|
NAMEng_ether —
Ethernet netgraph node type
SYNOPSIS#include <netgraph/ng_ether.h>
DESCRIPTIONTheether netgraph node type allows Ethernet interfaces
to interact with the
netgraph(4)
networking subsystem. Once the ng_ether module is
loaded into the kernel, a node is automatically created for each Ethernet
interface in the system. Each node will attempt to name itself with the same
name as the associated interface.
Three hooks are supported: lower, upper, and orphans. The hook name divert may be used as an alias for lower, and is provided for backward compatibility. In reality, the two names represent the same hook. The lower hook is a connection to the raw Ethernet device. When connected, all incoming packets are forwarded to this hook, instead of being passed to the kernel for upper layer processing. Writing to this hook results in a raw Ethernet frame being transmitted by the device. Normal outgoing packets are not affected by lower being connected. The upper hook is a connection to the upper protocol layers. When connected, all outgoing packets are forwarded to this hook, instead of being transmitted by the device. Writing to this hook results in a raw Ethernet frame being received by the kernel just as if it had come in over the wire. Normal incoming packets are not affected by upper being connected. The orphans hook is equivalent to lower, except that only unrecognized packets (that would otherwise be discarded) are written to the hook, while other normal incoming traffic is unaffected. Unrecognized packets written to upper will be forwarded back out to orphans if connected. In all cases, frames are raw Ethernet frames with the standard 14 byte Ethernet header (but no checksum). When no hooks are connected, upper and lower are in effect connected together, so that packets flow normally upwards and downwards. HOOKSThis node type supports the following hooks:
CONTROL MESSAGESThis node type supports the generic control messages, plus the following:
SHUTDOWNUpon receipt of theNGM_SHUTDOWN control message, all
hooks are disconnected, promiscuous mode is disabled, but the node is not
removed. Node can be shut down only using
NGM_ETHER_DETACH control message. If the interface
itself is detached (e.g., because of PC Card removal), the node disappears as
well.
EXAMPLESThis command dumps all unrecognized packets received by the “fxp0 ” interface to standard output
decoded in hex and ASCII:
nghook -a fxp0: orphans This command sends the contents of
sample.pkt out the interface
“ cat sample.pkt | nghook fxp0:
orphans These commands insert an ng_tee(4) node between the lower and upper protocol layers, which can be used for tracing packet flow, statistics, etc.: ngctl mkpeer fxp0: tee lower right ngctl connect fxp0: lower upper left SEE ALSOarp(4), netgraph(4), netintro(4), ifconfig(8), ngctl(8), nghook(8)AUTHORSJulian Elischer <julian@FreeBSD.org>Archie Cobbs <archie@FreeBSD.org> BUGSThe automatic KLD module loading mechanism that works for most other Netgraph node types does not work for theether node type,
because ether nodes are not created on demand;
instead, they are created when Ethernet interfaces are attached or when the
KLD is first loaded. Therefore, if the KLD is not statically compiled into the
kernel, it is necessary to load the KLD manually in order to bring the
ether nodes into existence.
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. |