xref: /freebsd/lib/libc/gen/sysctl.3 (revision 8f7835acc6d6d39854a82173d4cf10695c6eea13)
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28.Dd March 16, 2023
29.Dt SYSCTL 3
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm sysctl ,
33.Nm sysctlbyname ,
34.Nm sysctlnametomib
35.Nd get or set system information
36.Sh LIBRARY
37.Lb libc
38.Sh SYNOPSIS
39.In sys/sysctl.h
40.Ft int
41.Fn sysctl "const int *name" "u_int namelen" "void *oldp" "size_t *oldlenp" "const void *newp" "size_t newlen"
42.Ft int
43.Fn sysctlbyname "const char *name" "void *oldp" "size_t *oldlenp" "const void *newp" "size_t newlen"
44.Ft int
45.Fn sysctlnametomib "const char *name" "int *mibp" "size_t *sizep"
46.Sh DESCRIPTION
47The
48.Fn sysctl
49function retrieves system information and allows processes with
50appropriate privileges to set system information.
51The information available from
52.Fn sysctl
53consists of integers, strings, and tables.
54Information may be retrieved and set from the command interface
55using the
56.Xr sysctl 8
57utility.
58.Pp
59Unless explicitly noted below,
60.Fn sysctl
61returns a consistent snapshot of the data requested.
62Consistency is obtained by locking the destination
63buffer into memory so that the data may be copied out without blocking.
64Calls to
65.Fn sysctl
66are serialized to avoid deadlock.
67.Pp
68The state is described using a ``Management Information Base'' (MIB)
69style name, listed in
70.Fa name ,
71which is a
72.Fa namelen
73length array of integers.
74.Pp
75The
76.Fn sysctlbyname
77function accepts an ASCII representation of the name and internally
78looks up the integer name vector.
79Apart from that, it behaves the same
80as the standard
81.Fn sysctl
82function.
83.Pp
84The information is copied into the buffer specified by
85.Fa oldp .
86The size of the buffer is given by the location specified by
87.Fa oldlenp
88before the call,
89and that location gives the amount of data copied after a successful call
90and after a call that returns with the error code
91.Er ENOMEM .
92If the amount of data available is greater
93than the size of the buffer supplied,
94the call supplies as much data as fits in the buffer provided
95and returns with the error code
96.Er ENOMEM .
97If the old value is not desired,
98.Fa oldp
99and
100.Fa oldlenp
101should be set to NULL.
102.Pp
103The size of the available data can be determined by calling
104.Fn sysctl
105with the
106.Dv NULL
107argument for
108.Fa oldp .
109The size of the available data will be returned in the location pointed to by
110.Fa oldlenp .
111For some operations, the amount of space may change often.
112For these operations,
113the system attempts to round up so that the returned size is
114large enough for a call to return the data shortly thereafter.
115.Pp
116To set a new value,
117.Fa newp
118is set to point to a buffer of length
119.Fa newlen
120from which the requested value is to be taken.
121If a new value is not to be set,
122.Fa newp
123should be set to NULL and
124.Fa newlen
125set to 0.
126.Pp
127The
128.Fn sysctlnametomib
129function accepts an ASCII representation of the name,
130looks up the integer name vector,
131and returns the numeric representation in the mib array pointed to by
132.Fa mibp .
133The number of elements in the mib array is given by the location specified by
134.Fa sizep
135before the call,
136and that location gives the number of entries copied after a successful call.
137The resulting
138.Fa mib
139and
140.Fa size
141may be used in subsequent
142.Fn sysctl
143calls to get the data associated with the requested ASCII name.
144This interface is intended for use by applications that want to
145repeatedly request the same variable (the
146.Fn sysctl
147function runs in about a third the time as the same request made via the
148.Fn sysctlbyname
149function).
150The
151.Fn sysctlnametomib
152function is also useful for fetching mib prefixes and then adding
153a final component.
154For example, to fetch process information
155for processes with pid's less than 100:
156.Pp
157.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
158int i, mib[4];
159size_t len;
160struct kinfo_proc kp;
161
162/* Fill out the first three components of the mib */
163len = 4;
164sysctlnametomib("kern.proc.pid", mib, &len);
165
166/* Fetch and print entries for pid's < 100 */
167for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
168	mib[3] = i;
169	len = sizeof(kp);
170	if (sysctl(mib, 4, &kp, &len, NULL, 0) == -1)
171		perror("sysctl");
172	else if (len > 0)
173		printkproc(&kp);
174}
175.Ed
176.Pp
177The top level names are defined with a CTL_ prefix in
178.In sys/sysctl.h ,
179and are as follows.
180The next and subsequent levels down are found in the include files
181listed here, and described in separate sections below.
182.Bl -column CTLXMACHDEPXXX "Next Level NamesXXXXXX" -offset indent
183.It Sy Name Ta Sy Next Level Names Ta Sy Description
184.It Dv CTL_DEBUG Ta In sys/sysctl.h Ta Debugging
185.It Dv CTL_VFS Ta In sys/mount.h Ta File system
186.It Dv CTL_HW Ta In sys/sysctl.h Ta Generic CPU, I/O
187.It Dv CTL_KERN Ta In sys/sysctl.h Ta High kernel limits
188.It Dv CTL_MACHDEP Ta In sys/sysctl.h Ta Machine dependent
189.It Dv CTL_NET Ta In sys/socket.h Ta Networking
190.It Dv CTL_USER Ta In sys/sysctl.h Ta User-level
191.It Dv CTL_VM Ta In vm/vm_param.h Ta Virtual memory
192.El
193.Pp
194For example, the following retrieves the maximum number of processes allowed
195in the system:
196.Pp
197.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
198int mib[2], maxproc;
199size_t len;
200
201mib[0] = CTL_KERN;
202mib[1] = KERN_MAXPROC;
203len = sizeof(maxproc);
204sysctl(mib, 2, &maxproc, &len, NULL, 0);
205.Ed
206.Pp
207To retrieve the standard search path for the system utilities:
208.Pp
209.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
210int mib[2];
211size_t len;
212char *p;
213
214mib[0] = CTL_USER;
215mib[1] = USER_CS_PATH;
216sysctl(mib, 2, NULL, &len, NULL, 0);
217p = malloc(len);
218sysctl(mib, 2, p, &len, NULL, 0);
219.Ed
220.Ss CTL_DEBUG
221The debugging variables vary from system to system.
222A debugging variable may be added or deleted without need to recompile
223.Fn sysctl
224to know about it.
225Each time it runs,
226.Fn sysctl
227gets the list of debugging variables from the kernel and
228displays their current values.
229The system defines twenty
230.Pq Vt "struct ctldebug"
231variables named
232.Va debug0
233through
234.Va debug19 .
235They are declared as separate variables so that they can be
236individually initialized at the location of their associated variable.
237The loader prevents multiple use of the same variable by issuing errors
238if a variable is initialized in more than one place.
239For example, to export the variable
240.Va dospecialcheck
241as a debugging variable, the following declaration would be used:
242.Pp
243.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
244int dospecialcheck = 1;
245struct ctldebug debug5 = { "dospecialcheck", &dospecialcheck };
246.Ed
247.Ss CTL_VFS
248A distinguished second level name, VFS_GENERIC,
249is used to get general information about all file systems.
250One of its third level identifiers is VFS_MAXTYPENUM
251that gives the highest valid file system type number.
252Its other third level identifier is VFS_CONF that
253returns configuration information about the file system
254type given as a fourth level identifier (see
255.Xr getvfsbyname 3
256as an example of its use).
257The remaining second level identifiers are the
258file system type number returned by a
259.Xr statfs 2
260call or from VFS_CONF.
261The third level identifiers available for each file system
262are given in the header file that defines the mount
263argument structure for that file system.
264.Ss CTL_HW
265The string and integer information available for the CTL_HW level
266is detailed below.
267The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
268privilege may change the value.
269.Bl -column "Second Level Name" integerXXX Changeable -offset indent
270.It Sy Second Level Name Ta Sy Type Ta Sy Changeable
271.It Dv HW_MACHINE Ta string Ta no
272.It Dv HW_MODEL Ta string Ta no
273.It Dv HW_NCPU Ta integer Ta no
274.It Dv HW_BYTEORDER Ta integer Ta no
275.It Dv HW_PHYSMEM Ta integer Ta no
276.It Dv HW_USERMEM Ta integer Ta no
277.It Dv HW_PAGESIZE Ta integer Ta no
278.\".It Dv HW_DISKNAMES Ta integer Ta no
279.\".It Dv HW_DISKSTATS Ta integer Ta no
280.It Dv HW_FLOATINGPT Ta integer Ta no
281.It Dv HW_MACHINE_ARCH Ta string Ta no
282.It Dv HW_REALMEM Ta integer Ta no
283.It Dv HW_AVAILPAGES Ta integer Ta no
284.El
285.Bl -tag -width 6n
286.It Li HW_MACHINE
287The machine class.
288.It Li HW_MODEL
289The machine model
290.It Li HW_NCPU
291The number of cpus.
292.It Li HW_BYTEORDER
293The byteorder (4321 or 1234).
294.It Li HW_PHYSMEM
295Amount of physical memory (in bytes), minus the amount used by the kernel,
296pre-loaded modules, and (on x86) the dcons buffer.
297.It Li HW_USERMEM
298Amount of memory (in bytes) which is not wired.
299.It Li HW_PAGESIZE
300The software page size.
301.\".It Fa HW_DISKNAMES
302.\".It Fa HW_DISKSTATS
303.It Li HW_FLOATINGPT
304Nonzero if the floating point support is in hardware.
305.It Li HW_MACHINE_ARCH
306The machine dependent architecture type.
307.It Li HW_REALMEM
308Amount of memory (in bytes) reported by the firmware.
309That value is sometimes not sane; in that case, the kernel reports the max
310memory address instead.
311.It Li HW_AVAILPAGES
312The same value as
313.Li HW_PHYSMEM ,
314measured in pages rather than bytes.
315.El
316.Ss CTL_KERN
317The string and integer information available for the CTL_KERN level
318is detailed below.
319The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
320privilege may change the value.
321The types of data currently available are process information,
322system vnodes, the open file entries, routing table entries,
323virtual memory statistics, load average history, and clock rate
324information.
325.Bl -column "KERNXMAXFILESPERPROCXXX" "struct clockrateXXX" -offset indent
326.It Sy Second Level Name Ta Sy Type Ta Sy Changeable
327.It Dv KERN_ARGMAX Ta integer Ta no
328.It Dv KERN_ARND Ta integer Ta no
329.It Dv KERN_BOOTFILE Ta string Ta yes
330.It Dv KERN_BOOTTIME Ta struct timeval Ta no
331.It Dv KERN_CLOCKRATE Ta struct clockinfo Ta no
332.It Dv KERN_FILE Ta struct xfile Ta no
333.It Dv KERN_HOSTID Ta integer Ta yes
334.It Dv KERN_HOSTUUID Ta string Ta yes
335.It Dv KERN_HOSTNAME Ta string Ta yes
336.It Dv KERN_IOV_MAX Ta integer Ta yes
337.It Dv KERN_JOB_CONTROL Ta integer Ta no
338.It Dv KERN_LOCKF Ta struct kinfo_lockf Ta no
339.It Dv KERN_LOGSIGEXIT Ta integer Ta yes
340.It Dv KERN_MAXFILES Ta integer Ta yes
341.It Dv KERN_MAXFILESPERPROC Ta integer Ta yes
342.It Dv KERN_MAXPHYS Ta integer Ta no
343.It Dv KERN_MAXPROC Ta integer Ta no
344.It Dv KERN_MAXPROCPERUID Ta integer Ta yes
345.It Dv KERN_MAXVNODES Ta integer Ta yes
346.It Dv KERN_NGROUPS Ta integer Ta no
347.It Dv KERN_NISDOMAINNAME Ta string Ta yes
348.It Dv KERN_OSRELDATE Ta integer Ta no
349.It Dv KERN_OSRELEASE Ta string Ta no
350.It Dv KERN_OSREV Ta integer Ta no
351.It Dv KERN_OSTYPE Ta string Ta no
352.It Dv KERN_POSIX1 Ta integer Ta no
353.It Dv KERN_PROC Ta node Ta not applicable
354.It Dv KERN_PS_STRINGS Ta integer Ta no
355.It Dv KERN_SAVED_IDS Ta integer Ta no
356.It Dv KERN_SECURELVL Ta integer Ta raise only
357.It Dv KERN_UPDATEINTERVAL Ta integer Ta no
358.It Dv KERN_USRSTACK Ta integer Ta no
359.It Dv KERN_VERSION Ta string Ta no
360.El
361.Bl -tag -width 6n
362.It Li KERN_ARGMAX
363The maximum bytes of argument to
364.Xr execve 2 .
365.It Li KERN_ARND
366.Xr arc4rand 9
367Fills the buffer with random bytes from in-kernel random data generator.
368This is an alternative interface for
369.Xr read 2
370of
371.Xr random 4
372device, which does not depend on accessibility and correct mounting options
373of the
374.Xr devfs 4
375node.
376.It Li KERN_BOOTFILE
377The full pathname of the file from which the kernel was loaded.
378.It Li KERN_BOOTTIME
379A
380.Va struct timeval
381structure is returned.
382This structure contains the time that the system was booted.
383.It Li KERN_CLOCKRATE
384A
385.Va struct clockinfo
386structure is returned.
387This structure contains the clock, statistics clock and profiling clock
388frequencies, the number of micro-seconds per hz tick and the skew rate.
389.It Li KERN_FILE
390Return the entire file table.
391The returned data consists of an array of
392.Va struct xfile ,
393whose size depends on the current number of such objects in the system.
394.It Li KERN_HOSTID
395Get or set the host ID.
396.It Li KERN_HOSTUUID
397Get or set the host's universally unique identifier (UUID).
398.It Li KERN_HOSTNAME
399Get or set the hostname.
400.It Li KERN_IOV_MAX
401The maximum accepted number of elements in an input-output vector (iovec),
402see
403.Xr readv 2
404and
405.Xr writev 2 .
406.It Li KERN_JOB_CONTROL
407Return 1 if job control is available on this system, otherwise 0.
408.It Li KERN_LOCKF
409Returns the list of the file advisory locks currently known to kernel.
410.It Li KERN_LOGSIGEXIT
411Controls logging of process exit due to untrapped signals.
412.It Li KERN_MAXFILES
413The maximum number of files that may be open in the system.
414.It Li KERN_MAXFILESPERPROC
415The maximum number of files that may be open for a single process.
416This limit only applies to processes with an effective uid of nonzero
417at the time of the open request.
418Files that have already been opened are not affected if the limit
419or the effective uid is changed.
420.It Li KERN_MAXPHYS
421Specifies the maximum block I/O size.
422Can be changed by the tunable
423.Ev kern.maxphys .
424.It Li KERN_MAXPROC
425The maximum number of concurrent processes the system will allow.
426.It Li KERN_MAXPROCPERUID
427The maximum number of concurrent processes the system will allow
428for a single effective uid.
429This limit only applies to processes with an effective uid of nonzero
430at the time of a fork request.
431Processes that have already been started are not affected if the limit
432is changed.
433.It Li KERN_MAXVNODES
434The maximum number of vnodes available on the system.
435.It Li KERN_NGROUPS
436The maximum number of supplemental groups.
437.It Li KERN_NISDOMAINNAME
438The name of the current YP/NIS domain.
439.It Li KERN_OSRELDATE
440The kernel release version in the format
441.Ar M Ns Ar mm Ns Ar R Ns Ar xx ,
442where
443.Ar M
444is the major version,
445.Ar mm
446is the two digit minor version,
447.Ar R
448is 0 if release branch, otherwise 1,
449and
450.Ar xx
451is updated when the available APIs change.
452.Pp
453The userland release version is available from
454.In osreldate.h ;
455parse this file if you need to get the release version of
456the currently installed userland.
457.It Li KERN_OSRELEASE
458The system release string.
459.It Li KERN_OSREV
460The system revision string.
461.It Li KERN_OSTYPE
462The system type string.
463.It Li KERN_POSIX1
464The version of
465.St -p1003.1
466with which the system
467attempts to comply.
468.It Li KERN_PROC
469Return selected information about specific running processes.
470.Pp
471For the following names, an array of
472.Va struct kinfo_proc
473structures is returned,
474whose size depends on the current number of such objects in the system.
475.Bl -column "Third Level NameXXXXXX" "Fourth LevelXXXXXX" -offset indent
476.It Sy Third Level Name Ta Sy Fourth Level
477.It Dv KERN_PROC_ALL Ta None
478.It Dv KERN_PROC_PID Ta A process ID
479.It Dv KERN_PROC_PGRP Ta A process group
480.It Dv KERN_PROC_SESSION Ta A session
481.It Dv KERN_PROC_TTY Ta A tty device
482.It Dv KERN_PROC_UID Ta An effective user ID
483.It Dv KERN_PROC_RUID Ta A real user ID
484.It Dv KERN_PROC_GID Ta An effective group ID
485.It Dv KERN_PROC_RGID Ta A real group ID
486.El
487.Pp
488For the following names, the miscellaneous information about the target
489process, which is specified by the fourth level of the oid name,
490is returned.
491A process ID of
492.Li \-1
493specifies the current process.
494.Bl -column "Third Level NameXXXXXX" "TypeXXXXXX" -offset indent
495.It Sy Third Level Name Ta Sy Fourth Level
496.It Dv KERN_PROC_ARGS Ta "Set of strings"
497.It Dv KERN_PROC_PATHNAME Ta "String"
498.It Dv KERN_PROC_KSTACK Ta "struct kinfo_stack []"
499.It Dv KERN_PROC_VMMAP Ta "struct kinfo_vmentry []"
500.It Dv KERN_PROC_FILEDESC Ta "struct kinfo_file []"
501.It Dv KERN_PROC_GROUPS Ta "gid_t []"
502.It Dv KERN_PROC_ENV Ta "Set of strings"
503.It Dv KERN_PROC_AUXV Ta "Elf_Auxinfo []"
504.It Dv KERN_PROC_RLIMIT Ta "Integer"
505.It Dv KERN_PROC_RLIMIT_USAGE Ta "rlim_t []"
506.It Dv KERN_PROC_PS_STRINGS Ta "Integer"
507.It Dv KERN_PROC_UMASK Ta "Integer/short"
508.It Dv KERN_PROC_OSREL Ta "Integer"
509.It Dv KERN_PROC_SIGTRAMP Ta "Integer"
510.It Dv KERN_PROC_CWD Ta "String"
511.It Dv KERN_PROC_NFDS Ta "Integer"
512.It Dv KERN_PROC_SIGFASTBLK Ta "Integer"
513.It Dv KERN_PROC_VM_LAYOUT Ta "struct kinfo_vm_layout"
514.El
515.Pp
516.Bl -tag -compact
517.It Dv KERN_PROC_ARGS
518The command line argument
519array is returned in a flattened form, i.e., zero-terminated arguments
520follow each other.
521The total size of array is returned.
522It is also possible for a process to set its own process title this way.
523.It Dv KERN_PROC_PATHNAME
524The path of the process' text file is returned.
525.It Dv KERN_PROC_KSTACK
526The in-kernel call stacks for the threads of the specified process.
527.It Dv KERN_PROC_VMMAP
528The description of the map entries for the process.
529.It Dv KERN_PROC_FILEDESC
530The file descriptors for files opened in the specified process.
531.It Dv KERN_PROC_GROUPS
532Groups associated with the process.
533.It Dv KERN_PROC_ENV
534The set of strings representing the environment of the specified process.
535.Pp
536Note that from the kernel point of view, environment exists only at the
537time of
538.Xr execve 2
539system call.
540This node method tries to reconstruct the environment from the known
541breadcrumbs left in the process address space, but it is not guaranteed
542to succeed or to represent the current value as maintained by the program.
543.It Dv KERN_PROC_AUXV
544The set of ELF auxv entries.
545See the note above about environment, which is also applicable to auxv.
546.It Dv KERN_PROC_RLIMIT
547Additinal OID name element must be supplied, specifiing the resource name
548as in
549.Xr getrlimit 2 .
550The call returns the given resource limit for the process.
551.It Dv KERN_PROC_RLIMIT_USAGE
552Like
553.Dv KERN_PROC_RLIMIT ,
554but instead of the limit, returns the accounted resource usage.
555For resources which do not have a meaningful current value,
556.Li \-1
557is returned.
558.It Dv KERN_PROC_PS_STRINGS
559Returns the location of the
560.Vt ps_strings
561structure at the time of the last call to
562.Xr execve 2
563in the specified process.
564.It Dv KERN_PROC_UMASK
565The current umask value, see
566.Xr umask 2 .
567.It Dv KERN_PROC_OSREL
568The value of osrel for the process, that is the osrel the currently executed
569image was compiled for.
570Read from the note of the elf executable at
571.Xr execve 2
572time.
573Might be modified by the process.
574.It Dv KERN_PROC_SIGTRAMP
575Address of the signal trampoline in the process address space,
576where, simplifying, the kernel passes control for signal delivery.
577.It Dv KERN_PROC_CWD
578Returns the current working directory for the process.
579.It Dv KERN_PROC_NFDS
580Returns the total number of opened file descriptors for the process.
581.It Dv KERN_PROC_SIGFASTBLK
582Returns the address of the
583.Xr sigfastblock 2
584location, if active.
585.It Dv KERN_PROC_VM_LAYOUT
586Fills a structure describing process virtual address space layout.
587.El
588.It Li KERN_PS_STRINGS
589Reports the location of the process
590.Vt ps_strings
591structure after exec, for the ABI of the querying process.
592.It Li KERN_SAVED_IDS
593Returns 1 if saved set-group and saved set-user ID is available.
594.It Li KERN_SECURELVL
595The system security level.
596This level may be raised by processes with appropriate privilege.
597It may not be lowered.
598.It Li KERN_USRSTACK
599Reports the top of the main thread user stack for the current process.
600.It Li KERN_VERSION
601The system version string.
602.El
603.Ss CTL_NET
604The string and integer information available for the CTL_NET level
605is detailed below.
606The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
607privilege may change the value.
608.Bl -column "Second Level NameXXXXXX" "routing messagesXXX" -offset indent
609.It Sy Second Level Name Ta Sy Type Ta Sy Changeable
610.It Dv PF_ROUTE Ta routing messages Ta no
611.It Dv PF_INET Ta IPv4 values Ta yes
612.It Dv PF_INET6 Ta IPv6 values Ta yes
613.El
614.Bl -tag -width 6n
615.It Li PF_ROUTE
616Return the entire routing table or a subset of it.
617The data is returned as a sequence of routing messages (see
618.Xr route 4
619for the header file, format and meaning).
620The length of each message is contained in the message header.
621.Pp
622The third level name is a protocol number, which is currently always 0.
623The fourth level name is an address family, which may be set to 0 to
624select all address families.
625The fifth, sixth, and seventh level names are as follows:
626.Bl -column -offset indent "Fifth Level" "Sixth Level" "Seventh Level"
627.It Sy Fifth level Ta Sy Sixth Level Ta Sy Seventh Level
628.It Dv NET_RT_FLAGS Ta rtflags Ta None
629.It Dv NET_RT_DUMP Ta None Ta None or fib number
630.It Dv NET_RT_IFLIST Ta 0 or if_index Ta None
631.It Dv NET_RT_IFMALIST Ta 0 or if_index Ta None
632.It Dv NET_RT_IFLISTL Ta 0 or if_index Ta None
633.It Dv NET_RT_NHOPS Ta None Ta fib number
634.El
635.Pp
636The
637.Dv NET_RT_IFMALIST
638name returns information about multicast group memberships on all interfaces
639if 0 is specified, or for the interface specified by
640.Va if_index .
641.Pp
642The
643.Dv NET_RT_IFLISTL
644is like
645.Dv NET_RT_IFLIST ,
646just returning message header structs with additional fields allowing the
647interface to be extended without breaking binary compatibility.
648The
649.Dv NET_RT_IFLISTL
650uses 'l' versions of the message header structures:
651.Va struct if_msghdrl
652and
653.Va struct ifa_msghdrl .
654.Pp
655.Dv NET_RT_NHOPS
656returns all nexthops for specified address family in given fib.
657.It Li PF_INET
658Get or set various global information about the IPv4
659(Internet Protocol version 4).
660The third level name is the protocol.
661The fourth level name is the variable name.
662The currently defined protocols and names are:
663.Bl -column ProtocolXX VariableXX TypeXX ChangeableXX
664.It Sy Protocol Ta Sy Variable Ta Sy Type Ta Sy Changeable
665.It icmp Ta bmcastecho Ta integer Ta yes
666.It icmp Ta maskrepl Ta integer Ta yes
667.It ip Ta forwarding Ta integer Ta yes
668.It ip Ta redirect Ta integer Ta yes
669.It ip Ta ttl Ta integer Ta yes
670.It udp Ta checksum Ta integer Ta yes
671.El
672.Pp
673The variables are as follows:
674.Bl -tag -width 6n
675.It Li icmp.bmcastecho
676Returns 1 if an ICMP echo request to a broadcast or multicast address is
677to be answered.
678.It Li icmp.maskrepl
679Returns 1 if ICMP network mask requests are to be answered.
680.It Li ip.forwarding
681Returns 1 when IP forwarding is enabled for the host,
682meaning that the host is acting as a router.
683.It Li ip.redirect
684Returns 1 when ICMP redirects may be sent by the host.
685This option is ignored unless the host is routing IP packets,
686and should normally be enabled on all systems.
687.It Li ip.ttl
688The maximum time-to-live (hop count) value for an IP packet sourced by
689the system.
690This value applies to normal transport protocols, not to ICMP.
691.It Li udp.checksum
692Returns 1 when UDP checksums are being computed and checked.
693Disabling UDP checksums is strongly discouraged.
694.Pp
695For variables net.inet.*.ipsec, please refer to
696.Xr ipsec 4 .
697.El
698.It Li PF_INET6
699Get or set various global information about the IPv6
700(Internet Protocol version 6).
701The third level name is the protocol.
702The fourth level name is the variable name.
703.Pp
704For variables net.inet6.* please refer to
705.Xr inet6 4 .
706For variables net.inet6.*.ipsec6, please refer to
707.Xr ipsec 4 .
708.El
709.Ss CTL_USER
710The string and integer information available for the CTL_USER level
711is detailed below.
712The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
713privilege may change the value.
714.Bl -column "USER_COLL_WEIGHTS_MAXXXX" "integerXXX" -offset indent
715.It Sy Second Level Name Ta Sy Type Ta Sy Changeable
716.It Dv USER_BC_BASE_MAX Ta integer Ta no
717.It Dv USER_BC_DIM_MAX Ta integer Ta no
718.It Dv USER_BC_SCALE_MAX Ta integer Ta no
719.It Dv USER_BC_STRING_MAX Ta integer Ta no
720.It Dv USER_COLL_WEIGHTS_MAX Ta integer Ta no
721.It Dv USER_CS_PATH Ta string Ta no
722.It Dv USER_EXPR_NEST_MAX Ta integer Ta no
723.It Dv USER_LINE_MAX Ta integer Ta no
724.It Dv USER_LOCALBASE Ta string Ta no
725.It Dv USER_POSIX2_CHAR_TERM Ta integer Ta no
726.It Dv USER_POSIX2_C_BIND Ta integer Ta no
727.It Dv USER_POSIX2_C_DEV Ta integer Ta no
728.It Dv USER_POSIX2_FORT_DEV Ta integer Ta no
729.It Dv USER_POSIX2_FORT_RUN Ta integer Ta no
730.It Dv USER_POSIX2_LOCALEDEF Ta integer Ta no
731.It Dv USER_POSIX2_SW_DEV Ta integer Ta no
732.It Dv USER_POSIX2_UPE Ta integer Ta no
733.It Dv USER_POSIX2_VERSION Ta integer Ta no
734.It Dv USER_RE_DUP_MAX Ta integer Ta no
735.It Dv USER_STREAM_MAX Ta integer Ta no
736.It Dv USER_TZNAME_MAX Ta integer Ta no
737.El
738.Bl -tag -width 6n
739.It Li USER_BC_BASE_MAX
740The maximum ibase/obase values in the
741.Xr bc 1
742utility.
743.It Li USER_BC_DIM_MAX
744The maximum array size in the
745.Xr bc 1
746utility.
747.It Li USER_BC_SCALE_MAX
748The maximum scale value in the
749.Xr bc 1
750utility.
751.It Li USER_BC_STRING_MAX
752The maximum string length in the
753.Xr bc 1
754utility.
755.It Li USER_COLL_WEIGHTS_MAX
756The maximum number of weights that can be assigned to any entry of
757the LC_COLLATE order keyword in the locale definition file.
758.It Li USER_CS_PATH
759Return a value for the
760.Ev PATH
761environment variable that finds all the standard utilities.
762.It Li USER_EXPR_NEST_MAX
763The maximum number of expressions that can be nested within
764parenthesis by the
765.Xr expr 1
766utility.
767.It Li USER_LINE_MAX
768The maximum length in bytes of a text-processing utility's input
769line.
770.It Li USER_LOCALBASE
771Return the value of localbase that has been compiled into system utilities
772that need to have access to resources provided by a port or package.
773.It Li USER_POSIX2_CHAR_TERM
774Return 1 if the system supports at least one terminal type capable of
775all operations described in
776.St -p1003.2 ,
777otherwise 0.
778.It Li USER_POSIX2_C_BIND
779Return 1 if the system's C-language development facilities support the
780C-Language Bindings Option, otherwise 0.
781.It Li USER_POSIX2_C_DEV
782Return 1 if the system supports the C-Language Development Utilities Option,
783otherwise 0.
784.It Li USER_POSIX2_FORT_DEV
785Return 1 if the system supports the FORTRAN Development Utilities Option,
786otherwise 0.
787.It Li USER_POSIX2_FORT_RUN
788Return 1 if the system supports the FORTRAN Runtime Utilities Option,
789otherwise 0.
790.It Li USER_POSIX2_LOCALEDEF
791Return 1 if the system supports the creation of locales, otherwise 0.
792.It Li USER_POSIX2_SW_DEV
793Return 1 if the system supports the Software Development Utilities Option,
794otherwise 0.
795.It Li USER_POSIX2_UPE
796Return 1 if the system supports the User Portability Utilities Option,
797otherwise 0.
798.It Li USER_POSIX2_VERSION
799The version of
800.St -p1003.2
801with which the system attempts to comply.
802.It Li USER_RE_DUP_MAX
803The maximum number of repeated occurrences of a regular expression
804permitted when using interval notation.
805.It Li USER_STREAM_MAX
806The minimum maximum number of streams that a process may have open
807at any one time.
808.It Li USER_TZNAME_MAX
809The minimum maximum number of types supported for the name of a
810timezone.
811.El
812.Ss CTL_VM
813The string and integer information available for the CTL_VM level
814is detailed below.
815The changeable column shows whether a process with appropriate
816privilege may change the value.
817.Bl -column "Second Level NameXXXXXX" "struct loadavgXXX" -offset indent
818.It Sy Second Level Name Ta Sy Type Ta Sy Changeable
819.It Dv VM_LOADAVG Ta struct loadavg Ta no
820.It Dv VM_TOTAL Ta struct vmtotal Ta no
821.It Dv VM_SWAPPING_ENABLED Ta integer Ta maybe
822.It Dv VM_V_FREE_MIN Ta integer Ta yes
823.It Dv VM_V_FREE_RESERVED Ta integer Ta yes
824.It Dv VM_V_FREE_TARGET Ta integer Ta yes
825.It Dv VM_V_INACTIVE_TARGET Ta integer Ta yes
826.It Dv VM_V_PAGEOUT_FREE_MIN Ta integer Ta yes
827.It Dv VM_OVERCOMMIT Ta integer Ta yes
828.El
829.Bl -tag -width 6n
830.It Li VM_LOADAVG
831Return the load average history.
832The returned data consists of a
833.Va struct loadavg .
834.It Li VM_TOTAL
835Return the system wide virtual memory statistics.
836The returned data consists of a
837.Va struct vmtotal .
838.It Li VM_SWAPPING_ENABLED
8391 if process swapping is enabled or 0 if disabled.
840This variable is
841permanently set to 0 if the kernel was built with swapping disabled.
842.It Li VM_V_FREE_MIN
843Minimum amount of memory (cache memory plus free memory)
844required to be available before a process waiting on memory will be
845awakened.
846.It Li VM_V_FREE_RESERVED
847Processes will awaken the pageout daemon and wait for memory if the
848number of free and cached pages drops below this value.
849.It Li VM_V_FREE_TARGET
850The total amount of free memory (including cache memory) that the
851pageout daemon tries to maintain.
852.It Li VM_V_INACTIVE_TARGET
853The desired number of inactive pages that the pageout daemon should
854achieve when it runs.
855Inactive pages can be quickly inserted into
856process address space when needed.
857.It Li VM_V_PAGEOUT_FREE_MIN
858If the amount of free and cache memory falls below this value, the
859pageout daemon will enter "memory conserving mode" to avoid deadlock.
860.It Li VM_OVERCOMMIT
861Overcommit behaviour, as described in
862.Xr tuning 7 .
863.El
864.Sh RETURN VALUES
865.Rv -std
866.Sh FILES
867.Bl -tag -width <netinet/icmpXvar.h> -compact
868.It In sys/sysctl.h
869definitions for top level identifiers, second level kernel and hardware
870identifiers, and user level identifiers
871.It In sys/socket.h
872definitions for second level network identifiers
873.It In sys/gmon.h
874definitions for third level profiling identifiers
875.It In vm/vm_param.h
876definitions for second level virtual memory identifiers
877.It In netinet/in.h
878definitions for third level IPv4/IPv6 identifiers and
879fourth level IPv4/v6 identifiers
880.It In netinet/icmp_var.h
881definitions for fourth level ICMP identifiers
882.It In netinet/icmp6.h
883definitions for fourth level ICMPv6 identifiers
884.It In netinet/udp_var.h
885definitions for fourth level UDP identifiers
886.El
887.Sh ERRORS
888The following errors may be reported:
889.Bl -tag -width Er
890.It Bq Er EFAULT
891The buffer
892.Fa name ,
893.Fa oldp ,
894.Fa newp ,
895or length pointer
896.Fa oldlenp
897contains an invalid address.
898.It Bq Er EINVAL
899The
900.Fa name
901array is less than two or greater than CTL_MAXNAME.
902.It Bq Er EINVAL
903A non-null
904.Fa newp
905is given and its specified length in
906.Fa newlen
907is too large or too small.
908.It Bq Er ENOMEM
909The length pointed to by
910.Fa oldlenp
911is too short to hold the requested value.
912.It Bq Er ENOMEM
913The smaller of either the length pointed to by
914.Fa oldlenp
915or the estimated size of the returned data exceeds the
916system limit on locked memory.
917.It Bq Er ENOMEM
918Locking the buffer
919.Fa oldp ,
920or a portion of the buffer if the estimated size of the data
921to be returned is smaller,
922would cause the process to exceed its per-process locked memory limit.
923.It Bq Er ENOTDIR
924The
925.Fa name
926array specifies an intermediate rather than terminal name.
927.It Bq Er EISDIR
928The
929.Fa name
930array specifies a terminal name, but the actual name is not terminal.
931.It Bq Er ENOENT
932The
933.Fa name
934array specifies a value that is unknown.
935.It Bq Er EPERM
936An attempt is made to set a read-only value.
937.It Bq Er EPERM
938A process without appropriate privilege attempts to set a value.
939.El
940.Sh SEE ALSO
941.Xr confstr 3 ,
942.Xr kvm 3 ,
943.Xr sysconf 3 ,
944.Xr sysctl 8
945.Sh HISTORY
946The
947.Fn sysctl
948function first appeared in
949.Bx 4.4 .
950