xref: /linux/Documentation/admin-guide/sysctl/net.rst (revision d639d9fa162aadec1ae9980c4dcf6e50bd2f8290)
1================================
2Documentation for /proc/sys/net/
3================================
4
5Copyright
6
7Copyright (c) 1999
8
9	- Terrehon Bowden <terrehon@pacbell.net>
10	- Bodo Bauer <bb@ricochet.net>
11
12Copyright (c) 2000
13
14	- Jorge Nerin <comandante@zaralinux.com>
15
16Copyright (c) 2009
17
18	- Shen Feng <shen@cn.fujitsu.com>
19
20For general info and legal blurb, please look in index.rst.
21
22------------------------------------------------------------------------------
23
24This file contains the documentation for the sysctl files in
25/proc/sys/net
26
27The interface  to  the  networking  parts  of  the  kernel  is  located  in
28/proc/sys/net. The following table shows all possible subdirectories.  You may
29see only some of them, depending on your kernel's configuration.
30
31
32Table : Subdirectories in /proc/sys/net
33
34 ========= =================== = ========== ===================
35 Directory Content               Directory  Content
36 ========= =================== = ========== ===================
37 802       E802 protocol         mptcp      Multipath TCP
38 appletalk Appletalk protocol    netfilter  Network Filter
39 bridge    Bridging              tipc       TIPC
40 core      General parameter     unix       Unix domain sockets
41 ethernet  Ethernet protocol     vsock      VSOCK sockets
42 ipv4      IP version 4          x25        X.25 protocol
43 ipv6      IP version 6
44 ========= =================== = ========== ===================
45
461. /proc/sys/net/core - Network core options
47============================================
48
49bpf_jit_enable
50--------------
51
52This enables the BPF Just in Time (JIT) compiler. BPF is a flexible
53and efficient infrastructure allowing to execute bytecode at various
54hook points. It is used in a number of Linux kernel subsystems such
55as networking (e.g. XDP, tc), tracing (e.g. kprobes, uprobes, tracepoints)
56and security (e.g. seccomp). LLVM has a BPF back end that can compile
57restricted C into a sequence of BPF instructions. After program load
58through bpf(2) and passing a verifier in the kernel, a JIT will then
59translate these BPF proglets into native CPU instructions. There are
60two flavors of JITs, the newer eBPF JIT currently supported on:
61
62  - x86_64
63  - x86_32
64  - arm64
65  - arm32
66  - ppc64
67  - ppc32
68  - sparc64
69  - mips64
70  - s390x
71  - riscv64
72  - riscv32
73  - loongarch64
74  - arc
75
76And the older cBPF JIT supported on the following archs:
77
78  - mips
79  - sparc
80
81eBPF JITs are a superset of cBPF JITs, meaning the kernel will
82migrate cBPF instructions into eBPF instructions and then JIT
83compile them transparently. Older cBPF JITs can only translate
84tcpdump filters, seccomp rules, etc, but not mentioned eBPF
85programs loaded through bpf(2).
86
87Values:
88
89	- 0 - disable the JIT (default value)
90	- 1 - enable the JIT
91	- 2 - enable the JIT and ask the compiler to emit traces on kernel log.
92
93bpf_jit_harden
94--------------
95
96This enables hardening for the BPF JIT compiler. Supported are eBPF
97JIT backends. Enabling hardening trades off performance, but can
98mitigate JIT spraying.
99
100Values:
101
102	- 0 - disable JIT hardening (default value)
103	- 1 - enable JIT hardening for unprivileged users only
104	- 2 - enable JIT hardening for all users
105
106where "privileged user" in this context means a process having
107CAP_BPF or CAP_SYS_ADMIN in the root user name space.
108
109bpf_jit_kallsyms
110----------------
111
112When BPF JIT compiler is enabled, then compiled images are unknown
113addresses to the kernel, meaning they neither show up in traces nor
114in /proc/kallsyms. This enables export of these addresses, which can
115be used for debugging/tracing. If bpf_jit_harden is enabled, this
116feature is disabled.
117
118Values :
119
120	- 0 - disable JIT kallsyms export (default value)
121	- 1 - enable JIT kallsyms export for privileged users only
122
123bpf_jit_limit
124-------------
125
126This enforces a global limit for memory allocations to the BPF JIT
127compiler in order to reject unprivileged JIT requests once it has
128been surpassed. bpf_jit_limit contains the value of the global limit
129in bytes.
130
131dev_weight
132----------
133
134The maximum number of packets that kernel can handle on a NAPI interrupt,
135it's a Per-CPU variable. For drivers that support LRO or GRO_HW, a hardware
136aggregated packet is counted as one packet in this context.
137
138Default: 64
139
140dev_weight_rx_bias
141------------------
142
143RPS (e.g. RFS, aRFS) processing is competing with the registered NAPI poll function
144of the driver for the per softirq cycle netdev_budget. This parameter influences
145the proportion of the configured netdev_budget that is spent on RPS based packet
146processing during RX softirq cycles. It is further meant for making current
147dev_weight adaptable for asymmetric CPU needs on RX/TX side of the network stack.
148(see dev_weight_tx_bias) It is effective on a per CPU basis. Determination is based
149on dev_weight and is calculated multiplicative (dev_weight * dev_weight_rx_bias).
150
151Default: 1
152
153dev_weight_tx_bias
154------------------
155
156Scales the maximum number of packets that can be processed during a TX softirq cycle.
157Effective on a per CPU basis. Allows scaling of current dev_weight for asymmetric
158net stack processing needs. Be careful to avoid making TX softirq processing a CPU hog.
159
160Calculation is based on dev_weight (dev_weight * dev_weight_tx_bias).
161
162Default: 1
163
164default_qdisc
165-------------
166
167The default queuing discipline to use for network devices. This allows
168overriding the default of pfifo_fast with an alternative. Since the default
169queuing discipline is created without additional parameters so is best suited
170to queuing disciplines that work well without configuration like stochastic
171fair queue (sfq), CoDel (codel) or fair queue CoDel (fq_codel). Don't use
172queuing disciplines like Hierarchical Token Bucket or Deficit Round Robin
173which require setting up classes and bandwidths. Note that physical multiqueue
174interfaces still use mq as root qdisc, which in turn uses this default for its
175leaves. Virtual devices (like e.g. lo or veth) ignore this setting and instead
176default to noqueue.
177
178Default: pfifo_fast
179
180busy_read
181---------
182
183Low latency busy poll timeout for socket reads. (needs CONFIG_NET_RX_BUSY_POLL)
184Approximate time in us to busy loop waiting for packets on the device queue.
185This sets the default value of the SO_BUSY_POLL socket option.
186Can be set or overridden per socket by setting socket option SO_BUSY_POLL,
187which is the preferred method of enabling. If you need to enable the feature
188globally via sysctl, a value of 50 is recommended.
189
190Will increase power usage.
191
192Default: 0 (off)
193
194busy_poll
195----------------
196Low latency busy poll timeout for poll and select. (needs CONFIG_NET_RX_BUSY_POLL)
197Approximate time in us to busy loop waiting for events.
198Recommended value depends on the number of sockets you poll on.
199For several sockets 50, for several hundreds 100.
200For more than that you probably want to use epoll.
201Note that only sockets with SO_BUSY_POLL set will be busy polled,
202so you want to either selectively set SO_BUSY_POLL on those sockets or set
203sysctl.net.busy_read globally.
204
205Will increase power usage.
206
207Default: 0 (off)
208
209mem_pcpu_rsv
210------------
211
212Per-cpu reserved forward alloc cache size in page units. Default 1MB per CPU.
213
214bypass_prot_mem
215---------------
216
217Skip charging socket buffers to the global per-protocol memory
218accounting controlled by net.ipv4.tcp_mem, net.ipv4.udp_mem, etc.
219
220Default: 0 (off)
221
222rmem_default
223------------
224
225The default setting of the socket receive buffer in bytes.
226
227rmem_max
228--------
229
230The maximum receive socket buffer size in bytes.
231
232Default: 4194304
233
234rps_default_mask
235----------------
236
237The default RPS CPU mask used on newly created network devices. An empty
238mask means RPS disabled by default.
239
240tstamp_allow_data
241-----------------
242Allow processes to receive tx timestamps looped together with the original
243packet contents. If disabled, transmit timestamp requests from unprivileged
244processes are dropped unless socket option SOF_TIMESTAMPING_OPT_TSONLY is set.
245
246Default: 1 (on)
247
248
249wmem_default
250------------
251
252The default setting (in bytes) of the socket send buffer.
253
254wmem_max
255--------
256
257The maximum send socket buffer size in bytes.
258
259Default: 4194304
260
261message_burst and message_cost
262------------------------------
263
264These parameters  are used to limit the warning messages written to the kernel
265log from  the  networking  code.  They  enforce  a  rate  limit  to  make  a
266denial-of-service attack  impossible. A higher message_cost factor, results in
267fewer messages that will be written. Message_burst controls when messages will
268be dropped.  The  default  settings  limit  warning messages to one every five
269seconds.
270
271warnings
272--------
273
274This sysctl is now unused.
275
276This was used to control console messages from the networking stack that
277occur because of problems on the network like duplicate address or bad
278checksums.
279
280These messages are now emitted at KERN_DEBUG and can generally be enabled
281and controlled by the dynamic_debug facility.
282
283netdev_budget
284-------------
285
286Maximum number of packets taken from all interfaces in one polling cycle (NAPI
287poll). In one polling cycle interfaces which are registered to polling are
288probed in a round-robin manner. Also, a polling cycle may not exceed
289netdev_budget_usecs microseconds, even if netdev_budget has not been
290exhausted.
291
292netdev_budget_usecs
293---------------------
294
295Maximum number of microseconds in one NAPI polling cycle. Polling
296will exit when either netdev_budget_usecs have elapsed during the
297poll cycle or the number of packets processed reaches netdev_budget.
298
299netdev_max_backlog
300------------------
301
302Maximum number of packets, queued on the INPUT side, when the interface
303receives packets faster than kernel can process them.
304
305qdisc_max_burst
306------------------
307
308Maximum number of packets that can be temporarily stored before
309reaching qdisc.
310
311Default: 1000
312
313netdev_rss_key
314--------------
315
316RSS (Receive Side Scaling) enabled drivers use a host key that
317is randomly generated.
318Some user space might need to gather its content even if drivers do not
319provide ethtool -x support yet.
320
321::
322
323  myhost:~# cat /proc/sys/net/core/netdev_rss_key
324  84:50:f4:00:a8:15:d1:a7:e9:7f:1d:60:35:c7:47:25:42:97:74:ca:56:bb:b6:a1:d8: ... (256 bytes total)
325
326File contains all nul bytes if no driver ever called netdev_rss_key_fill()
327function.
328
329Note:
330  /proc/sys/net/core/netdev_rss_key contains 256 bytes of key,
331  but many drivers only use 40 or 52 bytes of it.
332
333::
334
335  myhost:~# ethtool -x eth0
336  RX flow hash indirection table for eth0 with 8 RX ring(s):
337      0:    0     1     2     3     4     5     6     7
338  RSS hash key:
339  84:50:f4:00:a8:15:d1:a7:e9:7f:1d:60:35:c7:47:25:42:97:74:ca:56:bb:b6:a1:d8:43:e3:c9:0c:fd:17:55:c2:3a:4d:69:ed:f1:42:89
340
341netdev_tstamp_prequeue
342----------------------
343
344If set to 0, RX packet timestamps can be sampled after RPS processing, when
345the target CPU processes packets. It might give some delay on timestamps, but
346permit to distribute the load on several cpus.
347
348If set to 1 (default), timestamps are sampled as soon as possible, before
349queueing.
350
351netdev_unregister_timeout_secs
352------------------------------
353
354Unregister network device timeout in seconds.
355This option controls the timeout (in seconds) used to issue a warning while
356waiting for a network device refcount to drop to 0 during device
357unregistration. A lower value may be useful during bisection to detect
358a leaked reference faster. A larger value may be useful to prevent false
359warnings on slow/loaded systems.
360Default value is 10, minimum 1, maximum 3600.
361
362skb_defer_max
363-------------
364
365Max size (in skbs) of the per-cpu list of skbs being freed
366by the cpu which allocated them.
367
368Default: 128
369
370optmem_max
371----------
372
373Maximum ancillary buffer size allowed per socket. Ancillary data is a sequence
374of struct cmsghdr structures with appended data. TCP tx zerocopy also uses
375optmem_max as a limit for its internal structures.
376
377Default : 128 KB
378
379fb_tunnels_only_for_init_net
380----------------------------
381
382Controls if fallback tunnels (like tunl0, gre0, gretap0, erspan0,
383sit0, ip6tnl0, ip6gre0) are automatically created. There are 3 possibilities
384(a) value = 0; respective fallback tunnels are created when module is
385loaded in every net namespaces (backward compatible behavior).
386(b) value = 1; [kcmd value: initns] respective fallback tunnels are
387created only in init net namespace and every other net namespace will
388not have them.
389(c) value = 2; [kcmd value: none] fallback tunnels are not created
390when a module is loaded in any of the net namespace. Setting value to
391"2" is pointless after boot if these modules are built-in, so there is
392a kernel command-line option that can change this default. Please refer to
393Documentation/admin-guide/kernel-parameters.txt for additional details.
394
395Not creating fallback tunnels gives control to userspace to create
396whatever is needed only and avoid creating devices which are redundant.
397
398Default : 0  (for compatibility reasons)
399
400devconf_inherit_init_net
401------------------------
402
403Controls if a new network namespace should inherit all current
404settings under /proc/sys/net/{ipv4,ipv6}/conf/{all,default}/. By
405default, we keep the current behavior: for IPv4 we inherit all current
406settings from init_net and for IPv6 we reset all settings to default.
407
408If set to 1, both IPv4 and IPv6 settings are forced to inherit from
409current ones in init_net. If set to 2, both IPv4 and IPv6 settings are
410forced to reset to their default values. If set to 3, both IPv4 and IPv6
411settings are forced to inherit from current ones in the netns where this
412new netns has been created.
413
414Default : 0  (for compatibility reasons)
415
416txrehash
417--------
418
419Controls default hash rethink behaviour on socket when SO_TXREHASH option is set
420to SOCK_TXREHASH_DEFAULT (i. e. not overridden by setsockopt).
421
422If set to 1 (default), hash rethink is performed on listening socket.
423If set to 0, hash rethink is not performed.
424
425txq_reselection_ms
426------------------
427
428Controls how often (in ms) a busy connected flow can select another tx queue.
429
430A resection is desirable when/if user thread has migrated and XPS
431would select a different queue. Same can occur without XPS
432if the flow hash has changed.
433
434But switching txq can introduce reorders, especially if the
435old queue is under high pressure. Modern TCP stacks deal
436well with reorders if they happen not too often.
437
438To disable this feature, set the value to 0.
439
440Default : 1000
441
442gro_normal_batch
443----------------
444
445Maximum number of the segments to batch up on output of GRO. When a packet
446exits GRO, either as a coalesced superframe or as an original packet which
447GRO has decided not to coalesce, it is placed on a per-NAPI list. This
448list is then passed to the stack when the number of segments reaches the
449gro_normal_batch limit.
450
451high_order_alloc_disable
452------------------------
453
454By default the allocator for page frags tries to use high order pages (order-3
455on x86). While the default behavior gives good results in most cases, some users
456might have hit a contention in page allocations/freeing. This was especially
457true on older kernels (< 5.14) when high-order pages were not stored on per-cpu
458lists. This allows to opt-in for order-0 allocation instead but is now mostly of
459historical importance.
460
461Default: 0
462
4632. /proc/sys/net/unix - Parameters for Unix domain sockets
464----------------------------------------------------------
465
466There is only one file in this directory.
467unix_dgram_qlen limits the max number of datagrams queued in Unix domain
468socket's buffer. It will not take effect unless PF_UNIX flag is specified.
469
470
4713. /proc/sys/net/ipv4 - IPV4 settings
472-------------------------------------
473Please see: Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.rst and
474Documentation/admin-guide/sysctl/net.rst for descriptions of these entries.
475
476
4774. TIPC
478-------
479
480tipc_rmem
481---------
482
483The TIPC protocol now has a tunable for the receive memory, similar to the
484tcp_rmem - i.e. a vector of 3 INTEGERs: (min, default, max)
485
486::
487
488    # cat /proc/sys/net/tipc/tipc_rmem
489    4252725 34021800        68043600
490    #
491
492The max value is set to CONN_OVERLOAD_LIMIT, and the default and min values
493are scaled (shifted) versions of that same value.  Note that the min value
494is not at this point in time used in any meaningful way, but the triplet is
495preserved in order to be consistent with things like tcp_rmem.
496
497named_timeout
498-------------
499
500TIPC name table updates are distributed asynchronously in a cluster, without
501any form of transaction handling. This means that different race scenarios are
502possible. One such is that a name withdrawal sent out by one node and received
503by another node may arrive after a second, overlapping name publication already
504has been accepted from a third node, although the conflicting updates
505originally may have been issued in the correct sequential order.
506If named_timeout is nonzero, failed topology updates will be placed on a defer
507queue until another event arrives that clears the error, or until the timeout
508expires. Value is in milliseconds.
509
5106. /proc/sys/net/vsock - VSOCK sockets
511--------------------------------------
512
513VSOCK sockets (AF_VSOCK) provide communication between virtual machines and
514their hosts. The behavior of VSOCK sockets in a network namespace is determined
515by the namespace's mode (``global`` or ``local``), which controls how CIDs
516(Context IDs) are allocated and how sockets interact across namespaces.
517
518ns_mode
519-------
520
521Read-only. Reports the current namespace's mode, set at namespace creation
522and immutable thereafter.
523
524Values:
525
526	- ``global`` - the namespace shares system-wide CID allocation and
527	  its sockets can reach any VM or socket in any global namespace.
528	  Sockets in this namespace cannot reach sockets in local
529	  namespaces.
530	- ``local`` - the namespace has private CID allocation and its
531	  sockets can only connect to VMs or sockets within the same
532	  namespace.
533
534The init_net mode is always ``global``.
535
536child_ns_mode
537-------------
538
539Controls what mode newly created child namespaces will inherit. At namespace
540creation, ``ns_mode`` is inherited from the parent's ``child_ns_mode``. The
541initial value matches the namespace's own ``ns_mode``.
542
543Values:
544
545	- ``global`` - child namespaces will share system-wide CID allocation
546	  and their sockets will be able to reach any VM or socket in any
547	  global namespace.
548	- ``local`` - child namespaces will have private CID allocation and
549	  their sockets will only be able to connect within their own
550	  namespace.
551
552The first write to ``child_ns_mode`` locks its value. Subsequent writes of the
553same value succeed, but writing a different value returns ``-EBUSY``.
554
555Changing ``child_ns_mode`` only affects namespaces created after the change;
556it does not modify the current namespace or any existing children.
557
558A namespace with ``ns_mode`` set to ``local`` cannot change
559``child_ns_mode`` to ``global`` (returns ``-EPERM``).
560
561g2h_fallback
562------------
563
564Controls whether connections to CIDs not owned by the host-to-guest (H2G)
565transport automatically fall back to the guest-to-host (G2H) transport.
566
567When enabled, if a connect targets a CID that the H2G transport (e.g.
568vhost-vsock) does not serve, or if no H2G transport is loaded at all, the
569connection is routed via the G2H transport (e.g. virtio-vsock) instead. This
570allows a host running both nested VMs (via vhost-vsock) and sibling VMs
571reachable through the hypervisor (e.g. Nitro Enclaves) to address both using
572a single CID space, without requiring applications to set
573``VMADDR_FLAG_TO_HOST``.
574
575When the fallback is taken, ``VMADDR_FLAG_TO_HOST`` is automatically set on
576the remote address so that userspace can determine the path via
577``getpeername()``.
578
579Note: With this sysctl enabled, user space that attempts to talk to a guest
580CID which is not implemented by the H2G transport will create host vsock
581traffic. Environments that rely on H2G-only isolation should set it to 0.
582
583Values:
584
585	- 0 - Connections to CIDs <= 2 or with VMADDR_FLAG_TO_HOST use G2H;
586	  all others use H2G (or fail with ENODEV if H2G is not loaded).
587	- 1 - Connections to CIDs not owned by H2G fall back to G2H. (default)
588