1.\" Copyright (c) 1983, 1991, 1993 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12.\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 13.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 14.\" without specific prior written permission. 15.\" 16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 17.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 18.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 19.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 20.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 21.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 22.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 23.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 24.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 25.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 26.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 27.\" 28.\" From: @(#)ifconfig.8 8.3 (Berkeley) 1/5/94 29.\" $FreeBSD$ 30.\" 31.Dd November 7, 2012 32.Dt IFCONFIG 8 33.Os 34.Sh NAME 35.Nm ifconfig 36.Nd configure network interface parameters 37.Sh SYNOPSIS 38.Nm 39.Op Fl L 40.Op Fl k 41.Op Fl m 42.Op Fl n 43.Ar interface 44.Op Cm create 45.Ar address_family 46.Oo 47.Ar address 48.Op Ar dest_address 49.Oc 50.Op Ar parameters 51.Nm 52.Ar interface 53.Cm destroy 54.Nm 55.Fl a 56.Op Fl L 57.Op Fl d 58.Op Fl m 59.Op Fl u 60.Op Fl v 61.Op Ar address_family 62.Nm 63.Fl l 64.Op Fl d 65.Op Fl u 66.Op Ar address_family 67.Nm 68.Op Fl L 69.Op Fl d 70.Op Fl k 71.Op Fl m 72.Op Fl u 73.Op Fl v 74.Op Fl C 75.Nm 76.Op Fl g Ar groupname 77.Sh DESCRIPTION 78The 79.Nm 80utility is used to assign an address 81to a network interface and/or configure 82network interface parameters. 83The 84.Nm 85utility must be used at boot time to define the network address 86of each interface present on a machine; it may also be used at 87a later time to redefine an interface's address 88or other operating parameters. 89.Pp 90The following options are available: 91.Bl -tag -width indent 92.It Ar address 93For the 94.Tn DARPA Ns -Internet 95family, 96the address is either a host name present in the host name data 97base, 98.Xr hosts 5 , 99or a 100.Tn DARPA 101Internet address expressed in the Internet standard 102.Dq dot notation . 103.Pp 104It is also possible to use the CIDR notation (also known as the 105slash notation) to include the netmask. 106That is, one can specify an address like 107.Li 192.168.0.1/16 . 108.Pp 109For the 110.Dq inet6 111family, it is also possible to specify the prefix length using the slash 112notation, like 113.Li ::1/128 . 114See the 115.Cm prefixlen 116parameter below for more information. 117.\" For the Xerox Network Systems(tm) family, 118.\" addresses are 119.\" .Ar net:a.b.c.d.e.f , 120.\" where 121.\" .Ar net 122.\" is the assigned network number (in decimal), 123.\" and each of the six bytes of the host number, 124.\" .Ar a 125.\" through 126.\" .Ar f , 127.\" are specified in hexadecimal. 128.\" The host number may be omitted on IEEE 802 protocol 129.\" (Ethernet, FDDI, and Token Ring) interfaces, 130.\" which use the hardware physical address, 131.\" and on interfaces other than the first. 132.\" For the 133.\" .Tn ISO 134.\" family, addresses are specified as a long hexadecimal string, 135.\" as in the Xerox family. 136.\" However, two consecutive dots imply a zero 137.\" byte, and the dots are optional, if the user wishes to (carefully) 138.\" count out long strings of digits in network byte order. 139.Pp 140The link-level 141.Pq Dq link 142address 143is specified as a series of colon-separated hex digits. 144This can be used to 145e.g.,\& set a new MAC address on an ethernet interface, though the 146mechanism used is not ethernet-specific. 147If the interface is already 148up when this option is used, it will be briefly brought down and 149then brought back up again in order to ensure that the receive 150filter in the underlying ethernet hardware is properly reprogrammed. 151.It Ar address_family 152Specify the 153address family 154which affects interpretation of the remaining parameters. 155Since an interface can receive transmissions in differing protocols 156with different naming schemes, specifying the address family is recommended. 157The address or protocol families currently 158supported are 159.Dq inet , 160.Dq inet6 , 161.Dq atalk , 162.Dq ipx , 163.\" .Dq iso , 164and 165.Dq link . 166.\" and 167.\" .Dq ns . 168The default if available is 169.Dq inet 170or otherwise 171.Dq link . 172.Dq ether 173and 174.Dq lladdr 175are synonyms for 176.Dq link . 177.It Ar dest_address 178Specify the address of the correspondent on the other end 179of a point to point link. 180.It Ar interface 181This 182parameter is a string of the form 183.Dq name unit , 184for example, 185.Dq Li ed0 . 186.It Ar groupname 187List the interfaces in the given group. 188.El 189.Pp 190The following parameters may be set with 191.Nm : 192.Bl -tag -width indent 193.It Cm add 194Another name for the 195.Cm alias 196parameter. 197Introduced for compatibility 198with 199.Bsx . 200.It Cm alias 201Establish an additional network address for this interface. 202This is sometimes useful when changing network numbers, and 203one wishes to accept packets addressed to the old interface. 204If the address is on the same subnet as the first network address 205for this interface, a non-conflicting netmask must be given. 206Usually 207.Li 0xffffffff 208is most appropriate. 209.It Fl alias 210Remove the network address specified. 211This would be used if you incorrectly specified an alias, or it 212was no longer needed. 213If you have incorrectly set an NS address having the side effect 214of specifying the host portion, removing all NS addresses will 215allow you to respecify the host portion. 216.It Cm anycast 217(Inet6 only.) 218Specify that the address configured is an anycast address. 219Based on the current specification, 220only routers may configure anycast addresses. 221Anycast address will not be used as source address of any of outgoing 222IPv6 packets. 223.It Cm arp 224Enable the use of the Address Resolution Protocol 225.Pq Xr arp 4 226in mapping 227between network level addresses and link level addresses (default). 228This is currently implemented for mapping between 229.Tn DARPA 230Internet 231addresses and 232.Tn IEEE 233802 48-bit MAC addresses (Ethernet, FDDI, and Token Ring addresses). 234.It Fl arp 235Disable the use of the Address Resolution Protocol 236.Pq Xr arp 4 . 237.It Cm staticarp 238If the Address Resolution Protocol is enabled, 239the host will only reply to requests for its addresses, 240and will never send any requests. 241.It Fl staticarp 242If the Address Resolution Protocol is enabled, 243the host will perform normally, 244sending out requests and listening for replies. 245.It Cm broadcast 246(Inet only.) 247Specify the address to use to represent broadcasts to the 248network. 249The default broadcast address is the address with a host part of all 1's. 250.It Cm debug 251Enable driver dependent debugging code; usually, this turns on 252extra console error logging. 253.It Fl debug 254Disable driver dependent debugging code. 255.It Cm promisc 256Put interface into permanently promiscuous mode. 257.It Fl promisc 258Disable permanently promiscuous mode. 259.It Cm delete 260Another name for the 261.Fl alias 262parameter. 263.It Cm description Ar value , Cm descr Ar value 264Specify a description of the interface. 265This can be used to label interfaces in situations where they may 266otherwise be difficult to distinguish. 267.It Cm -description , Cm -descr 268Clear the interface description. 269.It Cm down 270Mark an interface 271.Dq down . 272When an interface is marked 273.Dq down , 274the system will not attempt to 275transmit messages through that interface. 276If possible, the interface will be reset to disable reception as well. 277This action does not automatically disable routes using the interface. 278.It Cm group Ar group-name 279Assign the interface to a 280.Dq group . 281Any interface can be in multiple groups. 282.Pp 283Cloned interfaces are members of their interface family group by default. 284For example, a PPP interface such as 285.Em ppp0 286is a member of the PPP interface family group, 287.Em ppp . 288.\" The interface(s) the default route(s) point to are members of the 289.\" .Em egress 290.\" interface group. 291.It Cm -group Ar group-name 292Remove the interface from the given 293.Dq group . 294.It Cm eui64 295(Inet6 only.) 296Fill interface index 297(lowermost 64bit of an IPv6 address) 298automatically. 299.It Cm fib Ar fib_number 300Specify interface FIB. 301A FIB 302.Ar fib_number 303is assigned to all frames or packets received on that interface. 304The FIB is not inherited, e.g., vlans or other sub-interfaces will use 305the default FIB (0) irrespective of the parent interface's FIB. 306The kernel needs to be tuned to support more than the default FIB 307using the 308.Va ROUTETABLES 309kernel configuration option, or the 310.Va net.fibs 311tunable. 312.It Cm ipdst 313This is used to specify an Internet host who is willing to receive 314IP packets encapsulating IPX packets bound for a remote network. 315An apparent point to point link is constructed, and 316the address specified will be taken as the IPX address and network 317of the destination. 318.It Cm maclabel Ar label 319If Mandatory Access Control support is enabled in the kernel, 320set the MAC label to 321.Ar label . 322.\" (see 323.\" .Xr maclabel 7 ) . 324.It Cm media Ar type 325If the driver supports the media selection system, set the media type 326of the interface to 327.Ar type . 328Some interfaces support the mutually exclusive use of one of several 329different physical media connectors. 330For example, a 10Mbit/s Ethernet 331interface might support the use of either 332.Tn AUI 333or twisted pair connectors. 334Setting the media type to 335.Cm 10base5/AUI 336would change the currently active connector to the AUI port. 337Setting it to 338.Cm 10baseT/UTP 339would activate twisted pair. 340Refer to the interfaces' driver 341specific documentation or man page for a complete list of the 342available types. 343.It Cm mediaopt Ar opts 344If the driver supports the media selection system, set the specified 345media options on the interface. 346The 347.Ar opts 348argument 349is a comma delimited list of options to apply to the interface. 350Refer to the interfaces' driver specific man page for a complete 351list of available options. 352.It Fl mediaopt Ar opts 353If the driver supports the media selection system, disable the 354specified media options on the interface. 355.It Cm mode Ar mode 356If the driver supports the media selection system, set the specified 357operating mode on the interface to 358.Ar mode . 359For IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces that support multiple operating modes 360this directive is used to select between 802.11a 361.Pq Cm 11a , 362802.11b 363.Pq Cm 11b , 364and 802.11g 365.Pq Cm 11g 366operating modes. 367.It Cm inst Ar minst , Cm instance Ar minst 368Set the media instance to 369.Ar minst . 370This is useful for devices which have multiple physical layer interfaces 371.Pq PHYs . 372.It Cm name Ar name 373Set the interface name to 374.Ar name . 375.It Cm rxcsum , txcsum , rxcsum6 , txcsum6 376If the driver supports user-configurable checksum offloading, 377enable receive (or transmit) checksum offloading on the interface. 378The feature can be turned on selectively per protocol family. 379Use 380.Cm rxcsum6 , txcsum6 381for 382.Xr ip6 4 383or 384.Cm rxcsum , txcsum 385otherwise. 386Some drivers may not be able to enable these flags independently 387of each other, so setting one may also set the other. 388The driver will offload as much checksum work as it can reliably 389support, the exact level of offloading varies between drivers. 390.It Fl rxcsum , txcsum , rxcsum6 , txcsum6 391If the driver supports user-configurable checksum offloading, 392disable receive (or transmit) checksum offloading on the interface. 393The feature can be turned off selectively per protocol family. 394Use 395.Fl rxcsum6 , txcsum6 396for 397.Xr ip6 4 398or 399.Fl rxcsum , txcsum 400otherwise. 401These settings may not always be independent of each other. 402.It Cm tso 403If the driver supports 404.Xr tcp 4 405segmentation offloading, enable TSO on the interface. 406Some drivers may not be able to support TSO for 407.Xr ip 4 408and 409.Xr ip6 4 410packets, so they may enable only one of them. 411.It Fl tso 412If the driver supports 413.Xr tcp 4 414segmentation offloading, disable TSO on the interface. 415It will always disable TSO for 416.Xr ip 4 417and 418.Xr ip6 4 . 419.It Cm tso6 , tso4 420If the driver supports 421.Xr tcp 4 422segmentation offloading for 423.Xr ip6 4 424or 425.Xr ip 4 426use one of these to selectively enabled it only for one protocol family. 427.It Fl tso6 , tso4 428If the driver supports 429.Xr tcp 4 430segmentation offloading for 431.Xr ip6 4 432or 433.Xr ip 4 434use one of these to selectively disable it only for one protocol family. 435.It Cm lro 436If the driver supports 437.Xr tcp 4 438large receive offloading, enable LRO on the interface. 439.It Fl lro 440If the driver supports 441.Xr tcp 4 442large receive offloading, disable LRO on the interface. 443.It Cm wol , wol_ucast , wol_mcast , wol_magic 444Enable Wake On Lan (WOL) support, if available. 445WOL is a facility whereby a machine in a low power state may be woken 446in response to a received packet. 447There are three types of packets that may wake a system: 448ucast (directed solely to the machine's mac address), 449mcast (directed to a broadcast or multicast address), 450or 451magic (unicast or multicast frames with a ``magic contents''). 452Not all devices support WOL, those that do indicate the mechanisms 453they support in their capabilities. 454.Cm wol 455is a synonym for enabling all available WOL mechanisms. 456To disable WOL use 457.Fl wol . 458.It Cm vlanmtu , vlanhwtag, vlanhwfilter, vlanhwcsum, vlanhwtso 459If the driver offers user-configurable VLAN support, enable 460reception of extended frames, tag processing in hardware, 461frame filtering in hardware, checksum offloading, or TSO on VLAN, 462respectively. 463Note that this must be issued on a physical interface associated with 464.Xr vlan 4 , 465not on a 466.Xr vlan 4 467interface itself. 468.It Fl vlanmtu , vlanhwtag, vlanhwfilter, vlanhwtso 469If the driver offers user-configurable VLAN support, disable 470reception of extended frames, tag processing in hardware, 471frame filtering in hardware, or TSO on VLAN, 472respectively. 473.It Cm vnet Ar jail 474Move the interface to the 475.Xr jail 8 , 476specified by name or JID. 477If the jail has a virtual network stack, the interface will disappear 478from the current environment and become visible to the jail. 479.It Fl vnet Ar jail 480Reclaim the interface from the 481.Xr jail 8 , 482specified by name or JID. 483If the jail has a virtual network stack, the interface will disappear 484from the jail, and become visible to the current network environment. 485.It Cm polling 486Turn on 487.Xr polling 4 488feature and disable interrupts on the interface, if driver supports 489this mode. 490.It Fl polling 491Turn off 492.Xr polling 4 493feature and enable interrupt mode on the interface. 494.It Cm create 495Create the specified network pseudo-device. 496If the interface is given without a unit number, try to create a new 497device with an arbitrary unit number. 498If creation of an arbitrary device is successful, the new device name is 499printed to standard output unless the interface is renamed or destroyed 500in the same 501.Nm 502invocation. 503.It Cm destroy 504Destroy the specified network pseudo-device. 505.It Cm plumb 506Another name for the 507.Cm create 508parameter. 509Included for 510.Tn Solaris 511compatibility. 512.It Cm unplumb 513Another name for the 514.Cm destroy 515parameter. 516Included for 517.Tn Solaris 518compatibility. 519.It Cm metric Ar n 520Set the routing metric of the interface to 521.Ar n , 522default 0. 523The routing metric is used by the routing protocol 524.Pq Xr routed 8 . 525Higher metrics have the effect of making a route 526less favorable; metrics are counted as additional hops 527to the destination network or host. 528.It Cm mtu Ar n 529Set the maximum transmission unit of the interface to 530.Ar n , 531default is interface specific. 532The MTU is used to limit the size of packets that are transmitted on an 533interface. 534Not all interfaces support setting the MTU, and some interfaces have 535range restrictions. 536.It Cm netmask Ar mask 537.\" (Inet and ISO.) 538(Inet only.) 539Specify how much of the address to reserve for subdividing 540networks into sub-networks. 541The mask includes the network part of the local address 542and the subnet part, which is taken from the host field of the address. 543The mask can be specified as a single hexadecimal number 544with a leading 545.Ql 0x , 546with a dot-notation Internet address, 547or with a pseudo-network name listed in the network table 548.Xr networks 5 . 549The mask contains 1's for the bit positions in the 32-bit address 550which are to be used for the network and subnet parts, 551and 0's for the host part. 552The mask should contain at least the standard network portion, 553and the subnet field should be contiguous with the network 554portion. 555.Pp 556The netmask can also be specified in CIDR notation after the address. 557See the 558.Ar address 559option above for more information. 560.It Cm prefixlen Ar len 561(Inet6 only.) 562Specify that 563.Ar len 564bits are reserved for subdividing networks into sub-networks. 565The 566.Ar len 567must be integer, and for syntactical reason it must be between 0 to 128. 568It is almost always 64 under the current IPv6 assignment rule. 569If the parameter is omitted, 64 is used. 570.Pp 571The prefix can also be specified using the slash notation after the address. 572See the 573.Ar address 574option above for more information. 575.\" see 576.\" Xr eon 5 . 577.\" .It Cm nsellength Ar n 578.\" .Pf ( Tn ISO 579.\" only) 580.\" This specifies a trailing number of bytes for a received 581.\" .Tn NSAP 582.\" used for local identification, the remaining leading part of which is 583.\" taken to be the 584.\" .Tn NET 585.\" (Network Entity Title). 586.\" The default value is 1, which is conformant to US 587.\" .Tn GOSIP . 588.\" When an ISO address is set in an ifconfig command, 589.\" it is really the 590.\" .Tn NSAP 591.\" which is being specified. 592.\" For example, in 593.\" .Tn US GOSIP , 594.\" 20 hex digits should be 595.\" specified in the 596.\" .Tn ISO NSAP 597.\" to be assigned to the interface. 598.\" There is some evidence that a number different from 1 may be useful 599.\" for 600.\" .Tn AFI 601.\" 37 type addresses. 602.It Cm range Ar netrange 603Under appletalk, set the interface to respond to a 604.Ar netrange 605of the form 606.Ar startnet Ns - Ns Ar endnet . 607Appletalk uses this scheme instead of 608netmasks though 609.Fx 610implements it internally as a set of netmasks. 611.It Cm remove 612Another name for the 613.Fl alias 614parameter. 615Introduced for compatibility 616with 617.Bsx . 618.It Cm phase 619The argument following this specifies the version (phase) of the 620Appletalk network attached to the interface. 621Values of 1 or 2 are permitted. 622.Sm off 623.It Cm link Op Cm 0 No - Cm 2 624.Sm on 625Enable special processing of the link level of the interface. 626These three options are interface specific in actual effect, however, 627they are in general used to select special modes of operation. 628An example 629of this is to enable SLIP compression, or to select the connector type 630for some Ethernet cards. 631Refer to the man page for the specific driver 632for more information. 633.Sm off 634.It Fl link Op Cm 0 No - Cm 2 635.Sm on 636Disable special processing at the link level with the specified interface. 637.It Cm monitor 638Put the interface in monitor mode. 639No packets are transmitted, and received packets are discarded after 640.Xr bpf 4 641processing. 642.It Fl monitor 643Take the interface out of monitor mode. 644.It Cm up 645Mark an interface 646.Dq up . 647This may be used to enable an interface after an 648.Dq Nm Cm down . 649It happens automatically when setting the first address on an interface. 650If the interface was reset when previously marked down, 651the hardware will be re-initialized. 652.El 653.Pp 654The following parameters are for ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol. 655Note that the address family keyword 656.Dq Li inet6 657is needed for them: 658.Bl -tag -width indent 659.It Cm accept_rtadv 660Set a flag to enable accepting ICMPv6 Router Advertisement messages. 661The 662.Xr sysctl 8 663variable 664.Va net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv 665controls whether this flag is set by default or not. 666.It Cm -accept_rtadv 667Clear a flag 668.Cm accept_rtadv . 669.It Cm no_radr 670Set a flag to control whether routers from which the system accepts 671Router Advertisement messages will be added to the Default Router List 672or not. 673When the 674.Cm accept_rtadv 675flag is disabled, this flag has no effect. 676The 677.Xr sysctl 8 678variable 679.Va net.inet6.ip6.no_radr 680controls whether this flag is set by default or not. 681.It Cm -no_radr 682Clear a flag 683.Cm no_radr . 684.It Cm auto_linklocal 685Set a flag to perform automatic link-local address configuration when 686the interface becomes available. 687The 688.Xr sysctl 8 689variable 690.Va net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal 691controls whether this flag is set by default or not. 692.It Cm -auto_linklocal 693Clear a flag 694.Cm auto_linklocal . 695.It Cm defaultif 696Set the specified interface as the default route when there is no 697default router. 698.It Cm -defaultif 699Clear a flag 700.Cm defaultif . 701.It Cm ifdisabled 702Set a flag to disable all of IPv6 network communications on the 703specified interface. Note that if there are already configured IPv6 704addresses on that interface, all of them are marked as 705.Dq tentative 706and DAD will be performed when this flag is cleared. 707.It Cm -ifdisabled 708Clear a flag 709.Cm ifdisabled . 710When this flag is cleared and 711.Cm auto_linklocal 712flag is enabled, automatic configuration of a link-local address is 713performed. 714.It Cm nud 715Set a flag to enable Neighbor Unreachability Detection. 716.It Cm -nud 717Clear a flag 718.Cm nud . 719.El 720.Pp 721The following parameters are specific to cloning 722IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces with the 723.Cm create 724request: 725.Bl -tag -width indent 726.It Cm wlandev Ar device 727Use 728.Ar device 729as the parent for the cloned device. 730.It Cm wlanmode Ar mode 731Specify the operating mode for this cloned device. 732.Ar mode 733is one of 734.Cm sta , 735.Cm ahdemo 736(or 737.Cm adhoc-demo ), 738.Cm ibss , 739(or 740.Cm adhoc ), 741.Cm ap , 742(or 743.Cm hostap ), 744.Cm wds , 745.Cm tdma , 746.Cm mesh , 747and 748.Cm monitor . 749The operating mode of a cloned interface cannot be changed. 750The 751.Cm tdma 752mode is actually implemented as an 753.Cm adhoc-demo 754interface with special properties. 755.It Cm wlanbssid Ar bssid 756The 802.11 mac address to use for the bssid. 757This must be specified at create time for a legacy 758.Cm wds 759device. 760.It Cm wlanaddr Ar address 761The local mac address. 762If this is not specified then a mac address will automatically be assigned 763to the cloned device. 764Typically this address is the same as the address of the parent device 765but if the 766.Cm bssid 767parameter is specified then the driver will craft a unique address for 768the device (if supported). 769.It Cm wdslegacy 770Mark a 771.Cm wds 772device as operating in ``legacy mode''. 773Legacy 774.Cm wds 775devices have a fixed peer relationship and do not, for example, roam 776if their peer stops communicating. 777For completeness a Dynamic WDS (DWDS) interface may marked as 778.Fl wdslegacy . 779.It Cm bssid 780Request a unique local mac address for the cloned device. 781This is only possible if the device supports multiple mac addresses. 782To force use of the parent's mac address use 783.Fl bssid . 784.It Cm beacons 785Mark the cloned interface as depending on hardware support to 786track received beacons. 787To have beacons tracked in software use 788.Fl beacons . 789For 790.Cm hostap 791mode 792.Fl beacons 793can also be used to indicate no beacons should 794be transmitted; this can be useful when creating a WDS configuration but 795.Cm wds 796interfaces can only be created as companions to an access point. 797.El 798.Pp 799The following parameters are specific to IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces 800cloned with a 801.Cm create 802operation: 803.Bl -tag -width indent 804.It Cm ampdu 805Enable sending and receiving AMPDU frames when using 802.11n (default). 806The 802.11n specification states a compliant station must be capable 807of receiving AMPDU frames but transmission is optional. 808Use 809.Fl ampdu 810to disable all use of AMPDU with 802.11n. 811For testing and/or to work around interoperability problems one can use 812.Cm ampdutx 813and 814.Cm ampdurx 815to control use of AMPDU in one direction. 816.It Cm ampdudensity Ar density 817Set the AMPDU density parameter used when operating with 802.11n. 818This parameter controls the inter-packet gap for AMPDU frames. 819The sending device normally controls this setting but a receiving station 820may request wider gaps. 821Legal values for 822.Ar density 823are 0, .25, .5, 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 (microseconds). 824A value of 825.Cm - 826is treated the same as 0. 827.It Cm ampdulimit Ar limit 828Set the limit on packet size for receiving AMPDU frames when operating 829with 802.11n. 830Legal values for 831.Ar limit 832are 8192, 16384, 32768, and 65536 but one can also specify 833just the unique prefix: 8, 16, 32, 64. 834Note the sender may limit the size of AMPDU frames to be less 835than the maximum specified by the receiving station. 836.It Cm amsdu 837Enable sending and receiving AMSDU frames when using 802.11n. 838By default AMSDU is received but not transmitted. 839Use 840.Fl amsdu 841to disable all use of AMSDU with 802.11n. 842For testing and/or to work around interoperability problems one can use 843.Cm amsdutx 844and 845.Cm amsdurx 846to control use of AMSDU in one direction. 847.It Cm amsdulimit Ar limit 848Set the limit on packet size for sending and receiving AMSDU frames 849when operating with 802.11n. 850Legal values for 851.Ar limit 852are 7935 and 3839 (bytes). 853Note the sender may limit the size of AMSDU frames to be less 854than the maximum specified by the receiving station. 855Note also that devices are not required to support the 7935 limit, 856only 3839 is required by the specification and the larger value 857may require more memory to be dedicated to support functionality 858that is rarely used. 859.It Cm apbridge 860When operating as an access point, pass packets between 861wireless clients directly (default). 862To instead let them pass up through the 863system and be forwarded using some other mechanism, use 864.Fl apbridge . 865Disabling the internal bridging 866is useful when traffic is to be processed with 867packet filtering. 868.It Cm authmode Ar mode 869Set the desired authentication mode in infrastructure mode. 870Not all adapters support all modes. 871The set of 872valid modes is 873.Cm none , open , shared 874(shared key), 875.Cm 8021x 876(IEEE 802.1x), 877and 878.Cm wpa 879(IEEE WPA/WPA2/802.11i). 880The 881.Cm 8021x 882and 883.Cm wpa 884modes are only useful when using an authentication service 885(a supplicant for client operation or an authenticator when 886operating as an access point). 887Modes are case insensitive. 888.It Cm bgscan 889Enable background scanning when operating as a station. 890Background scanning is a technique whereby a station associated to 891an access point will temporarily leave the channel to scan for 892neighboring stations. 893This allows a station to maintain a cache of nearby access points 894so that roaming between access points can be done without 895a lengthy scan operation. 896Background scanning is done only when a station is not busy and 897any outbound traffic will cancel a scan operation. 898Background scanning should never cause packets to be lost though 899there may be some small latency if outbound traffic interrupts a 900scan operation. 901By default background scanning is enabled if the device is capable. 902To disable background scanning, use 903.Fl bgscan . 904Background scanning is controlled by the 905.Cm bgscanidle 906and 907.Cm bgscanintvl 908parameters. 909Background scanning must be enabled for roaming; this is an artifact 910of the current implementation and may not be required in the future. 911.It Cm bgscanidle Ar idletime 912Set the minimum time a station must be idle (not transmitting or 913receiving frames) before a background scan is initiated. 914The 915.Ar idletime 916parameter is specified in milliseconds. 917By default a station must be idle at least 250 milliseconds before 918a background scan is initiated. 919The idle time may not be set to less than 100 milliseconds. 920.It Cm bgscanintvl Ar interval 921Set the interval at which background scanning is attempted. 922The 923.Ar interval 924parameter is specified in seconds. 925By default a background scan is considered every 300 seconds (5 minutes). 926The 927.Ar interval 928may not be set to less than 15 seconds. 929.It Cm bintval Ar interval 930Set the interval at which beacon frames are sent when operating in 931ad-hoc or ap mode. 932The 933.Ar interval 934parameter is specified in TU's (1024 usecs). 935By default beacon frames are transmitted every 100 TU's. 936.It Cm bmissthreshold Ar count 937Set the number of consecutive missed beacons at which the station 938will attempt to roam (i.e., search for a new access point). 939The 940.Ar count 941parameter must be in the range 1 to 255; though the 942upper bound may be reduced according to device capabilities. 943The default threshold is 7 consecutive missed beacons; but 944this may be overridden by the device driver. 945Another name for the 946.Cm bmissthreshold 947parameter is 948.Cm bmiss . 949.It Cm bssid Ar address 950Specify the MAC address of the access point to use when operating 951as a station in a BSS network. 952This overrides any automatic selection done by the system. 953To disable a previously selected access point, supply 954.Cm any , none , 955or 956.Cm - 957for the address. 958This option is useful when more than one access point uses the same SSID. 959Another name for the 960.Cm bssid 961parameter is 962.Cm ap . 963.It Cm burst 964Enable packet bursting. 965Packet bursting is a transmission technique whereby the wireless 966medium is acquired once to send multiple frames and the interframe 967spacing is reduced. 968This technique can significantly increase throughput by reducing 969transmission overhead. 970Packet bursting is supported by the 802.11e QoS specification 971and some devices that do not support QoS may still be capable. 972By default packet bursting is enabled if a device is capable 973of doing it. 974To disable packet bursting, use 975.Fl burst . 976.It Cm chanlist Ar channels 977Set the desired channels to use when scanning for access 978points, neighbors in an IBSS network, or looking for unoccupied 979channels when operating as an access point. 980The set of channels is specified as a comma-separated list with 981each element in the list representing either a single channel number or a range 982of the form 983.Dq Li a-b . 984Channel numbers must be in the range 1 to 255 and be permissible 985according to the operating characteristics of the device. 986.It Cm channel Ar number 987Set a single desired channel. 988Channels range from 1 to 255, but the exact selection available 989depends on the region your adaptor was manufactured for. 990Setting 991the channel to 992.Li any , 993or 994.Cm - 995will clear any desired channel and, if the device is marked up, 996force a scan for a channel to operate on. 997Alternatively the frequency, in megahertz, may be specified 998instead of the channel number. 999.Pp 1000When there are several ways to use a channel the channel 1001number/frequency may be appended with attributes to clarify. 1002For example, if a device is capable of operating on channel 6 1003with 802.11n and 802.11g then one can specify that g-only use 1004should be used by specifying ``6:g''. 1005Similarly the channel width can be specified by appending it 1006with ``/''; e.g., ``6/40'' specifies a 40MHz wide channel, 1007These attributes can be combined as in: ``6:ht/40''. 1008The full set of flags specified following a ``:'' are: 1009.Cm a 1010(802.11a), 1011.Cm b 1012(802.11b), 1013.Cm d 1014(Atheros Dynamic Turbo mode), 1015.Cm g 1016(802.11g), 1017.Cm h 1018or 1019.Cm n 1020(802.11n aka HT), 1021.Cm s 1022(Atheros Static Turbo mode), 1023and 1024.Cm t 1025(Atheros Dynamic Turbo mode, or appended to ``st'' and ``dt''). 1026The full set of channel widths following a '/' are: 1027.Cm 5 1028(5MHz aka quarter-rate channel), 1029.Cm 10 1030(10MHz aka half-rate channel), 1031.Cm 20 1032(20MHz mostly for use in specifying ht20), 1033and 1034.Cm 40 1035(40MHz mostly for use in specifying ht40). 1036In addition, 1037a 40MHz HT channel specification may include the location 1038of the extension channel by appending ``+'' or ``-'' for above and below, 1039respectively; e.g., ``2437:ht/40+'' specifies 40MHz wide HT operation 1040with the center channel at frequency 2437 and the extension channel above. 1041.It Cm country Ar name 1042Set the country code to use in calculating the regulatory constraints 1043for operation. 1044In particular the set of available channels, how the wireless device 1045will operation on the channels, and the maximum transmit power that 1046can be used on a channel are defined by this setting. 1047Country/Region codes are specified as a 2-character abbreviation 1048defined by ISO 3166 or using a longer, but possibly ambiguous, spelling; 1049e.g., "ES" and "Spain". 1050The set of country codes are taken from /etc/regdomain.xml and can also 1051be viewed with the ``list countries'' request. 1052Note that not all devices support changing the country code from a default 1053setting; typically stored in EEPROM. 1054See also 1055.Cm regdomain , 1056.Cm indoor , 1057.Cm outdoor , 1058and 1059.Cm anywhere . 1060.It Cm dfs 1061Enable Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) as specified in 802.11h. 1062DFS embodies several facilities including detection of overlapping 1063radar signals, dynamic transmit power control, and channel selection 1064according to a least-congested criteria. 1065DFS support is mandatory for some 5GHz frequencies in certain 1066locales (e.g., ETSI). 1067By default DFS is enabled according to the regulatory definitions 1068specified in /etc/regdomain.xml and the current country code, regdomain, 1069and channel. 1070Note the underlying device (and driver) must support radar detection 1071for full DFS support to work. 1072To be fully compliant with the local regulatory agency frequencies that 1073require DFS should not be used unless it is fully supported. 1074Use 1075.Fl dfs 1076to disable this functionality for testing. 1077.It Cm dotd 1078Enable support for the 802.11d specification (default). 1079When this support is enabled in station mode, beacon frames that advertise 1080a country code different than the currently configured country code will 1081cause an event to be dispatched to user applications. 1082This event can be used by the station to adopt that country code and 1083operate according to the associated regulatory constraints. 1084When operating as an access point with 802.11d enabled the beacon and 1085probe response frames transmitted will advertise the current regulatory 1086domain settings. 1087To disable 802.11d use 1088.Fl dotd . 1089.It Cm doth 1090Enable 802.11h support including spectrum management. 1091When 802.11h is enabled beacon and probe response frames will have 1092the SpectrumMgt bit set in the capabilities field and 1093country and power constraint information elements will be present. 1094802.11h support also includes handling Channel Switch Announcements (CSA) 1095which are a mechanism to coordinate channel changes by an access point. 1096By default 802.11h is enabled if the device is capable. 1097To disable 802.11h use 1098.Fl doth . 1099.It Cm deftxkey Ar index 1100Set the default key to use for transmission. 1101Typically this is only set when using WEP encryption. 1102Note that you must set a default transmit key 1103for the system to know which key to use in encrypting outbound traffic. 1104The 1105.Cm weptxkey 1106is an alias for this request; it is provided for backwards compatibility. 1107.It Cm dtimperiod Ar period 1108Set the 1109DTIM 1110period for transmitting buffered multicast data frames when 1111operating in ap mode. 1112The 1113.Ar period 1114specifies the number of beacon intervals between DTIM 1115and must be in the range 1 to 15. 1116By default DTIM is 1 (i.e., DTIM occurs at each beacon). 1117.It Cm quiet 1118Enable the use of quiet IE. Hostap will use this to silence other 1119stations to reduce interference for radar detection when 1120operating on 5GHz frequency and doth support is enabled. 1121Use 1122.Fl quiet 1123to disable this functionality. 1124.It Cm quiet_period Ar period 1125Set the QUIET 1126.Ar period 1127to the number of beacon intervals between the start of regularly 1128scheduled quiet intervals defined by Quiet element. 1129.It Cm quiet_count Ar count 1130Set the QUIET 1131.Ar count 1132to the number of TBTTs until the beacon interval during which the 1133next quiet interval shall start. A value of 1 indicates the quiet 1134interval will start during the beacon interval starting at the next 1135TBTT. A value 0 is reserved. 1136.It Cm quiet_offset Ar offset 1137Set the QUIET 1138.Ar offset 1139to the offset of the start of the quiet interval from the TBTT 1140specified by the Quiet count, expressed in TUs. 1141The value of the 1142.Ar offset 1143shall be less than one beacon interval. 1144.It Cm quiet_duration Ar dur 1145Set the QUIET 1146.Ar dur 1147to the duration of the Quiet interval, expressed in TUs. 1148The value should be less than beacon interval. 1149.It Cm dturbo 1150Enable the use of Atheros Dynamic Turbo mode when communicating with 1151another Dynamic Turbo-capable station. 1152Dynamic Turbo mode is an Atheros-specific mechanism by which 1153stations switch between normal 802.11 operation and a ``boosted'' 1154mode in which a 40MHz wide channel is used for communication. 1155Stations using Dynamic Turbo mode operate boosted only when the 1156channel is free of non-dturbo stations; when a non-dturbo station 1157is identified on the channel all stations will automatically drop 1158back to normal operation. 1159By default, Dynamic Turbo mode is not enabled, even if the device is capable. 1160Note that turbo mode (dynamic or static) is only allowed on some 1161channels depending on the regulatory constraints; use the 1162.Cm list chan 1163command to identify the channels where turbo mode may be used. 1164To disable Dynamic Turbo mode use 1165.Fl dturbo . 1166.It Cm dwds 1167Enable Dynamic WDS (DWDS) support. 1168DWDS is a facility by which 4-address traffic can be carried between 1169stations operating in infrastructure mode. 1170A station first associates to an access point and authenticates using 1171normal procedures (e.g., WPA). 1172Then 4-address frames are passed to carry traffic for stations 1173operating on either side of the wireless link. 1174DWDS extends the normal WDS mechanism by leveraging existing security 1175protocols and eliminating static binding. 1176.Pp 1177When DWDS is enabled on an access point 4-address frames received from 1178an authorized station will generate a ``DWDS discovery'' event to user 1179applications. 1180This event should be used to create a WDS interface that is bound 1181to the remote station (and usually plumbed into a bridge). 1182Once the WDS interface is up and running 4-address traffic then logically 1183flows through that interface. 1184.Pp 1185When DWDS is enabled on a station, traffic with a destination address 1186different from the peer station are encapsulated in a 4-address frame 1187and transmitted to the peer. 1188All 4-address traffic uses the security information of the stations 1189(e.g., cryptographic keys). 1190A station is associated using 802.11n facilities may transport 11914-address traffic using these same mechanisms; this depends on available 1192resources and capabilities of the device. 1193The DWDS implementation guards against layer 2 routing loops of 1194multicast traffic. 1195.It Cm ff 1196Enable the use of Atheros Fast Frames when communicating with 1197another Fast Frames-capable station. 1198Fast Frames are an encapsulation technique by which two 802.3 1199frames are transmitted in a single 802.11 frame. 1200This can noticeably improve throughput but requires that the 1201receiving station understand how to decapsulate the frame. 1202Fast frame use is negotiated using the Atheros 802.11 vendor-specific 1203protocol extension so enabling use is safe when communicating with 1204non-Atheros devices. 1205By default, use of fast frames is enabled if the device is capable. 1206To explicitly disable fast frames, use 1207.Fl ff . 1208.It Cm fragthreshold Ar length 1209Set the threshold for which transmitted frames are broken into fragments. 1210The 1211.Ar length 1212argument is the frame size in bytes and must be in the range 256 to 2346. 1213Setting 1214.Ar length 1215to 1216.Li 2346 , 1217.Cm any , 1218or 1219.Cm - 1220disables transmit fragmentation. 1221Not all adapters honor the fragmentation threshold. 1222.It Cm hidessid 1223When operating as an access point, do not broadcast the SSID 1224in beacon frames or respond to probe request frames unless 1225they are directed to the ap (i.e., they include the ap's SSID). 1226By default, the SSID is included in beacon frames and 1227undirected probe request frames are answered. 1228To re-enable the broadcast of the SSID etc., use 1229.Fl hidessid . 1230.It Cm ht 1231Enable use of High Throughput (HT) when using 802.11n (default). 1232The 802.11n specification includes mechanisms for operation 1233on 20MHz and 40MHz wide channels using different signalling mechanisms 1234than specified in 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11a. 1235Stations negotiate use of these facilities, termed HT20 and HT40, 1236when they associate. 1237To disable all use of 802.11n use 1238.Fl ht . 1239To disable use of HT20 (e.g., to force only HT40 use) use 1240.Fl ht20 . 1241To disable use of HT40 use 1242.Fl ht40 . 1243.Pp 1244HT configuration is used to ``auto promote'' operation 1245when several choices are available. 1246For example, if a station associates to an 11n-capable access point 1247it controls whether the station uses legacy operation, HT20, or HT40. 1248When an 11n-capable device is setup as an access point and 1249Auto Channel Selection is used to locate a channel to operate on, 1250HT configuration controls whether legacy, HT20, or HT40 operation is setup 1251on the selected channel. 1252If a fixed channel is specified for a station then HT configuration can 1253be given as part of the channel specification; e.g., 6:ht/20 to setup 1254HT20 operation on channel 6. 1255.It Cm htcompat 1256Enable use of compatibility support for pre-802.11n devices (default). 1257The 802.11n protocol specification went through several incompatible iterations. 1258Some vendors implemented 11n support to older specifications that 1259will not interoperate with a purely 11n-compliant station. 1260In particular the information elements included in management frames 1261for old devices are different. 1262When compatibility support is enabled both standard and compatible data 1263will be provided. 1264Stations that associate using the compatibility mechanisms are flagged 1265in ``list sta''. 1266To disable compatibility support use 1267.Fl htcompat . 1268.It Cm htprotmode Ar technique 1269For interfaces operating in 802.11n, use the specified 1270.Ar technique 1271for protecting HT frames in a mixed legacy/HT network. 1272The set of valid techniques is 1273.Cm off , 1274and 1275.Cm rts 1276(RTS/CTS, default). 1277Technique names are case insensitive. 1278.It Cm inact 1279Enable inactivity processing for stations associated to an 1280access point (default). 1281When operating as an access point the 802.11 layer monitors 1282the activity of each associated station. 1283When a station is inactive for 5 minutes it will send several 1284``probe frames'' to see if the station is still present. 1285If no response is received then the station is deauthenticated. 1286Applications that prefer to handle this work can disable this 1287facility by using 1288.Fl inact . 1289.It Cm indoor 1290Set the location to use in calculating regulatory constraints. 1291The location is also advertised in beacon and probe response frames 1292when 802.11d is enabled with 1293.Cm dotd . 1294See also 1295.Cm outdoor , 1296.Cm anywhere , 1297.Cm country , 1298and 1299.Cm regdomain . 1300.It Cm list active 1301Display the list of channels available for use taking into account 1302any restrictions set with the 1303.Cm chanlist 1304directive. 1305See the description of 1306.Cm list chan 1307for more information. 1308.It Cm list caps 1309Display the adaptor's capabilities, including the operating 1310modes supported. 1311.It Cm list chan 1312Display the list of channels available for use. 1313Channels are shown with their IEEE channel number, equivalent 1314frequency, and usage modes. 1315Channels identified as 1316.Ql 11g 1317are also usable in 1318.Ql 11b 1319mode. 1320Channels identified as 1321.Ql 11a Turbo 1322may be used only for Atheros' Static Turbo mode 1323(specified with 1324. Cm mediaopt turbo ) . 1325Channels marked with a 1326.Ql * 1327have a regulatory constraint that they be passively scanned. 1328This means a station is not permitted to transmit on the channel until 1329it identifies the channel is being used for 802.11 communication; 1330typically by hearing a beacon frame from an access point operating 1331on the channel. 1332.Cm list freq 1333is another way of requesting this information. 1334By default a compacted list of channels is displayed; if the 1335.Fl v 1336option is specified then all channels are shown. 1337.It Cm list countries 1338Display the set of country codes and regulatory domains that can be 1339used in regulatory configuration. 1340.It Cm list mac 1341Display the current MAC Access Control List state. 1342Each address is prefixed with a character that indicates the 1343current policy applied to it: 1344.Ql + 1345indicates the address is allowed access, 1346.Ql - 1347indicates the address is denied access, 1348.Ql * 1349indicates the address is present but the current policy open 1350(so the ACL is not consulted). 1351.It Cm list mesh 1352Displays the mesh routing table, used for forwarding packets on a mesh 1353network. 1354.It Cm list regdomain 1355Display the current regulatory settings including the available channels 1356and transmit power caps. 1357.It Cm list roam 1358Display the parameters that govern roaming operation. 1359.It Cm list txparam 1360Display the parameters that govern transmit operation. 1361.It Cm list txpower 1362Display the transmit power caps for each channel. 1363.It Cm list scan 1364Display the access points and/or ad-hoc neighbors 1365located in the vicinity. 1366This information may be updated automatically by the adapter 1367with a 1368.Cm scan 1369request or through background scanning. 1370Depending on the capabilities of the stations the following 1371flags can be included in the output: 1372.Bl -tag -width 3n 1373.It Li A 1374Authorized. 1375Indicates that the station is permitted to send/receive data frames. 1376.It Li E 1377Extended Rate Phy (ERP). 1378Indicates that the station is operating in an 802.11g network 1379using extended transmit rates. 1380.It Li H 1381High Throughput (HT). 1382Indicates that the station is using HT transmit rates. 1383If a `+' follows immediately after then the station associated 1384using deprecated mechanisms supported only when 1385.Cm htcompat 1386is enabled. 1387.It Li P 1388Power Save. 1389Indicates that the station is operating in power save mode. 1390.It Li Q 1391Quality of Service (QoS). 1392Indicates that the station is using QoS encapsulation for 1393data frame. 1394QoS encapsulation is enabled only when WME mode is enabled. 1395.It Li S 1396Short Preamble. 1397Indicates that the station is doing short preamble to optionally 1398improve throughput performance with 802.11g and 802.11b. 1399.It Li T 1400Transitional Security Network (TSN). 1401Indicates that the station associated using TSN; see also 1402.Cm tsn 1403below. 1404.It Li W 1405Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS). 1406Indicates that the station associated using WPS. 1407.El 1408.Pp 1409By default interesting information elements captured from the neighboring 1410stations are displayed at the end of each row. 1411Possible elements include: 1412.Cm WME 1413(station supports WME), 1414.Cm WPA 1415(station supports WPA), 1416.Cm WPS 1417(station supports WPS), 1418.Cm RSN 1419(station supports 802.11i/RSN), 1420.Cm HTCAP 1421(station supports 802.11n/HT communication), 1422.Cm ATH 1423(station supports Atheros protocol extensions), 1424.Cm VEN 1425(station supports unknown vendor-specific extensions). 1426If the 1427.Fl v 1428flag is used all the information elements and their 1429contents will be shown. 1430Specifying the 1431.Fl v 1432flag also enables display of long SSIDs. 1433The 1434.Cm list ap 1435command is another way of requesting this information. 1436.It Cm list sta 1437When operating as an access point display the stations that are 1438currently associated. 1439When operating in ad-hoc mode display stations identified as 1440neighbors in the IBSS. 1441When operating in mesh mode display stations identified as 1442neighbors in the MBSS. 1443When operating in station mode display the access point. 1444Capabilities advertised by the stations are described under 1445the 1446.Cm scan 1447request. 1448Depending on the capabilities of the stations the following 1449flags can be included in the output: 1450.Bl -tag -width 3n 1451.It Li A 1452Authorized. 1453Indicates that the station is permitted to send/receive data frames. 1454.It Li E 1455Extended Rate Phy (ERP). 1456Indicates that the station is operating in an 802.11g network 1457using extended transmit rates. 1458.It Li H 1459High Throughput (HT). 1460Indicates that the station is using HT transmit rates. 1461If a `+' follows immediately after then the station associated 1462using deprecated mechanisms supported only when 1463.Cm htcompat 1464is enabled. 1465.It Li P 1466Power Save. 1467Indicates that the station is operating in power save mode. 1468.It Li Q 1469Quality of Service (QoS). 1470Indicates that the station is using QoS encapsulation for 1471data frame. 1472QoS encapsulation is enabled only when WME mode is enabled. 1473.It Li S 1474Short Preamble. 1475Indicates that the station is doing short preamble to optionally 1476improve throughput performance with 802.11g and 802.11b. 1477.It Li T 1478Transitional Security Network (TSN). 1479Indicates that the station associated using TSN; see also 1480.Cm tsn 1481below. 1482.It Li W 1483Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS). 1484Indicates that the station associated using WPS. 1485.El 1486.Pp 1487By default information elements received from associated stations 1488are displayed in a short form; the 1489.Fl v 1490flag causes this information to be displayed symbolically. 1491.It Cm list wme 1492Display the current channel parameters to use when operating in WME mode. 1493If the 1494.Fl v 1495option is specified then both channel and BSS parameters are displayed 1496for each AC (first channel, then BSS). 1497When WME mode is enabled for an adaptor this information will be 1498displayed with the regular status; this command is mostly useful 1499for examining parameters when WME mode is disabled. 1500See the description of the 1501.Cm wme 1502directive for information on the various parameters. 1503.It Cm maxretry Ar count 1504Set the maximum number of tries to use in sending unicast frames. 1505The default setting is 6 but drivers may override this with a value 1506they choose. 1507.It Cm mcastrate Ar rate 1508Set the rate for transmitting multicast/broadcast frames. 1509Rates are specified as megabits/second in decimal; e.g.,\& 5.5 for 5.5 Mb/s. 1510This rate should be valid for the current operating conditions; 1511if an invalid rate is specified drivers are free to chose an 1512appropriate rate. 1513.It Cm mgtrate Ar rate 1514Set the rate for transmitting management and/or control frames. 1515Rates are specified as megabits/second in decimal; e.g.,\& 5.5 for 5.5 Mb/s. 1516.It Cm outdoor 1517Set the location to use in calculating regulatory constraints. 1518The location is also advertised in beacon and probe response frames 1519when 802.11d is enabled with 1520.Cm dotd . 1521See also 1522.Cm anywhere , 1523.Cm country , 1524.Cm indoor , 1525and 1526.Cm regdomain . 1527.It Cm powersave 1528Enable powersave operation. 1529When operating as a client, the station will conserve power by 1530periodically turning off the radio and listening for 1531messages from the access point telling it there are packets waiting. 1532The station must then retrieve the packets. 1533Not all devices support power save operation as a client. 1534The 802.11 specification requires that all access points support 1535power save but some drivers do not. 1536Use 1537.Fl powersave 1538to disable powersave operation when operating as a client. 1539.It Cm powersavesleep Ar sleep 1540Set the desired max powersave sleep time in TU's (1024 usecs). 1541By default the max powersave sleep time is 100 TU's. 1542.It Cm protmode Ar technique 1543For interfaces operating in 802.11g, use the specified 1544.Ar technique 1545for protecting OFDM frames in a mixed 11b/11g network. 1546The set of valid techniques is 1547.Cm off , cts 1548(CTS to self), 1549and 1550.Cm rtscts 1551(RTS/CTS). 1552Technique names are case insensitive. 1553Not all devices support 1554.Cm cts 1555as a protection technique. 1556.It Cm pureg 1557When operating as an access point in 802.11g mode allow only 155811g-capable stations to associate (11b-only stations are not 1559permitted to associate). 1560To allow both 11g and 11b-only stations to associate, use 1561.Fl pureg . 1562.It Cm puren 1563When operating as an access point in 802.11n mode allow only 1564HT-capable stations to associate (legacy stations are not 1565permitted to associate). 1566To allow both HT and legacy stations to associate, use 1567.Fl puren . 1568.It Cm regdomain Ar sku 1569Set the regulatory domain to use in calculating the regulatory constraints 1570for operation. 1571In particular the set of available channels, how the wireless device 1572will operation on the channels, and the maximum transmit power that 1573can be used on a channel are defined by this setting. 1574Regdomain codes (SKU's) are taken from /etc/regdomain.xml and can also 1575be viewed with the ``list countries'' request. 1576Note that not all devices support changing the regdomain from a default 1577setting; typically stored in EEPROM. 1578See also 1579.Cm country , 1580.Cm indoor , 1581.Cm outdoor , 1582and 1583.Cm anywhere . 1584.It Cm rifs 1585Enable use of Reduced InterFrame Spacing (RIFS) when operating in 802.11n 1586on an HT channel. 1587Note that RIFS must be supported by both the station and access point 1588for it to be used. 1589To disable RIFS use 1590.Fl rifs . 1591.It Cm roam:rate Ar rate 1592Set the threshold for controlling roaming when operating in a BSS. 1593The 1594.Ar rate 1595parameter specifies the transmit rate in megabits 1596at which roaming should be considered. 1597If the current transmit rate drops below this setting and background scanning 1598is enabled, then the system will check if a more desirable access point is 1599available and switch over to it. 1600The current scan cache contents are used if they are considered 1601valid according to the 1602.Cm scanvalid 1603parameter; otherwise a background scan operation is triggered before 1604any selection occurs. 1605Each channel type has a separate rate threshold; the default values are: 160612 Mb/s (11a), 2 Mb/s (11b), 2 Mb/s (11g), MCS 1 (11na, 11ng). 1607.It Cm roam:rssi Ar rssi 1608Set the threshold for controlling roaming when operating in a BSS. 1609The 1610.Ar rssi 1611parameter specifies the receive signal strength in dBm units 1612at which roaming should be considered. 1613If the current rssi drops below this setting and background scanning 1614is enabled, then the system will check if a more desirable access point is 1615available and switch over to it. 1616The current scan cache contents are used if they are considered 1617valid according to the 1618.Cm scanvalid 1619parameter; otherwise a background scan operation is triggered before 1620any selection occurs. 1621Each channel type has a separate rssi threshold; the default values are 1622all 7 dBm. 1623.It Cm roaming Ar mode 1624When operating as a station, control how the system will 1625behave when communication with the current access point 1626is broken. 1627The 1628.Ar mode 1629argument may be one of 1630.Cm device 1631(leave it to the hardware device to decide), 1632.Cm auto 1633(handle either in the device or the operating system\[em]as appropriate), 1634.Cm manual 1635(do nothing until explicitly instructed). 1636By default, the device is left to handle this if it is 1637capable; otherwise, the operating system will automatically 1638attempt to reestablish communication. 1639Manual mode is used by applications such as 1640.Xr wpa_supplicant 8 1641that want to control the selection of an access point. 1642.It Cm rtsthreshold Ar length 1643Set the threshold for which 1644transmitted frames are preceded by transmission of an 1645RTS 1646control frame. 1647The 1648.Ar length 1649argument 1650is the frame size in bytes and must be in the range 1 to 2346. 1651Setting 1652.Ar length 1653to 1654.Li 2346 , 1655.Cm any , 1656or 1657.Cm - 1658disables transmission of RTS frames. 1659Not all adapters support setting the RTS threshold. 1660.It Cm scan 1661Initiate a scan of neighboring stations, wait for it to complete, and 1662display all stations found. 1663Only the super-user can initiate a scan. 1664See 1665.Cm list scan 1666for information on the display. 1667By default a background scan is done; otherwise a foreground 1668scan is done and the station may roam to a different access point. 1669The 1670.Cm list scan 1671request can be used to show recent scan results without 1672initiating a new scan. 1673.It Cm scanvalid Ar threshold 1674Set the maximum time the scan cache contents are considered valid; 1675i.e., will be used without first triggering a scan operation to 1676refresh the data. 1677The 1678.Ar threshold 1679parameter is specified in seconds and defaults to 60 seconds. 1680The minimum setting for 1681.Ar threshold 1682is 10 seconds. 1683One should take care setting this threshold; if it is set too low 1684then attempts to roam to another access point may trigger unnecessary 1685background scan operations. 1686.It Cm shortgi 1687Enable use of Short Guard Interval when operating in 802.11n 1688on an HT channel. 1689NB: this currently enables Short GI on both HT40 and HT20 channels. 1690To disable Short GI use 1691.Fl shortgi . 1692.It Cm smps 1693Enable use of Static Spatial Multiplexing Power Save (SMPS) 1694when operating in 802.11n. 1695A station operating with Static SMPS maintains only a single 1696receive chain active (this can significantly reduce power consumption). 1697To disable SMPS use 1698.Fl smps . 1699.It Cm smpsdyn 1700Enable use of Dynamic Spatial Multiplexing Power Save (SMPS) 1701when operating in 802.11n. 1702A station operating with Dynamic SMPS maintains only a single 1703receive chain active but switches to multiple receive chains when it 1704receives an RTS frame (this can significantly reduce power consumption). 1705Note that stations cannot distinguish between RTS/CTS intended to 1706enable multiple receive chains and those used for other purposes. 1707To disable SMPS use 1708.Fl smps . 1709.It Cm ssid Ar ssid 1710Set the desired Service Set Identifier (aka network name). 1711The SSID is a string up to 32 characters 1712in length and may be specified as either a normal string or in 1713hexadecimal when preceded by 1714.Ql 0x . 1715Additionally, the SSID may be cleared by setting it to 1716.Ql - . 1717.It Cm tdmaslot Ar slot 1718When operating with TDMA, use the specified 1719.Ar slot 1720configuration. 1721The 1722.Ar slot 1723is a number between 0 and the maximum number of slots in the BSS. 1724Note that a station configured as slot 0 is a master and 1725will broadcast beacon frames advertising the BSS; 1726stations configured to use other slots will always 1727scan to locate a master before they ever transmit. 1728By default 1729.Cm tdmaslot 1730is set to 1. 1731.It Cm tdmaslotcnt Ar cnt 1732When operating with TDMA, setup a BSS with 1733.Ar cnt 1734slots. 1735The slot count may be at most 8. 1736The current implementation is only tested with two stations 1737(i.e., point to point applications). 1738This setting is only meaningful when a station is configured as slot 0; 1739other stations adopt this setting from the BSS they join. 1740By default 1741.Cm tdmaslotcnt 1742is set to 2. 1743.It Cm tdmaslotlen Ar len 1744When operating with TDMA, setup a BSS such that each station has a slot 1745.Ar len 1746microseconds long. 1747The slot length must be at least 150 microseconds (1/8 TU) 1748and no more than 65 milliseconds. 1749Note that setting too small a slot length may result in poor channel 1750bandwidth utilization due to factors such as timer granularity and 1751guard time. 1752This setting is only meaningful when a station is configured as slot 0; 1753other stations adopt this setting from the BSS they join. 1754By default 1755.Cm tdmaslotlen 1756is set to 10 milliseconds. 1757.It Cm tdmabintval Ar intval 1758When operating with TDMA, setup a BSS such that beacons are transmitted every 1759.Ar intval 1760superframes to synchronize the TDMA slot timing. 1761A superframe is defined as the number of slots times the slot length; e.g., 1762a BSS with two slots of 10 milliseconds has a 20 millisecond superframe. 1763The beacon interval may not be zero. 1764A lower setting of 1765.Cm tdmabintval 1766causes the timers to be resynchronized more often; this can be help if 1767significant timer drift is observed. 1768By default 1769.Cm tdmabintval 1770is set to 5. 1771.It Cm tsn 1772When operating as an access point with WPA/802.11i allow legacy 1773stations to associate using static key WEP and open authentication. 1774To disallow legacy station use of WEP, use 1775.Fl tsn . 1776.It Cm txpower Ar power 1777Set the power used to transmit frames. 1778The 1779.Ar power 1780argument is specified in .5 dBm units. 1781Out of range values are truncated. 1782Typically only a few discreet power settings are available and 1783the driver will use the setting closest to the specified value. 1784Not all adapters support changing the transmit power. 1785.It Cm ucastrate Ar rate 1786Set a fixed rate for transmitting unicast frames. 1787Rates are specified as megabits/second in decimal; e.g.,\& 5.5 for 5.5 Mb/s. 1788This rate should be valid for the current operating conditions; 1789if an invalid rate is specified drivers are free to chose an 1790appropriate rate. 1791.It Cm wepmode Ar mode 1792Set the desired WEP mode. 1793Not all adapters support all modes. 1794The set of valid modes is 1795.Cm off , on , 1796and 1797.Cm mixed . 1798The 1799.Cm mixed 1800mode explicitly tells the adaptor to allow association with access 1801points which allow both encrypted and unencrypted traffic. 1802On these adapters, 1803.Cm on 1804means that the access point must only allow encrypted connections. 1805On other adapters, 1806.Cm on 1807is generally another name for 1808.Cm mixed . 1809Modes are case insensitive. 1810.It Cm weptxkey Ar index 1811Set the WEP key to be used for transmission. 1812This is the same as setting the default transmission key with 1813.Cm deftxkey . 1814.It Cm wepkey Ar key Ns | Ns Ar index : Ns Ar key 1815Set the selected WEP key. 1816If an 1817.Ar index 1818is not given, key 1 is set. 1819A WEP key will be either 5 or 13 1820characters (40 or 104 bits) depending on the local network and the 1821capabilities of the adaptor. 1822It may be specified either as a plain 1823string or as a string of hexadecimal digits preceded by 1824.Ql 0x . 1825For maximum portability, hex keys are recommended; 1826the mapping of text keys to WEP encryption is usually driver-specific. 1827In particular, the 1828.Tn Windows 1829drivers do this mapping differently to 1830.Fx . 1831A key may be cleared by setting it to 1832.Ql - . 1833If WEP is supported then there are at least four keys. 1834Some adapters support more than four keys. 1835If that is the case, then the first four keys 1836(1-4) will be the standard temporary keys and any others will be adaptor 1837specific keys such as permanent keys stored in NVRAM. 1838.Pp 1839Note that you must set a default transmit key with 1840.Cm deftxkey 1841for the system to know which key to use in encrypting outbound traffic. 1842.It Cm wme 1843Enable Wireless Multimedia Extensions (WME) support, if available, 1844for the specified interface. 1845WME is a subset of the IEEE 802.11e standard to support the 1846efficient communication of realtime and multimedia data. 1847To disable WME support, use 1848.Fl wme . 1849Another name for this parameter is 1850.Cm wmm . 1851.Pp 1852The following parameters are meaningful only when WME support is in use. 1853Parameters are specified per-AC (Access Category) and 1854split into those that are used by a station when acting 1855as an access point and those for client stations in the BSS. 1856The latter are received from the access point and may not be changed 1857(at the station). 1858The following Access Categories are recognized: 1859.Pp 1860.Bl -tag -width ".Cm AC_BK" -compact 1861.It Cm AC_BE 1862(or 1863.Cm BE ) 1864best effort delivery, 1865.It Cm AC_BK 1866(or 1867.Cm BK ) 1868background traffic, 1869.It Cm AC_VI 1870(or 1871.Cm VI ) 1872video traffic, 1873.It Cm AC_VO 1874(or 1875.Cm VO ) 1876voice traffic. 1877.El 1878.Pp 1879AC parameters are case-insensitive. 1880Traffic classification is done in the operating system using the 1881vlan priority associated with data frames or the 1882ToS (Type of Service) indication in IP-encapsulated frames. 1883If neither information is present, traffic is assigned to the 1884Best Effort (BE) category. 1885.Bl -tag -width indent 1886.It Cm ack Ar ac 1887Set the ACK policy for QoS transmissions by the local station; 1888this controls whether or not data frames transmitted by a station 1889require an ACK response from the receiving station. 1890To disable waiting for an ACK use 1891.Fl ack . 1892This parameter is applied only to the local station. 1893.It Cm acm Ar ac 1894Enable the Admission Control Mandatory (ACM) mechanism 1895for transmissions by the local station. 1896To disable the ACM use 1897.Fl acm . 1898On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates 1899the setting received from the access point. 1900NB: ACM is not supported right now. 1901.It Cm aifs Ar ac Ar count 1902Set the Arbitration Inter Frame Spacing (AIFS) 1903channel access parameter to use for transmissions 1904by the local station. 1905On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates 1906the setting received from the access point. 1907.It Cm cwmin Ar ac Ar count 1908Set the CWmin channel access parameter to use for transmissions 1909by the local station. 1910On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates 1911the setting received from the access point. 1912.It Cm cwmax Ar ac Ar count 1913Set the CWmax channel access parameter to use for transmissions 1914by the local station. 1915On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates 1916the setting received from the access point. 1917.It Cm txoplimit Ar ac Ar limit 1918Set the Transmission Opportunity Limit channel access parameter 1919to use for transmissions by the local station. 1920This parameter defines an interval of time when a WME station 1921has the right to initiate transmissions onto the wireless medium. 1922On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates 1923the setting received from the access point. 1924.It Cm bss:aifs Ar ac Ar count 1925Set the AIFS channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS. 1926This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode. 1927.It Cm bss:cwmin Ar ac Ar count 1928Set the CWmin channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS. 1929This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode. 1930.It Cm bss:cwmax Ar ac Ar count 1931Set the CWmax channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS. 1932This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode. 1933.It Cm bss:txoplimit Ar ac Ar limit 1934Set the TxOpLimit channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS. 1935This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode. 1936.El 1937.It Cm wps 1938Enable Wireless Privacy Subscriber support. 1939Note that WPS support requires a WPS-capable supplicant. 1940To disable this function use 1941.Fl wps . 1942.El 1943.Pp 1944The following parameters support an optional access control list 1945feature available with some adapters when operating in ap mode; see 1946.Xr wlan_acl 4 . 1947This facility allows an access point to accept/deny association 1948requests based on the MAC address of the station. 1949Note that this feature does not significantly enhance security 1950as MAC address spoofing is easy to do. 1951.Bl -tag -width indent 1952.It Cm mac:add Ar address 1953Add the specified MAC address to the database. 1954Depending on the policy setting association requests from the 1955specified station will be allowed or denied. 1956.It Cm mac:allow 1957Set the ACL policy to permit association only by 1958stations registered in the database. 1959.It Cm mac:del Ar address 1960Delete the specified MAC address from the database. 1961.It Cm mac:deny 1962Set the ACL policy to deny association only by 1963stations registered in the database. 1964.It Cm mac:kick Ar address 1965Force the specified station to be deauthenticated. 1966This typically is done to block a station after updating the 1967address database. 1968.It Cm mac:open 1969Set the ACL policy to allow all stations to associate. 1970.It Cm mac:flush 1971Delete all entries in the database. 1972.It Cm mac:radius 1973Set the ACL policy to permit association only by 1974stations approved by a RADIUS server. 1975Note that this feature requires the 1976.Xr hostapd 8 1977program be configured to do the right thing 1978as it handles the RADIUS processing 1979(and marks stations as authorized). 1980.El 1981.Pp 1982The following parameters are related to a wireless interface operating in mesh 1983mode: 1984.Bl -tag -width indent 1985.It Cm meshid Ar meshid 1986Set the desired Mesh Identifier. 1987The Mesh ID is a string up to 32 characters in length. 1988A mesh interface must have a Mesh Identifier specified 1989to reach an operational state. 1990.It Cm meshttl Ar ttl 1991Set the desired ``time to live'' for mesh forwarded packets; 1992this is the number of hops a packet may be forwarded before 1993it is discarded. 1994The default setting for 1995.Cm meshttl 1996is 31. 1997.It Cm meshpeering 1998Enable or disable peering with neighbor mesh stations. 1999Stations must peer before any data packets can be exchanged. 2000By default 2001.Cm meshpeering 2002is enabled. 2003.It Cm meshforward 2004Enable or disable forwarding packets by a mesh interface. 2005By default 2006.Cm meshforward 2007is enabled. 2008.It Cm meshgate 2009This attribute specifies whether or not the mesh STA activates mesh gate 2010announcements. 2011By default 2012.Cm meshgate 2013is disabled. 2014.It Cm meshmetric Ar protocol 2015Set the specified 2016.Ar protocol 2017as the link metric protocol used on a mesh network. 2018The default protocol is called 2019.Ar AIRTIME . 2020The mesh interface will restart after changing this setting. 2021.It Cm meshpath Ar protocol 2022Set the specified 2023.Ar protocol 2024as the path selection protocol used on a mesh network. 2025The only available protocol at the moment is called 2026.Ar HWMP 2027(Hybrid Wireless Mesh Protocol). 2028The mesh interface will restart after changing this setting. 2029.It Cm hwmprootmode Ar mode 2030Stations on a mesh network can operate as ``root nodes.'' 2031Root nodes try to find paths to all mesh nodes and advertise themselves 2032regularly. 2033When there is a root mesh node on a network, other mesh nodes can setup 2034paths between themselves faster because they can use the root node 2035to find the destination. 2036This path may not be the best, but on-demand 2037routing will eventually find the best path. 2038The following modes are recognized: 2039.Pp 2040.Bl -tag -width ".Cm PROACTIVE" -compact 2041.It Cm DISABLED 2042Disable root mode. 2043.It Cm NORMAL 2044Send broadcast path requests every two seconds. 2045Nodes on the mesh without a path to this root mesh station with try to 2046discover a path to us. 2047.It Cm PROACTIVE 2048Send broadcast path requests every two seconds and every node must reply 2049with a path reply even if it already has a path to this root mesh station. 2050.It Cm RANN 2051Send broadcast root announcement (RANN) frames. 2052Nodes on the mesh without a path to this root mesh station with try to 2053discover a path to us. 2054.El 2055By default 2056.Cm hwmprootmode 2057is set to 2058.Ar DISABLED . 2059.It Cm hwmpmaxhops Ar cnt 2060Set the maximum number of hops allowed in an HMWP path to 2061.Ar cnt . 2062The default setting for 2063.Cm hwmpmaxhops 2064is 31. 2065.El 2066.Pp 2067The following parameters are for compatibility with other systems: 2068.Bl -tag -width indent 2069.It Cm nwid Ar ssid 2070Another name for the 2071.Cm ssid 2072parameter. 2073Included for 2074.Nx 2075compatibility. 2076.It Cm stationname Ar name 2077Set the name of this station. 2078The station name is not part of the IEEE 802.11 2079protocol though some interfaces support it. 2080As such it only 2081seems to be meaningful to identical or virtually identical equipment. 2082Setting the station name is identical in syntax to setting the SSID. 2083One can also use 2084.Cm station 2085for 2086.Bsx 2087compatibility. 2088.It Cm wep 2089Another way of saying 2090.Cm wepmode on . 2091Included for 2092.Bsx 2093compatibility. 2094.It Fl wep 2095Another way of saying 2096.Cm wepmode off . 2097Included for 2098.Bsx 2099compatibility. 2100.It Cm nwkey key 2101Another way of saying: 2102.Dq Li "wepmode on weptxkey 1 wepkey 1:key wepkey 2:- wepkey 3:- wepkey 4:-" . 2103Included for 2104.Nx 2105compatibility. 2106.It Cm nwkey Xo 2107.Sm off 2108.Ar n : k1 , k2 , k3 , k4 2109.Sm on 2110.Xc 2111Another way of saying 2112.Dq Li "wepmode on weptxkey n wepkey 1:k1 wepkey 2:k2 wepkey 3:k3 wepkey 4:k4" . 2113Included for 2114.Nx 2115compatibility. 2116.It Fl nwkey 2117Another way of saying 2118.Cm wepmode off . 2119Included for 2120.Nx 2121compatibility. 2122.El 2123.Pp 2124The following parameters are specific to bridge interfaces: 2125.Bl -tag -width indent 2126.It Cm addm Ar interface 2127Add the interface named by 2128.Ar interface 2129as a member of the bridge. 2130The interface is put into promiscuous mode 2131so that it can receive every packet sent on the network. 2132.It Cm deletem Ar interface 2133Remove the interface named by 2134.Ar interface 2135from the bridge. 2136Promiscuous mode is disabled on the interface when 2137it is removed from the bridge. 2138.It Cm maxaddr Ar size 2139Set the size of the bridge address cache to 2140.Ar size . 2141The default is 2000 entries. 2142.It Cm timeout Ar seconds 2143Set the timeout of address cache entries to 2144.Ar seconds 2145seconds. 2146If 2147.Ar seconds 2148is zero, then address cache entries will not be expired. 2149The default is 1200 seconds. 2150.It Cm addr 2151Display the addresses that have been learned by the bridge. 2152.It Cm static Ar interface-name Ar address 2153Add a static entry into the address cache pointing to 2154.Ar interface-name . 2155Static entries are never aged out of the cache or re-placed, even if the 2156address is seen on a different interface. 2157.It Cm deladdr Ar address 2158Delete 2159.Ar address 2160from the address cache. 2161.It Cm flush 2162Delete all dynamically-learned addresses from the address cache. 2163.It Cm flushall 2164Delete all addresses, including static addresses, from the address cache. 2165.It Cm discover Ar interface 2166Mark an interface as a 2167.Dq discovering 2168interface. 2169When the bridge has no address cache entry 2170(either dynamic or static) 2171for the destination address of a packet, 2172the bridge will forward the packet to all 2173member interfaces marked as 2174.Dq discovering . 2175This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge. 2176.It Cm -discover Ar interface 2177Clear the 2178.Dq discovering 2179attribute on a member interface. 2180For packets without the 2181.Dq discovering 2182attribute, the only packets forwarded on the interface are broadcast 2183or multicast packets and packets for which the destination address 2184is known to be on the interface's segment. 2185.It Cm learn Ar interface 2186Mark an interface as a 2187.Dq learning 2188interface. 2189When a packet arrives on such an interface, the source 2190address of the packet is entered into the address cache as being a 2191destination address on the interface's segment. 2192This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge. 2193.It Cm -learn Ar interface 2194Clear the 2195.Dq learning 2196attribute on a member interface. 2197.It Cm sticky Ar interface 2198Mark an interface as a 2199.Dq sticky 2200interface. 2201Dynamically learned address entries are treated at static once entered into 2202the cache. 2203Sticky entries are never aged out of the cache or replaced, even if the 2204address is seen on a different interface. 2205.It Cm -sticky Ar interface 2206Clear the 2207.Dq sticky 2208attribute on a member interface. 2209.It Cm private Ar interface 2210Mark an interface as a 2211.Dq private 2212interface. 2213A private interface does not forward any traffic to any other port that is also 2214a private interface. 2215.It Cm -private Ar interface 2216Clear the 2217.Dq private 2218attribute on a member interface. 2219.It Cm span Ar interface 2220Add the interface named by 2221.Ar interface 2222as a span port on the bridge. 2223Span ports transmit a copy of every frame received by the bridge. 2224This is most useful for snooping a bridged network passively on 2225another host connected to one of the span ports of the bridge. 2226.It Cm -span Ar interface 2227Delete the interface named by 2228.Ar interface 2229from the list of span ports of the bridge. 2230.It Cm stp Ar interface 2231Enable Spanning Tree protocol on 2232.Ar interface . 2233The 2234.Xr if_bridge 4 2235driver has support for the IEEE 802.1D Spanning Tree protocol (STP). 2236Spanning Tree is used to detect and remove loops in a network topology. 2237.It Cm -stp Ar interface 2238Disable Spanning Tree protocol on 2239.Ar interface . 2240This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge. 2241.It Cm edge Ar interface 2242Set 2243.Ar interface 2244as an edge port. 2245An edge port connects directly to end stations cannot create bridging 2246loops in the network, this allows it to transition straight to forwarding. 2247.It Cm -edge Ar interface 2248Disable edge status on 2249.Ar interface . 2250.It Cm autoedge Ar interface 2251Allow 2252.Ar interface 2253to automatically detect edge status. 2254This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge. 2255.It Cm -autoedge Ar interface 2256Disable automatic edge status on 2257.Ar interface . 2258.It Cm ptp Ar interface 2259Set the 2260.Ar interface 2261as a point to point link. 2262This is required for straight transitions to forwarding and 2263should be enabled on a direct link to another RSTP capable switch. 2264.It Cm -ptp Ar interface 2265Disable point to point link status on 2266.Ar interface . 2267This should be disabled for a half duplex link and for an interface 2268connected to a shared network segment, 2269like a hub or a wireless network. 2270.It Cm autoptp Ar interface 2271Automatically detect the point to point status on 2272.Ar interface 2273by checking the full duplex link status. 2274This is the default for interfaces added to the bridge. 2275.It Cm -autoptp Ar interface 2276Disable automatic point to point link detection on 2277.Ar interface . 2278.It Cm maxage Ar seconds 2279Set the time that a Spanning Tree protocol configuration is valid. 2280The default is 20 seconds. 2281The minimum is 6 seconds and the maximum is 40 seconds. 2282.It Cm fwddelay Ar seconds 2283Set the time that must pass before an interface begins forwarding 2284packets when Spanning Tree is enabled. 2285The default is 15 seconds. 2286The minimum is 4 seconds and the maximum is 30 seconds. 2287.It Cm hellotime Ar seconds 2288Set the time between broadcasting of Spanning Tree protocol 2289configuration messages. 2290The hello time may only be changed when operating in legacy stp mode. 2291The default is 2 seconds. 2292The minimum is 1 second and the maximum is 2 seconds. 2293.It Cm priority Ar value 2294Set the bridge priority for Spanning Tree. 2295The default is 32768. 2296The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 61440. 2297.It Cm proto Ar value 2298Set the Spanning Tree protocol. 2299The default is rstp. 2300The available options are stp and rstp. 2301.It Cm holdcnt Ar value 2302Set the transmit hold count for Spanning Tree. 2303This is the number of packets transmitted before being rate limited. 2304The default is 6. 2305The minimum is 1 and the maximum is 10. 2306.It Cm ifpriority Ar interface Ar value 2307Set the Spanning Tree priority of 2308.Ar interface 2309to 2310.Ar value . 2311The default is 128. 2312The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 240. 2313.It Cm ifpathcost Ar interface Ar value 2314Set the Spanning Tree path cost of 2315.Ar interface 2316to 2317.Ar value . 2318The default is calculated from the link speed. 2319To change a previously selected path cost back to automatic, set the 2320cost to 0. 2321The minimum is 1 and the maximum is 200000000. 2322.It Cm ifmaxaddr Ar interface Ar size 2323Set the maximum number of hosts allowed from an interface, packets with unknown 2324source addresses are dropped until an existing host cache entry expires or is 2325removed. 2326Set to 0 to disable. 2327.El 2328.Pp 2329The following parameters are specific to lagg interfaces: 2330.Bl -tag -width indent 2331.It Cm laggport Ar interface 2332Add the interface named by 2333.Ar interface 2334as a port of the aggregation interface. 2335.It Cm -laggport Ar interface 2336Remove the interface named by 2337.Ar interface 2338from the aggregation interface. 2339.It Cm laggproto Ar proto 2340Set the aggregation protocol. 2341The default is failover. 2342The available options are failover, fec, lacp, loadbalance, roundrobin and 2343none. 2344.It Cm lagghash Ar option Ns Oo , Ns Ar option Oc 2345Set the packet layers to hash for aggregation protocols which load balance. 2346The default is 2347.Dq l2,l3,l4 . 2348The options can be combined using commas. 2349.Pp 2350.Bl -tag -width ".Cm l2" -compact 2351.It Cm l2 2352src/dst mac address and optional vlan number. 2353.It Cm l3 2354src/dst address for IPv4 or IPv6. 2355.It Cm l4 2356src/dst port for TCP/UDP/SCTP. 2357.El 2358.Pp 2359.El 2360.Pp 2361The following parameters are specific to IP tunnel interfaces, 2362.Xr gif 4 : 2363.Bl -tag -width indent 2364.It Cm tunnel Ar src_addr dest_addr 2365Configure the physical source and destination address for IP tunnel 2366interfaces. 2367The arguments 2368.Ar src_addr 2369and 2370.Ar dest_addr 2371are interpreted as the outer source/destination for the encapsulating 2372IPv4/IPv6 header. 2373.It Fl tunnel 2374Unconfigure the physical source and destination address for IP tunnel 2375interfaces previously configured with 2376.Cm tunnel . 2377.It Cm deletetunnel 2378Another name for the 2379.Fl tunnel 2380parameter. 2381.It Cm accept_rev_ethip_ver 2382Set a flag to accept both correct EtherIP packets and ones 2383with reversed version field. Enabled by default. 2384This is for backward compatibility with 2385.Fx 6.1 , 23866.2, 6.3, 7.0, and 7.1. 2387.It Cm -accept_rev_ethip_ver 2388Clear a flag 2389.Cm accept_rev_ethip_ver . 2390.It Cm send_rev_ethip_ver 2391Set a flag to send EtherIP packets with reversed version 2392field intentionally. Disabled by default. 2393This is for backward compatibility with 2394.Fx 6.1 , 23956.2, 6.3, 7.0, and 7.1. 2396.It Cm -send_rev_ethip_ver 2397Clear a flag 2398.Cm send_rev_ethip_ver . 2399.El 2400.Pp 2401The following parameters are specific to GRE tunnel interfaces, 2402.Xr gre 4 : 2403.Bl -tag -width indent 2404.It Cm grekey Ar key 2405Configure the GRE key to be used for outgoing packets. 2406Note that 2407.Xr gre 4 will always accept GRE packets with invalid or absent keys. 2408This command will result in a four byte MTU reduction on the interface. 2409.El 2410.Pp 2411The following parameters are specific to 2412.Xr pfsync 4 2413interfaces: 2414.Bl -tag -width indent 2415.It Cm syncdev Ar iface 2416Use the specified interface 2417to send and receive pfsync state synchronisation messages. 2418.It Fl syncdev 2419Stop sending pfsync state synchronisation messages over the network. 2420.It Cm syncpeer Ar peer_address 2421Make the pfsync link point-to-point rather than using 2422multicast to broadcast the state synchronisation messages. 2423The peer_address is the IP address of the other host taking part in 2424the pfsync cluster. 2425.It Fl syncpeer 2426Broadcast the packets using multicast. 2427.It Cm maxupd Ar n 2428Set the maximum number of updates for a single state which 2429can be collapsed into one. 2430This is an 8-bit number; the default value is 128. 2431.It Cm defer 2432Defer transmission of the first packet in a state until a peer has 2433acknowledged that the associated state has been inserted. 2434.It Fl defer 2435Do not defer the first packet in a state. 2436This is the default. 2437.El 2438.Pp 2439The following parameters are specific to 2440.Xr vlan 4 2441interfaces: 2442.Bl -tag -width indent 2443.It Cm vlan Ar vlan_tag 2444Set the VLAN tag value to 2445.Ar vlan_tag . 2446This value is a 12-bit VLAN Identifier (VID) which is used to create an 802.1Q 2447VLAN header for packets sent from the 2448.Xr vlan 4 2449interface. 2450Note that 2451.Cm vlan 2452and 2453.Cm vlandev 2454must both be set at the same time. 2455.It Cm vlandev Ar iface 2456Associate the physical interface 2457.Ar iface 2458with a 2459.Xr vlan 4 2460interface. 2461Packets transmitted through the 2462.Xr vlan 4 2463interface will be 2464diverted to the specified physical interface 2465.Ar iface 2466with 802.1Q VLAN encapsulation. 2467Packets with 802.1Q encapsulation received 2468by the parent interface with the correct VLAN Identifier will be diverted to 2469the associated 2470.Xr vlan 4 2471pseudo-interface. 2472The 2473.Xr vlan 4 2474interface is assigned a 2475copy of the parent interface's flags and the parent's ethernet address. 2476The 2477.Cm vlandev 2478and 2479.Cm vlan 2480must both be set at the same time. 2481If the 2482.Xr vlan 4 2483interface already has 2484a physical interface associated with it, this command will fail. 2485To 2486change the association to another physical interface, the existing 2487association must be cleared first. 2488.Pp 2489Note: if the hardware tagging capability 2490is set on the parent interface, the 2491.Xr vlan 4 2492pseudo 2493interface's behavior changes: 2494the 2495.Xr vlan 4 2496interface recognizes that the 2497parent interface supports insertion and extraction of VLAN tags on its 2498own (usually in firmware) and that it should pass packets to and from 2499the parent unaltered. 2500.It Fl vlandev Op Ar iface 2501If the driver is a 2502.Xr vlan 4 2503pseudo device, disassociate the parent interface from it. 2504This breaks the link between the 2505.Xr vlan 4 2506interface and its parent, 2507clears its VLAN Identifier, flags and its link address and shuts the interface 2508down. 2509The 2510.Ar iface 2511argument is useless and hence deprecated. 2512.El 2513.Pp 2514The following parameters are used to configure 2515.Xr carp 4 2516protocol on an interface: 2517.Bl -tag -width indent 2518.It Cm vhid Ar n 2519Set the virtual host ID. 2520This is a required setting to initiate 2521.Xr carp 4 . 2522If the virtual host ID does not exist yet, it is created and attached to the 2523interface, otherwise configuration of an existing vhid is adjusted. 2524If the 2525.Cm vhid 2526keyword is supplied along with an 2527.Dq inet6 2528or 2529.Dq inet 2530address, then this address is configured to be run under control of the 2531specified vhid. 2532Whenever a last address that refers to a particular vhid is removed from an 2533interface, the vhid is automatically removed from interface and destroyed. 2534Any other configuration parameters for the 2535.Xr carp 4 2536protocol should be supplied along with the 2537.Cm vhid 2538keyword. 2539Acceptable values for vhid are 1 to 255. 2540.It Cm advbase Ar seconds 2541Specifies the base of the advertisement interval in seconds. 2542The acceptable values are 1 to 255. 2543The default value is 1. 2544.It Cm advskew Ar interval 2545Specifies the skew to add to the base advertisement interval to 2546make one host advertise slower than another host. 2547It is specified in 1/256 of seconds. 2548The acceptable values are 1 to 254. 2549The default value is 0. 2550.It Cm pass Ar phrase 2551Set the authentication key to 2552.Ar phrase . 2553.It Cm state Ar MASTER|BACKUP 2554Forcibly change state of a given vhid. 2555.El 2556.Pp 2557The 2558.Nm 2559utility displays the current configuration for a network interface 2560when no optional parameters are supplied. 2561If a protocol family is specified, 2562.Nm 2563will report only the details specific to that protocol family. 2564.Pp 2565If the 2566.Fl m 2567flag is passed before an interface name, 2568.Nm 2569will display the capability list and all 2570of the supported media for the specified interface. 2571If 2572.Fl L 2573flag is supplied, address lifetime is displayed for IPv6 addresses, 2574as time offset string. 2575.Pp 2576Optionally, the 2577.Fl a 2578flag may be used instead of an interface name. 2579This flag instructs 2580.Nm 2581to display information about all interfaces in the system. 2582The 2583.Fl d 2584flag limits this to interfaces that are down, and 2585.Fl u 2586limits this to interfaces that are up. 2587When no arguments are given, 2588.Fl a 2589is implied. 2590.Pp 2591The 2592.Fl l 2593flag may be used to list all available interfaces on the system, with 2594no other additional information. 2595Use of this flag is mutually exclusive 2596with all other flags and commands, except for 2597.Fl d 2598(only list interfaces that are down) 2599and 2600.Fl u 2601(only list interfaces that are up). 2602.Pp 2603The 2604.Fl v 2605flag may be used to get more verbose status for an interface. 2606.Pp 2607The 2608.Fl C 2609flag may be used to list all of the interface cloners available on 2610the system, with no additional information. 2611Use of this flag is mutually exclusive with all other flags and commands. 2612.Pp 2613The 2614.Fl k 2615flag causes keying information for the interface, if available, to be 2616printed. 2617For example, the values of 802.11 WEP keys and 2618.Xr carp 4 2619passphrases will be printed, if accessible to the current user. 2620This information is not printed by default, as it may be considered 2621sensitive. 2622.Pp 2623If the network interface driver is not present in the kernel then 2624.Nm 2625will attempt to load it. 2626The 2627.Fl n 2628flag disables this behavior. 2629.Pp 2630Only the super-user may modify the configuration of a network interface. 2631.Sh EXAMPLES 2632Assign the IPv4 address 2633.Li 192.0.2.10 , 2634with a network mask of 2635.Li 255.255.255.0 , 2636to the interface 2637.Li fxp0 : 2638.Dl # ifconfig fxp0 inet 192.0.2.10 netmask 255.255.255.0 2639.Pp 2640Add the IPv4 address 2641.Li 192.0.2.45 , 2642with the CIDR network prefix 2643.Li /28 , 2644to the interface 2645.Li ed0 , 2646using 2647.Cm add 2648as a synonym for the canonical form of the option 2649.Cm alias : 2650.Dl # ifconfig ed0 inet 192.0.2.45/28 add 2651.Pp 2652Remove the IPv4 address 2653.Li 192.0.2.45 2654from the interface 2655.Li ed0 : 2656.Dl # ifconfig ed0 inet 192.0.2.45 -alias 2657.Pp 2658Enable IPv6 functionality of the interface: 2659.Dl # ifconfig em0 inet6 -ifdisabled 2660.Pp 2661Add the IPv6 address 2662.Li 2001:DB8:DBDB::123/48 2663to the interface 2664.Li em0 : 2665.Dl # ifconfig em0 inet6 2001:db8:bdbd::123 prefixlen 48 alias 2666Note that lower case hexadecimal IPv6 addresses are acceptable. 2667.Pp 2668Remove the IPv6 address added in the above example, 2669using the 2670.Li / 2671character as shorthand for the network prefix, 2672and using 2673.Cm delete 2674as a synonym for the canonical form of the option 2675.Fl alias : 2676.Dl # ifconfig em0 inet6 2001:db8:bdbd::123/48 delete 2677.Pp 2678Configure a single CARP redundant address on igb0, and then switch it 2679to be master: 2680.Dl # ifconfig igb0 vhid 1 10.0.0.1/24 pass foobar 2681.Dl # ifconfig igb0 vhid 1 state master 2682.Pp 2683Configure the interface 2684.Li xl0 , 2685to use 100baseTX, full duplex Ethernet media options: 2686.Dl # ifconfig xl0 media 100baseTX mediaopt full-duplex 2687.Pp 2688Label the em0 interface as an uplink: 2689.Dl # ifconfig em0 description \&"Uplink to Gigabit Switch 2\&" 2690.Pp 2691Create the software network interface 2692.Li gif1 : 2693.Dl # ifconfig gif1 create 2694.Pp 2695Destroy the software network interface 2696.Li gif1 : 2697.Dl # ifconfig gif1 destroy 2698.Pp 2699Display available wireless networks using 2700.Li wlan0 : 2701.Dl # ifconfig wlan0 list scan 2702.Sh DIAGNOSTICS 2703Messages indicating the specified interface does not exist, the 2704requested address is unknown, or the user is not privileged and 2705tried to alter an interface's configuration. 2706.Sh SEE ALSO 2707.Xr netstat 1 , 2708.Xr carp 4 , 2709.Xr gif 4 , 2710.Xr netintro 4 , 2711.Xr pfsync 4 , 2712.Xr polling 4 , 2713.Xr vlan 4 , 2714.Xr devd.conf 5 , 2715.\" .Xr eon 5 , 2716.Xr devd 8 , 2717.Xr rc 8 , 2718.Xr routed 8 , 2719.Xr jail 8 , 2720.Xr sysctl 8 2721.Sh HISTORY 2722The 2723.Nm 2724utility appeared in 2725.Bx 4.2 . 2726.Sh BUGS 2727Basic IPv6 node operation requires a link-local address on each 2728interface configured for IPv6. 2729Normally, such an address is automatically configured by the 2730kernel on each interface added to the system or enabled; this behavior may 2731be disabled by setting per-interface flag 2732.Cm -auto_linklocal . 2733The default value of this flag is 1 and can be disabled by using the sysctl 2734MIB variable 2735.Va net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal . 2736.Pp 2737Do not configure IPv6 addresses with no link-local address by using 2738.Nm . 2739It can result in unexpected behaviors of the kernel. 2740