xref: /freebsd/lib/libc/gen/sysctl.3 (revision 3193579b66fd7067f898dbc54bdea81a0e6f9bd0)
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32.\"	@(#)sysctl.3	8.4 (Berkeley) 5/9/95
33.\" $FreeBSD$
34.\"
35.Dd January 23, 2001
36.Dt SYSCTL 3
37.Os
38.Sh NAME
39.Nm sysctl ,
40.Nm sysctlbyname ,
41.Nm sysctlnametomib
42.Nd get or set system information
43.Sh LIBRARY
44.Lb libc
45.Sh SYNOPSIS
46.In sys/types.h
47.In sys/sysctl.h
48.Ft int
49.Fn sysctl "int *name" "u_int namelen" "void *oldp" "size_t *oldlenp" "void *newp" "size_t newlen"
50.Ft int
51.Fn sysctlbyname "const char *name" "void *oldp" "size_t *oldlenp" "void *newp" "size_t newlen"
52.Ft int
53.Fn sysctlnametomib "const char *name" "int *mibp" "size_t *sizep"
54.Sh DESCRIPTION
55The
56.Fn sysctl
57function retrieves system information and allows processes with
58appropriate privileges to set system information.
59The information available from
60.Fn sysctl
61consists of integers, strings, and tables.
62Information may be retrieved and set from the command interface
63using the
64.Xr sysctl 8
65utility.
66.Pp
67Unless explicitly noted below,
68.Fn sysctl
69returns a consistent snapshot of the data requested.
70Consistency is obtained by locking the destination
71buffer into memory so that the data may be copied out without blocking.
72Calls to
73.Fn sysctl
74are serialized to avoid deadlock.
75.Pp
76The state is described using a ``Management Information Base'' (MIB)
77style name, listed in
78.Fa name ,
79which is a
80.Fa namelen
81length array of integers.
82.Pp
83The
84.Fn sysctlbyname
85function accepts an ASCII representation of the name and internally
86looks up the integer name vector.  Apart from that, it behaves the same
87as the standard
88.Fn sysctl
89function.
90.Pp
91The information is copied into the buffer specified by
92.Fa oldp .
93The size of the buffer is given by the location specified by
94.Fa oldlenp
95before the call,
96and that location gives the amount of data copied after a successful call
97and after a call that returns with the error code
98.Er ENOMEM .
99If the amount of data available is greater
100than the size of the buffer supplied,
101the call supplies as much data as fits in the buffer provided
102and returns with the error code
103.Er ENOMEM .
104If the old value is not desired,
105.Fa oldp
106and
107.Fa oldlenp
108should be set to NULL.
109.Pp
110The size of the available data can be determined by calling
111.Fn sysctl
112with the
113.Dv NULL
114argument for
115.Fa oldp .
116The size of the available data will be returned in the location pointed to by
117.Fa oldlenp .
118For some operations, the amount of space may change often.
119For these operations,
120the system attempts to round up so that the returned size is
121large enough for a call to return the data shortly thereafter.
122.Pp
123To set a new value,
124.Fa newp
125is set to point to a buffer of length
126.Fa newlen
127from which the requested value is to be taken.
128If a new value is not to be set,
129.Fa newp
130should be set to NULL and
131.Fa newlen
132set to 0.
133.Pp
134The
135.Fn sysctlnametomib
136function accepts an ASCII representation of the name,
137looks up the integer name vector,
138and returns the numeric representation in the mib array pointed to by
139.Fa mibp .
140The number of elements in the mib array is given by the location specified by
141.Fa sizep
142before the call,
143and that location gives the number of entries copied after a successful call.
144The resulting
145.Fa mib
146and
147.Fa size
148may be used in subsequent
149.Fn sysctl
150calls to get the data associated with the requested ASCII name.
151This interface is intended for use by applications that want to
152repeatedly request the same variable (the
153.Fn sysctl
154function runs in about a third the time as the same request made via the
155.Fn sysctlbyname
156function).
157The
158.Fn sysctlnametomib
159function is also useful for fetching mib prefixes and then adding
160a final component.
161For example, to fetch process information
162for processes with pid's less than 100:
163.Pp
164.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
165int i, mib[4];
166size_t len;
167struct kinfo_proc kp;
168
169/* Fill out the first three components of the mib */
170len = 4;
171sysctlnametomib("kern.proc.pid", mib, &len);
172
173/* Fetch and print entries for pid's < 100 */
174for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
175	mib[3] = i;
176	len = sizeof(kp);
177	if (sysctl(mib, 4, &kp, &len, NULL, 0) == -1)
178		perror("sysctl");
179	else if (len > 0)
180		printkproc(&kp);
181}
182.Ed
183.Pp
184The top level names are defined with a CTL_ prefix in
185.In sys/sysctl.h ,
186and are as follows.
187The next and subsequent levels down are found in the include files
188listed here, and described in separate sections below.
189.Pp
190.Bl -column CTLXMACHDEPXXX "Next level namesXXXXXX" -offset indent
191.It Sy "Name	Next level names	Description"
192.It "CTL\_DEBUG	sys/sysctl.h	Debugging"
193.It "CTL\_VFS	sys/mount.h	File system"
194.It "CTL\_HW	sys/sysctl.h	Generic CPU, I/O"
195.It "CTL\_KERN	sys/sysctl.h	High kernel limits"
196.It "CTL\_MACHDEP	sys/sysctl.h	Machine dependent"
197.It "CTL\_NET	sys/socket.h	Networking"
198.It "CTL\_USER	sys/sysctl.h	User-level"
199.It "CTL\_VM	vm/vm_param.h	Virtual memory"
200.El
201.Pp
202For example, the following retrieves the maximum number of processes allowed
203in the system:
204.Pp
205.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
206int mib[2], maxproc;
207size_t len;
208
209mib[0] = CTL_KERN;
210mib[1] = KERN_MAXPROC;
211len = sizeof(maxproc);
212sysctl(mib, 2, &maxproc, &len, NULL, 0);
213.Ed
214.Pp
215To retrieve the standard search path for the system utilities:
216.Pp
217.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
218int mib[2];
219size_t len;
220char *p;
221
222mib[0] = CTL_USER;
223mib[1] = USER_CS_PATH;
224sysctl(mib, 2, NULL, &len, NULL, 0);
225p = malloc(len);
226sysctl(mib, 2, p, &len, NULL, 0);
227.Ed
228.Ss CTL_DEBUG
229The debugging variables vary from system to system.
230A debugging variable may be added or deleted without need to recompile
231.Fn sysctl
232to know about it.
233Each time it runs,
234.Fn sysctl
235gets the list of debugging variables from the kernel and
236displays their current values.
237The system defines twenty
238.Pq Vt "struct ctldebug"
239variables named
240.Va debug0
241through
242.Va debug19 .
243They are declared as separate variables so that they can be
244individually initialized at the location of their associated variable.
245The loader prevents multiple use of the same variable by issuing errors
246if a variable is initialized in more than one place.
247For example, to export the variable
248.Va dospecialcheck
249as a debugging variable, the following declaration would be used:
250.Pp
251.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
252int dospecialcheck = 1;
253struct ctldebug debug5 = { "dospecialcheck", &dospecialcheck };
254.Ed
255.Ss CTL_VFS
256A distinguished second level name, VFS_GENERIC,
257is used to get general information about all file systems.
258One of its third level identifiers is VFS_MAXTYPENUM
259that gives the highest valid file system type number.
260Its other third level identifier is VFS_CONF that
261returns configuration information about the file system
262type given as a fourth level identifier (see
263.Xr getvfsbyname 3
264as an example of its use).
265The remaining second level identifiers are the
266file system type number returned by a
267.Xr statfs 2
268call or from VFS_CONF.
269The third level identifiers available for each file system
270are given in the header file that defines the mount
271argument structure for that file system.
272.Ss CTL_HW
273The string and integer information available for the CTL_HW level
274is detailed below.
275The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
276privilege may change the value.
277.Bl -column "Second level nameXXXXXX" integerXXX -offset indent
278.It Sy "Second level name	Type	Changeable"
279.It "HW\_MACHINE	string	no"
280.It "HW\_MODEL	string	no"
281.It "HW\_NCPU	integer	no"
282.It "HW\_BYTEORDER	integer	no"
283.It "HW\_PHYSMEM	integer	no"
284.It "HW\_USERMEM	integer	no"
285.It "HW\_PAGESIZE	integer	no"
286.It "HW\_FLOATINGPOINT	integer	no"
287.It "HW\_MACHINE\_ARCH	string	no"
288.\".It "HW\_DISKNAMES	integer	no"
289.\".It "HW\_DISKSTATS	integer	no"
290.El
291.Pp
292.Bl -tag -width 6n
293.It Li HW_MACHINE
294The machine class.
295.It Li HW_MODEL
296The machine model
297.It Li HW_NCPU
298The number of cpus.
299.It Li HW_BYTEORDER
300The byteorder (4,321, or 1,234).
301.It Li HW_PHYSMEM
302The bytes of physical memory.
303.It Li HW_USERMEM
304The bytes of non-kernel memory.
305.It Li HW_PAGESIZE
306The software page size.
307.It Li HW_FLOATINGPOINT
308Nonzero if the floating point support is in hardware.
309.It Li HW_MACHINE_ARCH
310The machine dependent architecture type.
311.\".It Fa HW_DISKNAMES
312.\".It Fa HW_DISKSTATS
313.El
314.Ss CTL_KERN
315The string and integer information available for the CTL_KERN level
316is detailed below.
317The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
318privilege may change the value.
319The types of data currently available are process information,
320system vnodes, the open file entries, routing table entries,
321virtual memory statistics, load average history, and clock rate
322information.
323.Bl -column "KERNXMAXFILESPERPROCXXX" "struct clockrateXXX" -offset indent
324.It Sy "Second level name	Type	Changeable"
325.It "KERN\_ARGMAX	integer	no"
326.It "KERN\_BOOTFILE	string	yes"
327.It "KERN\_BOOTTIME	struct timeval	no"
328.It "KERN\_CLOCKRATE	struct clockinfo	no"
329.It "KERN\_FILE	struct file	no"
330.It "KERN\_HOSTID	integer	yes"
331.It "KERN\_HOSTNAME	string	yes"
332.It "KERN\_JOB\_CONTROL	integer	no"
333.It "KERN\_MAXFILES	integer	yes"
334.It "KERN\_MAXFILESPERPROC	integer	yes"
335.It "KERN\_MAXPROC	integer	no"
336.It "KERN\_MAXPROCPERUID	integer	yes"
337.It "KERN\_MAXVNODES	integer	yes"
338.It "KERN\_NGROUPS	integer	no"
339.It "KERN\_NISDOMAINNAME	string	yes"
340.It "KERN\_OSRELDATE	integer	no"
341.It "KERN\_OSRELEASE	string	no"
342.It "KERN\_OSREV	integer	no"
343.It "KERN\_OSTYPE	string	no"
344.It "KERN\_POSIX1	integer	no"
345.It "KERN\_PROC	struct proc	no"
346.It "KERN\_PROF	node	not applicable"
347.It "KERN\_QUANTUM	integer	yes"
348.It "KERN\_SAVED\_IDS	integer	no"
349.It "KERN\_SECURELVL	integer	raise only"
350.It "KERN\_UPDATEINTERVAL	integer	no"
351.It "KERN\_VERSION	string	no"
352.It "KERN\_VNODE	struct vnode	no"
353.El
354.Pp
355.Bl -tag -width 6n
356.It Li KERN_ARGMAX
357The maximum bytes of argument to
358.Xr execve 2 .
359.It Li KERN_BOOTFILE
360The full pathname of the file from which the kernel was loaded.
361.It Li KERN_BOOTTIME
362A
363.Va struct timeval
364structure is returned.
365This structure contains the time that the system was booted.
366.It Li KERN_CLOCKRATE
367A
368.Va struct clockinfo
369structure is returned.
370This structure contains the clock, statistics clock and profiling clock
371frequencies, the number of micro-seconds per hz tick and the skew rate.
372.It Li KERN_FILE
373Return the entire file table.
374The returned data consists of a single
375.Va struct filehead
376followed by an array of
377.Va struct file ,
378whose size depends on the current number of such objects in the system.
379.It Li KERN_HOSTID
380Get or set the host id.
381.It Li KERN_HOSTNAME
382Get or set the hostname.
383.It Li KERN_JOB_CONTROL
384Return 1 if job control is available on this system, otherwise 0.
385.It Li KERN_MAXFILES
386The maximum number of files that may be open in the system.
387.It Li KERN_MAXFILESPERPROC
388The maximum number of files that may be open for a single process.
389This limit only applies to processes with an effective uid of nonzero
390at the time of the open request.
391Files that have already been opened are not affected if the limit
392or the effective uid is changed.
393.It Li KERN_MAXPROC
394The maximum number of concurrent processes the system will allow.
395.It Li KERN_MAXPROCPERUID
396The maximum number of concurrent processes the system will allow
397for a single effective uid.
398This limit only applies to processes with an effective uid of nonzero
399at the time of a fork request.
400Processes that have already been started are not affected if the limit
401is changed.
402.It Li KERN_MAXVNODES
403The maximum number of vnodes available on the system.
404.It Li KERN_NGROUPS
405The maximum number of supplemental groups.
406.It Li KERN_NISDOMAINNAME
407The name of the current YP/NIS domain.
408.It Li KERN_OSRELDATE
409The kernel release version in the format
410.Ar M Ns Ar mm Ns Ar R Ns Ar xx ,
411where
412.Ar M
413is the major version,
414.Ar mm
415is the two digit minor version,
416.Ar R
417is 0 if release branch, otherwise 1,
418and
419.Ar xx
420is updated when the available APIs change.
421.Pp
422The userland release version is available from
423.In osreldate.h ;
424parse this file if you need to get the release version of
425the currently installed userland.
426.It Li KERN_OSRELEASE
427The system release string.
428.It Li KERN_OSREV
429The system revision string.
430.It Li KERN_OSTYPE
431The system type string.
432.It Li KERN_POSIX1
433The version of
434.St -p1003.1
435with which the system
436attempts to comply.
437.It Li KERN_PROC
438Return the entire process table, or a subset of it.
439An array of pairs of
440.Va struct proc
441followed by corresponding
442.Va struct eproc
443structures is returned,
444whose size depends on the current number of such objects in the system.
445The third and fourth level names are as follows:
446.Bl -column "Third level nameXXXXXX" "Fourth level is:XXXXXX" -offset indent
447.It "Third level name	Fourth level is:"
448.It "KERN\_PROC\_ALL	None"
449.It "KERN\_PROC\_PID	A process ID"
450.It "KERN\_PROC\_PGRP	A process group"
451.It "KERN\_PROC\_TTY	A tty device"
452.It "KERN\_PROC\_UID	A user ID"
453.It "KERN\_PROC\_RUID	A real user ID"
454.El
455.Pp
456If the third level name is KERN_PROC_ARGS then the command line argument
457array is returned in a flattened form, i.e. zero-terminated arguments
458follow each other.
459The total size of array is returned.
460It is also possible for a process to set its own process title this way.
461.Bl -column "Third level nameXXXXXX" "Fourth level is:XXXXXX" -offset indent
462.It Sy "Third level name	Fourth level is:"
463.It "KERN\_PROC\_ARGS	A process ID"
464.El
465.It Li KERN_PROF
466Return profiling information about the kernel.
467If the kernel is not compiled for profiling,
468attempts to retrieve any of the KERN_PROF values will
469fail with
470.Er ENOENT .
471The third level names for the string and integer profiling information
472is detailed below.
473The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
474privilege may change the value.
475.Bl -column "GPROFXGMONPARAMXXX" "struct gmonparamXXX" -offset indent
476.It Sy "Third level name	Type	Changeable"
477.It "GPROF\_STATE	integer	yes"
478.It "GPROF\_COUNT	u_short[\|]	yes"
479.It "GPROF\_FROMS	u_short[\|]	yes"
480.It "GPROF\_TOS	struct tostruct	yes"
481.It "GPROF\_GMONPARAM	struct gmonparam	no"
482.El
483.Pp
484The variables are as follows:
485.Bl -tag -width 6n
486.It Li GPROF_STATE
487Returns GMON_PROF_ON or GMON_PROF_OFF to show that profiling
488is running or stopped.
489.It Li GPROF_COUNT
490Array of statistical program counter counts.
491.It Li GPROF_FROMS
492Array indexed by program counter of call-from points.
493.It Li GPROF_TOS
494Array of
495.Va struct tostruct
496describing destination of calls and their counts.
497.It Li GPROF_GMONPARAM
498Structure giving the sizes of the above arrays.
499.El
500.It Li KERN_QUANTUM
501The maximum period of time, in microseconds, for which a process is allowed
502to run without being preempted if other processes are in the run queue.
503.It Li KERN_SAVED_IDS
504Returns 1 if saved set-group and saved set-user ID is available.
505.It Li KERN_SECURELVL
506The system security level.
507This level may be raised by processes with appropriate privilege.
508It may not be lowered.
509.It Li KERN_VERSION
510The system version string.
511.It Li KERN_VNODE
512Return the entire vnode table.
513Note, the vnode table is not necessarily a consistent snapshot of
514the system.
515The returned data consists of an array whose size depends on the
516current number of such objects in the system.
517Each element of the array contains the kernel address of a vnode
518.Va struct vnode *
519followed by the vnode itself
520.Va struct vnode .
521.El
522.Ss CTL_MACHDEP
523The set of variables defined is architecture dependent.
524The following variables are defined for the i386 architecture.
525.Bl -column "CONSOLE_DEVICEXXX" "struct bootinfoXXX" -offset indent
526.It Sy "Second level name	Type	Changeable"
527.It Li "CPU_CONSDEV	dev_t	no"
528.It Li "CPU_ADJKERNTZ	int	yes"
529.It Li "CPU_DISRTCSET	int	yes"
530.It Li "CPU_BOOTINFO	struct bootinfo	no"
531.It Li "CPU_WALLCLOCK	int	yes"
532.El
533.Ss CTL_NET
534The string and integer information available for the CTL_NET level
535is detailed below.
536The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
537privilege may change the value.
538.Bl -column "Second level nameXXXXXX" "routing messagesXXX" -offset indent
539.It Sy "Second level name	Type	Changeable"
540.It "PF\_ROUTE	routing messages	no"
541.It "PF\_INET	IPv4 values	yes"
542.It "PF\_INET6	IPv6 values	yes"
543.El
544.Pp
545.Bl -tag -width 6n
546.It Li PF_ROUTE
547Return the entire routing table or a subset of it.
548The data is returned as a sequence of routing messages (see
549.Xr route 4
550for the header file, format and meaning).
551The length of each message is contained in the message header.
552.Pp
553The third level name is a protocol number, which is currently always 0.
554The fourth level name is an address family, which may be set to 0 to
555select all address families.
556The fifth and sixth level names are as follows:
557.Bl -column "Fifth level nameXXXXXX" "Sixth level is:XXX" -offset indent
558.It Sy "Fifth level name	Sixth level is:"
559.It "NET\_RT\_FLAGS	rtflags"
560.It "NET\_RT\_DUMP	None"
561.It "NET\_RT\_IFLIST	0 or if_index"
562.El
563.It Li PF_INET
564Get or set various global information about the IPv4
565(Internet Protocol version 4).
566The third level name is the protocol.
567The fourth level name is the variable name.
568The currently defined protocols and names are:
569.Bl -column ProtocolXX VariableXX TypeXX ChangeableXX
570.It Sy "Protocol	Variable	Type	Changeable"
571.It "icmp	bmcastecho	integer	yes"
572.It "icmp	maskrepl	integer	yes"
573.It "ip	forwarding	integer	yes"
574.It "ip	redirect	integer	yes"
575.It "ip	ttl	integer	yes"
576.It "udp	checksum	integer	yes"
577.El
578.Pp
579The variables are as follows:
580.Bl -tag -width 6n
581.It Li icmp.bmcastecho
582Returns 1 if an ICMP echo request to a broadcast or multicast address is
583to be answered.
584.It Li icmp.maskrepl
585Returns 1 if ICMP network mask requests are to be answered.
586.It Li ip.forwarding
587Returns 1 when IP forwarding is enabled for the host,
588meaning that the host is acting as a router.
589.It Li ip.redirect
590Returns 1 when ICMP redirects may be sent by the host.
591This option is ignored unless the host is routing IP packets,
592and should normally be enabled on all systems.
593.It Li ip.ttl
594The maximum time-to-live (hop count) value for an IP packet sourced by
595the system.
596This value applies to normal transport protocols, not to ICMP.
597.It Li udp.checksum
598Returns 1 when UDP checksums are being computed and checked.
599Disabling UDP checksums is strongly discouraged.
600.Pp
601For variables net.inet.*.ipsec, please refer to
602.Xr ipsec 4 .
603.El
604.It Li PF_INET6
605Get or set various global information about the IPv6
606(Internet Protocol version 6).
607The third level name is the protocol.
608The fourth level name is the variable name.
609.Pp
610For variables net.inet6.* please refer to
611.Xr inet6 4 .
612For variables net.inet6.*.ipsec6, please refer to
613.Xr ipsec 4 .
614.El
615.Ss CTL_USER
616The string and integer information available for the CTL_USER level
617is detailed below.
618The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
619privilege may change the value.
620.Bl -column "USER_COLL_WEIGHTS_MAXXXX" "integerXXX" -offset indent
621.It Sy "Second level name	Type	Changeable"
622.It "USER\_BC\_BASE\_MAX	integer	no"
623.It "USER\_BC\_DIM\_MAX	integer	no"
624.It "USER\_BC\_SCALE\_MAX	integer	no"
625.It "USER\_BC\_STRING\_MAX	integer	no"
626.It "USER\_COLL\_WEIGHTS\_MAX	integer	no"
627.It "USER\_CS\_PATH	string	no"
628.It "USER\_EXPR\_NEST\_MAX	integer	no"
629.It "USER\_LINE\_MAX	integer	no"
630.It "USER\_POSIX2\_CHAR\_TERM	integer	no"
631.It "USER\_POSIX2\_C\_BIND	integer	no"
632.It "USER\_POSIX2\_C\_DEV	integer	no"
633.It "USER\_POSIX2\_FORT\_DEV	integer	no"
634.It "USER\_POSIX2\_FORT\_RUN	integer	no"
635.It "USER\_POSIX2\_LOCALEDEF	integer	no"
636.It "USER\_POSIX2\_SW\_DEV	integer	no"
637.It "USER\_POSIX2\_UPE	integer	no"
638.It "USER\_POSIX2\_VERSION	integer	no"
639.It "USER\_RE\_DUP\_MAX	integer	no"
640.It "USER\_STREAM\_MAX	integer	no"
641.It "USER\_TZNAME\_MAX	integer	no"
642.El
643.Bl -tag -width 6n
644.Pp
645.It Li USER_BC_BASE_MAX
646The maximum ibase/obase values in the
647.Xr bc 1
648utility.
649.It Li USER_BC_DIM_MAX
650The maximum array size in the
651.Xr bc 1
652utility.
653.It Li USER_BC_SCALE_MAX
654The maximum scale value in the
655.Xr bc 1
656utility.
657.It Li USER_BC_STRING_MAX
658The maximum string length in the
659.Xr bc 1
660utility.
661.It Li USER_COLL_WEIGHTS_MAX
662The maximum number of weights that can be assigned to any entry of
663the LC_COLLATE order keyword in the locale definition file.
664.It Li USER_CS_PATH
665Return a value for the
666.Ev PATH
667environment variable that finds all the standard utilities.
668.It Li USER_EXPR_NEST_MAX
669The maximum number of expressions that can be nested within
670parenthesis by the
671.Xr expr 1
672utility.
673.It Li USER_LINE_MAX
674The maximum length in bytes of a text-processing utility's input
675line.
676.It Li USER_POSIX2_CHAR_TERM
677Return 1 if the system supports at least one terminal type capable of
678all operations described in
679.St -p1003.2 ,
680otherwise 0.
681.It Li USER_POSIX2_C_BIND
682Return 1 if the system's C-language development facilities support the
683C-Language Bindings Option, otherwise 0.
684.It Li USER_POSIX2_C_DEV
685Return 1 if the system supports the C-Language Development Utilities Option,
686otherwise 0.
687.It Li USER_POSIX2_FORT_DEV
688Return 1 if the system supports the FORTRAN Development Utilities Option,
689otherwise 0.
690.It Li USER_POSIX2_FORT_RUN
691Return 1 if the system supports the FORTRAN Runtime Utilities Option,
692otherwise 0.
693.It Li USER_POSIX2_LOCALEDEF
694Return 1 if the system supports the creation of locales, otherwise 0.
695.It Li USER_POSIX2_SW_DEV
696Return 1 if the system supports the Software Development Utilities Option,
697otherwise 0.
698.It Li USER_POSIX2_UPE
699Return 1 if the system supports the User Portability Utilities Option,
700otherwise 0.
701.It Li USER_POSIX2_VERSION
702The version of
703.St -p1003.2
704with which the system attempts to comply.
705.It Li USER_RE_DUP_MAX
706The maximum number of repeated occurrences of a regular expression
707permitted when using interval notation.
708.It Li USER_STREAM_MAX
709The minimum maximum number of streams that a process may have open
710at any one time.
711.It Li USER_TZNAME_MAX
712The minimum maximum number of types supported for the name of a
713timezone.
714.El
715.Ss CTL_VM
716The string and integer information available for the CTL_VM level
717is detailed below.
718The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
719privilege may change the value.
720.Bl -column "Second level nameXXXXXX" "struct loadavgXXX" -offset indent
721.It Sy "Second level name	Type	Changeable"
722.It "VM\_LOADAVG	struct loadavg	no"
723.It "VM\_METER	struct vmtotal	no"
724.It "VM\_PAGEOUT\_ALGORITHM	integer	yes"
725.It "VM\_SWAPPING\_ENABLED	integer	maybe"
726.It "VM\_V\_CACHE\_MAX	integer	yes"
727.It "VM\_V\_CACHE\_MIN	integer	yes"
728.It "VM\_V\_FREE\_MIN	integer	yes"
729.It "VM\_V\_FREE\_RESERVED	integer	yes"
730.It "VM\_V\_FREE\_TARGET	integer	yes"
731.It "VM\_V\_INACTIVE\_TARGET	integer	yes"
732.It "VM\_V\_PAGEOUT\_FREE\_MIN	integer	yes"
733.El
734.Pp
735.Bl -tag -width 6n
736.It Li VM_LOADAVG
737Return the load average history.
738The returned data consists of a
739.Va struct loadavg .
740.It Li VM_METER
741Return the system wide virtual memory statistics.
742The returned data consists of a
743.Va struct vmtotal .
744.It Li VM_PAGEOUT_ALGORITHM
7450 if the statistics-based page management algorithm is in use
746or 1 if the near-LRU algorithm is in use.
747.It Li VM_SWAPPING_ENABLED
7481 if process swapping is enabled or 0 if disabled.  This variable is
749permanently set to 0 if the kernel was built with swapping disabled.
750.It Li VM_V_CACHE_MAX
751Maximum desired size of the cache queue.
752.It Li VM_V_CACHE_MIN
753Minimum desired size of the cache queue.  If the cache queue size
754falls very far below this value, the pageout daemon is awakened.
755.It Li VM_V_FREE_MIN
756Minimum amount of memory (cache memory plus free memory)
757required to be available before a process waiting on memory will be
758awakened.
759.It Li VM_V_FREE_RESERVED
760Processes will awaken the pageout daemon and wait for memory if the
761number of free and cached pages drops below this value.
762.It Li VM_V_FREE_TARGET
763The total amount of free memory (including cache memory) that the
764pageout daemon tries to maintain.
765.It Li VM_V_INACTIVE_TARGET
766The desired number of inactive pages that the pageout daemon should
767achieve when it runs.  Inactive pages can be quickly inserted into
768process address space when needed.
769.It Li VM_V_PAGEOUT_FREE_MIN
770If the amount of free and cache memory falls below this value, the
771pageout daemon will enter "memory conserving mode" to avoid deadlock.
772.El
773.Sh RETURN VALUES
774.Rv -std
775.Sh ERRORS
776The following errors may be reported:
777.Bl -tag -width Er
778.It Bq Er EFAULT
779The buffer
780.Fa name ,
781.Fa oldp ,
782.Fa newp ,
783or length pointer
784.Fa oldlenp
785contains an invalid address.
786.It Bq Er EINVAL
787The
788.Fa name
789array is less than two or greater than CTL_MAXNAME.
790.It Bq Er EINVAL
791A non-null
792.Fa newp
793is given and its specified length in
794.Fa newlen
795is too large or too small.
796.It Bq Er ENOMEM
797The length pointed to by
798.Fa oldlenp
799is too short to hold the requested value.
800.It Bq Er ENOTDIR
801The
802.Fa name
803array specifies an intermediate rather than terminal name.
804.It Bq Er EISDIR
805The
806.Fa name
807array specifies a terminal name, but the actual name is not terminal.
808.It Bq Er ENOENT
809The
810.Fa name
811array specifies a value that is unknown.
812.It Bq Er EPERM
813An attempt is made to set a read-only value.
814.It Bq Er EPERM
815A process without appropriate privilege attempts to set a value.
816.El
817.Sh FILES
818.Bl -tag -width <netinet/icmpXvar.h> -compact
819.It In sys/sysctl.h
820definitions for top level identifiers, second level kernel and hardware
821identifiers, and user level identifiers
822.It In sys/socket.h
823definitions for second level network identifiers
824.It In sys/gmon.h
825definitions for third level profiling identifiers
826.It In vm/vm_param.h
827definitions for second level virtual memory identifiers
828.It In netinet/in.h
829definitions for third level IPv4/IPv6 identifiers and
830fourth level IPv4/v6 identifiers
831.It In netinet/icmp_var.h
832definitions for fourth level ICMP identifiers
833.It In netinet/icmp6.h
834definitions for fourth level ICMPv6 identifiers
835.It In netinet/udp_var.h
836definitions for fourth level UDP identifiers
837.El
838.Sh SEE ALSO
839.Xr sysconf 3 ,
840.Xr sysctl 8
841.Sh HISTORY
842The
843.Fn sysctl
844function first appeared in
845.Bx 4.4 .
846