, and others. If .I n is not given it is taken to be 0. .PP The top level directory has a single directory named .BI ether n, where .I n is the interface number, starting from 0, assigned in some platform-dependent way. That directory contains a conversation directory for each of 8 Ethernet packet types, and a .B clone file. .PP Opening the .B clone file returns a file descriptor open on the .B ctl file of an unused conversation directory. Reading the .B ctl file returns a text string representing the number of the connection. The connection is controlled by writing textual commands to the associated .B ctl file: .TP .BI connect " type" Set the .I type of Ethernet packets received on the connection; the type is expressed as an integer constant (in hexadecimal if it has a leading .BR 0x , octal if it has a leading .BR 0 , and otherwise decimal). For instance, Ethernet packets carrying IP version 4 use type .BR 0x800 . The value .B \-1 stands for all types. The value .B \-2 causes at most the first 64 bytes of all types of packets to be copied to the conversation. If several conversations are assigned the same packet type, a copy of the packet is given to each. .TP .B promiscuous Set the interface to capture all packets regardless of destination address. An interface normally receives only packets whose destination address is that of the interface or is the broadcast address, .BR ffffffffffff . The interface remains promiscuous until the control file is closed. The extra packets are received only by conversations of the same type as the incoming packet (or of type -1). .TP .BI addmulti " address" Add the given MAC multicast .I address to the set of multicast addresses accepted by the interface. .I Address is a twelve digit MAC address in hexadecimal. .TP .BI remmulti " address" Remove .I address from the set of multicast addresses accepted by the interface. .PP Incoming Ethernet packets are demultiplexed by destination address and packet type and queued for reading by the corresponding open connection(s). Each read of the .B data file returns each packet in turn, including the Ethernet header. A read will terminate at packet boundaries. Each write to the .B data file causes a packet to be sent. The Ethernet address of the interface is inserted into the packet header as the source address. .PP Reading the .B type file returns the decimal value of the assigned Ethernet packet type. .PP Reading the .B stats file returns status information, the value of counters, the `promiscuous' state, and the Ethernet MAC address of the interface. .PP Reading the .B ifstats file returns statistics and status information specific to a given hardware interface. .SH SOURCE .B /os/port/devlance.c .br .B /os/port/netif.c .br .B /os/*/devether.c .br .B /os/*/ether*.c .SH SEE ALSO .IR ip (3)