DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
NETSTAT(1) DragonFly General Commands Manual NETSTAT(1)
NAME
netstat -- show network status
DESCRIPTION
The netstat command symbolically displays the contents of various
network-related data structures. There are a number of output formats,
depending on the options for the information presented.
netstat [-AaLlnPSW] [-c cpu] [-f protocol_family | -p protocol] [-M core]
[-N system]
Display a list of active sockets (protocol control blocks) for
each network protocol, for a particular protocol_family, or for a
single protocol. If -A is also present, show the address of a
protocol control block (PCB) associated with a socket; used for
debugging. If -a is also present, show the state of all sockets;
normally sockets used by server processes are not shown. If -L
is also present, show the size of the various listen queues. The
first count shows the number of unaccepted connections, the
second count shows the amount of unaccepted incomplete
connections, and the third count is the maximum number of queued
connections. If -S is also present, show network addresses as
numbers (as with -n) but show ports symbolically.
netstat -i | -I interface [-aBbdhnt] [-f address_family] [-M core]
[-N system]
Show the state of all network interfaces or a single interface
which have been auto-configured (interfaces statically configured
into a system, but not located at boot time are not shown). An
asterisk (``*'') after an interface name indicates that the
interface is ``down''. If -a is also present, multicast
addresses currently in use are shown for each Ethernet interface
and for each IP interface address. Multicast addresses are shown
on separate lines following the interface address with which they
are associated. If -b is also present, show the number of bytes
in and out. If -d is also present, show the number of dropped
packets. If -h is also present, print all counters in human
readable form. If -t is also present, show the contents of
watchdog timers. If -B is also present, the maximum buffer sizes
are displayed instead of current buffer usage.
netstat -w wait [-I interface] [-dh] [-M core] [-N system]
At intervals of wait seconds, display the information regarding
packet traffic on all configured network interfaces or a single
interface. If -d is also present, show the number of dropped
packets. If -h is also present, print counters in human readable
form.
netstat -s [-s] [-z] [-f protocol_family | -p protocol] [-M core]
[-N system]
Display system-wide statistics for each network protocol, for a
particular protocol_family, or for a single protocol. If -s is
repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed. If -z is
also present, reset statistic counters after displaying them.
netstat -i | -I interface -s [-f protocol_family | -p protocol] [-M core]
[-N system]
Display per-interface statistics for each network protocol, for a
particular protocol_family, or for a single protocol.
netstat -m [-M core] [-N system]
Show statistics recorded by the memory management routines
(mbuf(9)). The network manages a private pool of memory buffers.
netstat -r [-AalnW] [-f address_family] [-M core] [-N system]
Display the contents of all routing tables, or a routing table
for a particular address_family. If -A is also present, show the
contents of the internal Patricia tree structures; used for
debugging. If -a is also present, show protocol-cloned routes
(routes generated by an RTF_PRCLONING parent route); normally
these routes are not shown. When -W or -l is also present, show
the path MTU, MSL, initial window size and MPLS label operations
for each route.
netstat -rs [-s] [-M core] [-N system]
Display routing statistics. If -s is repeated, counters with a
value of zero are suppressed.
netstat -g [-lW] [-f address_family] [-M core] [-N system]
Show information related to multicast (group address) routing.
By default, show the IP Multicast virtual-interface and routing
tables.
netstat -gs [-s] [-f address_family] [-M core] [-N system]
Show multicast routing statistics. If -s is repeated, counters
with a value of zero are suppressed.
Some options have the general meaning:
-c cpu
On SMP systems the route table is replicated. This option allows
the route table for a specific cpu to be accessed and exists
primarily for debugging purposes.
-f address_family, -f protocol_family, -p protocol
Limit display to those records of the specified address_family,
protocol_family or a single protocol. The following address
families, protocol families and protocols are recognized:
Family Protocols
inet (AF_INET PF_INET) carp, divert, icmp, igmp, ip, pim, tcp,
udp
inet6 (AF_INET6 PF_INET6) carp, icmp6, ip6, rip6, tcp, udp
netgraph, ng (AF_NETGRAPH PF_NETGRAPH)
ctrl, data
unix (AF_UNIX PF_UNIX)
link (AF_LINK PF_LINK)
mpls (AF_MPLS PF_MPLS)
The program will complain if protocol is unknown or if there is no
statistics routine for it.
-l The -l option is equivalent to -W.
-M Extract values associated with the name list from the specified
core instead of the default /dev/kmem.
-N Extract the name list from the specified system instead of the
default, which is the kernel image the system has booted from.
-n Show network addresses and ports as numbers. Normally netstat
attempts to resolve addresses and ports, and display them
symbolically.
-P Display additional protocol-specific information. For TCP the
current transmit window, unacked sequence space, and RTT is
displayed.
-W Wide display. In certain displays, add columns and avoid
truncating addresses even if this causes some fields to overflow.
The default display, for active sockets, shows the local and remote
addresses, send and receive queue sizes (in bytes), protocol, and the
internal state of the protocol. Address formats are of the form
``host.port'' or ``network.port'' if a socket's address specifies a
network but no specific host address. When known, the host and network
addresses are displayed symbolically according to the databases hosts(5)
and networks(5), respectively. If a symbolic name for an address is
unknown, or if the -n option is specified, the address is printed
numerically, according to the address family. For more information
regarding the Internet IPv4 ``dot format'', refer to inet(3).
Unspecified, or ``wildcard'', addresses and ports appear as ``*''.
The interface display provides a table of cumulative statistics regarding
packets transferred, errors, and collisions. The network addresses of
the interface and the maximum transmission unit (``mtu'') are also
displayed.
The routing table display indicates the available routes and their
status. Each route consists of a destination host or network, and a
gateway to use in forwarding packets. The flags field shows a collection
of information about the route stored as binary choices. The individual
flags are discussed in more detail in the route(8) and route(4) manual
pages. The mapping between letters and flags is:
1 RTF_PROTO1 Protocol specific routing flag #1
2 RTF_PROTO2 Protocol specific routing flag #2
3 RTF_PROTO3 Protocol specific routing flag #3
B RTF_BLACKHOLE Just discard pkts (during updates)
b RTF_BROADCAST The route represents a broadcast address
C RTF_CLONING Generate new routes on use
c RTF_PRCLONING Protocol-specified generate new routes on use
D RTF_DYNAMIC Created dynamically (by redirect)
G RTF_GATEWAY Destination requires forwarding by intermediary
H RTF_HOST Host entry (net otherwise)
L RTF_LLINFO Valid protocol to link address translation
M RTF_MODIFIED Modified dynamically (by redirect)
m RTF_MPLSOPS MPLS label operations
R RTF_REJECT Host or net unreachable
S RTF_STATIC Manually added
U RTF_UP Route usable
W RTF_WASCLONED Route was generated as a result of cloning
X RTF_XRESOLVE External daemon translates proto to link address
Direct routes are created for each interface attached to the local host;
the gateway field for such entries shows the address of the outgoing
interface. The refcnt field gives the current number of active uses of
the route. Connection oriented protocols normally hold on to a single
route for the duration of a connection while connectionless protocols
obtain a route while sending to the same destination. The use field
provides a count of the number of packets sent using that route. The
interface entry indicates the network interface utilized for the route.
When netstat is invoked with the -w option and a wait interval argument,
it displays a running count of statistics related to network interfaces.
An obsolescent version of this option used a numeric parameter with no
option, and is currently supported for backward compatibility. By
default, this display summarizes information for all interfaces.
Information for a specific interface may be displayed with the -I option.
SEE ALSO
fstat(1), nfsstat(1), ps(1), sockstat(1), carp(4), inet(4), inet6(4),
route(4), unix(4), hosts(5), networks(5), protocols(5), services(5),
iostat(8), route(8), trpt(8), vmstat(8), mbuf(9)
HISTORY
The netstat command appeared in 4.2BSD.
IPv6 support was added by WIDE/KAME project.
BUGS
The notion of errors is ill-defined.
DragonFly 5.1 April 21, 2018 DragonFly 5.1