xref: /titanic_51/usr/src/man/man5/ieee802.3.5 (revision 71b4af9b981b0fc179b6c0bab0186b84a2bc2d9c)
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24.Dd "Jan 29, 2016"
25.Dt IEEE802.3 5
26.Os
27.Sh NAME
28.Nm ieee802.3
29.Nd IEEE 802.3 Ethernet parameters and statistics
30.Sh DESCRIPTION
31The IEEE 802.3 standard specifies the details for Ethernet
32networking.  This page describes the various statistics and tunables
33that device drivers supporting Ethernet commonly offer.
34.
35Note that not every device or driver supports every one of these
36values, and many devices offer additional statistics and tunables that
37are specific to that hardware.  See the device driver's documentation
38for those specific details.
39.
40.Lp
41Values that are statistics are visible
42.Xr kstat 1M ,
43whereas properties are visible using the
44.Xr dladm 1M
45.Sy show-linkprop
46subcommand.  Tunables are properties that can be changed using the
47.Xr dladm 1M
48.Sy set-linkprop
49subcommand.  A more useful summary of current operational
50state can be seen with the
51.Xr dladm 1M
52.Sy show-ether
53subcommand.
54.
55.Ss Statistics
56The following statistics are accessible with
57.Xr kstat 1M .
58Note that some statistics are available in both 32- and 64-bit counters,
59in which case the name of the 64 bit statistic will be the same as the
6032-bit, but with
61.Dq Sy 64
62appended.  For example,
63.Sy ipackets64
64is the 64-bit version of the
65.Sy ipackets
66statistic. These are indicated with the special suffix
67.Op Sy 64
68in the table below.
69.
70.Bl -tag -width tx_late_collisions
71.It Sy adv_cap_1000fdx
72Advertises 1000 Mbps full-duplex support.
73.It Sy adv_cap_1000hdx
74Advertises 1000 Mbps half-duplex support.
75.It Sy adv_cap_100fdx
76Advertises 100 Mbps full-duplex support.
77.It Sy adv_cap_100gfdx
78Advertises 100 Gbps support.
79.It Sy adv_cap_100hdx
80Advertises 100 Mbps half-duplex support.
81.It Sy adv_cap_100T4
82Advertises 100BASE-T4 support.
83.It Sy adv_cap_10fdx
84Advertises 10 Mbps full-duplex support.
85.It Sy adv_cap_10gfdx
86Advertises 10 Gbps support.
87.It Sy adv_cap_10hdx
88Advertises 10 Mbps half-duplex support.
89.It Sy adv_cap_2500fdx
90Advertises 2.5 Gbps support.
91.It Sy adv_cap_40gfdx
92Advertises 40 Gbps support.
93.It Sy adv_cap_5000fdx
94Advertises 5 Gbps support.
95.It Sy adv_cap_autoneg
96Advertises auto-negotiation support.
97.It Sy adv_cap_asmpause
98Advertises asymmetric flow control support.
99.It Sy adv_cap_pause
100Advertises flow control support.
101.It Sy adv_rem_fault
102Remote fault status sent to peer.
103.It Sy align_errors
104Mis-aligned frames received.
105.It Sy brdcstrcv
106Broadcast frames received.
107.It Sy brdcstxmt
108Broadcast frames transmitted.
109.It Sy cap_1000fdx
110Device supports 1000 Mbps full-duplex.
111.It Sy cap_1000hdx
112Device supports 1000 Mbps half-duplex.
113.It Sy cap_100fdx
114Device supports 100 Mbps full-duplex.
115.It Sy cap_100gfdx
116Device supports 100 Gbps.
117.It Sy cap_100hdx
118Device supports 100 Mbps half-duplex.
119.It Sy cap_100T4
120Device supports 100BASE-T4.
121.It Sy cap_10fdx
122Device supports 10 Mbps full-duplex.
123.It Sy cap_10gfdx
124Device supports 10 Gpbs.
125.It Sy cap_10hdx
126Device supports 10 Mbps half-duplex.
127.It Sy cap_2500fdx
128Device supports 2.5 Gbps.
129.It Sy cap_40gfdx
130Device supports 40 Gpbs.
131.It Sy cap_5000fdx
132Device supports 5 Gbps.
133.It Sy cap_asmpause
134Device supports asymmetric flow control.
135.It Sy cap_autoneg
136Device supports auto-negotiation.
137.It Sy cap_pause
138Device supports symmetric flow control.
139.It Sy cap_rem_fault
140Device supports remote fault notification.
141.It Sy carrier_errors
142Frames dropped due to loss of link.
143.It Sy collisions
144Collisions.
145.It Sy defer_xmts
146Transmits deferred due to link activity.
147.It Sy ex_collisions
148Frames dropped due to too many collisions.
149.It Sy fcs_errors
150Frames received with bad frame checksum.
151.It Sy first_collisions
152Frames with at least one collision.
153.It Sy ierrors
154Receive errors.
155.It Sy ifspeed
156Link speed in bits per second.
157.It Sy ipackets Ns Op Sy 64
158Frames received successfully.
159.It Sy jabber_errors
160Jabber errors.
161.It Sy link_asmpause
162Asymmetric flow control; works together with
163.Sy link_pause .
164See the description for it below.
165.It Sy link_autoneg
166Link was auto-negotiated.
167.It Sy link_duplex
168Link duplex status, values as follows:
169.Bl -column "0" infinity
170.It 0 Ta Unknown.
171.It 1 Ta Half-duplex.
172.It 2 Ta Full-duplex.
173.El
174.It Sy link_pause
175Link flow control available; works together with
176.Sy link_asmpause .
177The meanings of these bits are:
178.Bl -column "pause" "asmpause"
179.It Sy pause Ta Sy asmpause Ta Sy meaning
180.It 0 Ta 0 Ta "No flow control."
181.It 1 Ta 0 Ta Symmetric flow control.
182.It 0 Ta 1 Ta Honor received pause frames.
183.It 1 Ta 1 Ta Send pause frames when congested.
184.El
185.It Sy link_state
186Link state; 0 for down, 1 for up.
187.It Sy link_up
188Link is up if 1.
189.It Sy lp_cap_1000fdx
190Peer supports 1000 Mbps full-duplex.
191.It Sy lp_cap_1000hdx
192Peer supports 1000 Mbps half-duplex.
193.It Sy lp_cap_100fdx
194Peer supports 100 Mbps full-duplex.
195.It Sy lp_cap_100gfdx
196Peer supports 100 Gbps full-duplex.
197.It Sy lp_cap_100hdx
198Peer supports 100 Mbps half-duplex.
199.It Sy lp_cap_100T4
200Peer supports 100BASE-T4.
201.It Sy lp_cap_10fdx
202Peer supports 10 Mbps full-duplex.
203.It Sy lp_cap_10gfdx
204Peer supports 10 Gbps.
205.It Sy lp_cap_10hdx
206Peer supports 10 Mbps half-duplex.
207.It Sy lp_cap_2500fdx
208Peer supports 2.5 Gbps.
209.It Sy lp_cap_5000fdx
210Peer supports 5 Gbps.
211.It Sy lp_cap_40gfdx
212Peer supports 40 Gbps.
213.It Sy lp_cap_asmpause
214Peer supports asymmetric flow control.
215.It Sy lp_cap_autoneg
216Peer supports auto-negotiation.
217.It Sy lp_cap_pause
218Peer advertises flow control support.
219.It Sy lp_rem_fault
220Peer announces a remote fault.
221.It Sy macrv_errors
222Generic receive errors.
223.It Sy macxmt_errors
224Generic transmit errors.
225.It Sy multi_collisions
226Frames with more than one collision.
227.It Sy multircv
228Multicast frames received.
229.It Sy multixmt
230Multicast frames transmitted.
231.It Sy norcvbuf
232Receive frames dropped due to lack of resources.
233.It Sy noxmtbuf
234Transmit frames dropped due to lack of resources.
235.It Sy obytes Ns Op Sy 64
236Bytes (octets) transmitted successfully.
237.It Sy oerrors
238Transmit errors.
239.It Sy oflo
240Overflow errors.
241.It Sy opackets Ns Op Sy 64
242Frames successfully transmitted.
243.It Sy promisc
244Interface is in promiscuous mode.
245.It Sy rbytes Ns Op Sy 64
246Bytes (octets) received successfully.
247.It Sy runt_errors
248Frames received that were too short.
249.It Sy sqe_errors
250Squelch errors.
251.It Sy toolong_errors
252Frames received that were too long.
253.It Sy tx_late_collisions
254Late collisions on transmit.
255.It Sy uflo
256Underflow errors.
257.It Sy unknowns
258Frames received with no local recipient.
259.It Sy xcvr_addr
260Transceiver address.
261.It Sy xcvr_id
262Transceiver vendor and device ID.
263.It Sy xcvr_inuse
264Identifies the type of transceiver in use.  Values are as follows:
265.Bl -column "0"
266.It 0 Ta Unknown or undefined.
267.It 1 Ta None.
268.It 2 Ta 10 Mbps
269.It 3 Ta 100BASE-T4
270.It 4 Ta 100BASE-X
271.It 5 Ta 100BASE-T2
272.It 6 Ta 1000BASE-X
273.It 7 Ta 1000BASE-T
274.El
275.El
276.Ss Properties
277The following parameters are accessible with
278.Xr dladm 1M .
279Some of these are normally read-only.  Other properties that are not
280specific to IEEE 802.3 / Ethernet links are also available via
281.Xr dladm 1M ,
282and are documented in its man page rather than here.
283.
284.Bl -tag -width adv_1000hdx_cap
285.It Sy speed
286Link speed, in Mbps per second (dladm only).
287.It Sy duplex
288Link duplex, either "full" or "half".
289.It Sy state
290Link state, either "up" or "down".
291.It Sy mtu
292Maximum link frame size in bytes. See
293.Sx Jumbo Frames .
294.It Sy flowctrl
295Flow control setting, one of \(dqno\(dq, \(dqtx\(dq, \(dqrx\(dq, or \(dqbi\(dq.
296See
297.Sx Flow Control .
298.It Sy adv_10gfdx_cap
299Advertising 10 Gbps support.
300.It Sy en_10gfdx_cap
301Enable 10 Gbps support.
302.
303.It Sy adv_1000fdx_cap
304Advertising 1000 Mbps full-duplex support.
305.It Sy en_1000fdx_cap
306Enable 1000 Mbps full-duplex.
307.
308.It Sy adv_1000hdx_cap
309Advertising 1000 Mbps half-duplex support.
310.It Sy en_1000hdx_cap
311Enable 1000 Mbps half-duplex.
312.
313.It Sy adv_100fdx_cap
314Advertising 100 Mbps full-duplex support.
315.It Sy en_100fdx_cap
316Enable 100 Mbps full-duplex.
317.
318.It Sy adv_100hdx_cap
319Advertising 100 Mbps half-duplex support.
320.It Sy en_100hdx_cap
321Enable 100 Mbps half-duplex.
322.
323.It Sy adv_10fdx_cap
324Advertising 10 Mbps full-duplex support.
325.It Sy en_10fhdx_cap
326Enable 100 Mbps full-duplex.
327.
328.It Sy adv_10hdx_cap
329Advertising 10 Mbps half-duplex support.
330.It Sy en_10fhdx_cap
331Enable 10 Mbps half-duplex.
332.El
333.Ss Auto-negotiation
334With modern devices, auto-negotiation is normally handled automatically.  With
33510 Gbps and 1000 Gbps, it is mandatory.  (10GBASE-T also requires full-duplex
336operation.) It is also
337.Em strongly
338recommended for use whenever possible; without auto-negotiation the link
339will usually not operate unless both partners are configured to use the
340same link mode.
341.Lp
342Auto-negotiation, when enabled, takes place by comparing the local capabilities
343that have been advertised (which must also be supported by the local device),
344with the capabilities that have been advertised by the link partner (peer).
345.
346The first of the following modes that is supported by both partners is
347selected as the link negotiation result:
348.Lp
349.Bl -bullet -offset indent -compact
350.It
35110 Gbps (10gfdx)
352.It
3531000 Mbps full-duplex (1000fdx)
354.It
3551000 Mbps half-duplex (1000hdx)
356.It
357100 Mbps full-duplex (100fdx)
358.It
359100BASE-T4 (100T4)
360.It
361100 Mbps half-duplex (100hdx)
362.It
36310 Mbps full-duplex (10fdx)
364.It
36510 Mbps half-duplex (10hdx)
366.El
367.Lp
368Advertisement of these modes can be enabled or disabled by setting the
369appropriate
370.Sy en_
371property in
372.Xr dladm 1M .
373.Lp
374Auto-negotation may also be disabled, by setting the
375.Sy adv_autoneg_cap
376property to 0.  In this case, the highest enabled link mode (using the above
377list) is
378.Dq forced
379for the link.
380.Ss Flow Control
381Link layer flow control is available on many modern devices, and is mandatory
382for operation at 10 Gbps. It requires that the link be auto-negotiated, and
383that the link be full-duplex, in order to function.
384.Lp
385Flow control is applied when a receiver becomes congested.  In this case the
386receiver can send a special frame, called a pause frame, to request its
387partner cease transmitting for a short period of time.
388.Lp
389Flow control can be said to be either symmetric, in which case both partners
390can send and honor pause frames, or asymmetric, in which case one partner
391may not transmit pause frames.
392.Lp
393The flow control mode used is driven by the
394.Sy flowctrl
395property.  It has the following meanings:
396.Lp
397.Bl -column -compact -offset indent Dv
398.It \(dqno\(dq Ta Neither send, nor honor pause frames.
399.It \(dqtx\(dq Ta Send pause frames, provided that the peer can support them,
400but do not honor them.
401.It \(dqrx\(dq Ta Receive and honor pause frames.
402.It \(dqbi\(dq Ta Both send and receive (and honor) pause frames.
403.El
404.Lp
405The statistics for flow control
406.Po Sy adv_cap_pause , adv_cap_asmpause , lp_cap_pause , lp_cap_asmpause ,
407.Sy link_pause ,
408and
409.Sy link_asmpause
410.Pc
411are based on the properties exchanged in the auto-negotiation and are
412confusing as a result.  Administrators are advised to use the
413.Sy flowctrl
414property instead.
415.
416.Ss Jumbo Frames
417The IEEE 802.3 standard specifies a standard frame size of 1518 bytes,
418which includes a 4-byte frame checksum, a 14-byte header, and 1500 bytes
419of payload.  Most devices support larger frame sizes than this, and
420when all possible parties on the same local network can do so, it may be
421advantageous to choose a larger frame size; 9000 bytes is the most common
422option, as it allows a transport layer to convey 8 KB (8192) of data, while
423leaving room for various link, network, and transport layer headers.
424.Lp
425Note that the use of frames carrying more than 1500 bytes of payload is
426not standardized, even though it is common practice.
427.Lp
428The
429.Sy mtu
430property is used to configure the frame size.  Note that this is the size of
431the payload, and excludes the preamble, checksum, and header.  It also excludes
432the tag for devices that support tagging (see
433.Sx Virtual LANs
434below).
435.Lp
436Care must be taken to ensure that all communication parties agree on the same
437size, or communication may cease to function properly.
438.Lp
439Note that the
440.Sy mtu
441property refers to the link layer property.  It may be necessary to configure
442upper layer protocols such as IP to use a different size when this changes.
443See
444.Xr ifconfig 1M .
445.
446.Ss Virtual LANs
447Most devices support virtual LANs (and also priority control tagging) though
448the use of a 4-byte tag inserted between the frame header and payload.  The
449details of configuration of this are covered in the
450.Xr dladm 1M
451manual.
452.
453.Ss Data Link Provider Interface (DLPI) Details
454.
455The correct method for applications to access Ethernet devices directly
456is to use the DLPI. See
457.Xr dlpi 7P
458and
459.Xr libdlpi 3LIB
460for further information.
461.Lp
462The following DLPI parameters are presented to applications.
463.Bl -column -offset indent "Broadcast address"
464.It Maximum SDU Ta 1500 (or larger, as determined by the Sy mtu No property.)
465.It Minimum SDU Ta 0
466.It Address length Ta 6
467.It MAC type Ta Dv DL_ETHER
468.It SAP length Ta \(mi2
469.It Service mode Ta Dv DL_CLDLS
470.It Broadcast address Ta Li ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff No (6 bytes with all bits set)
471.El
472.Lp
473Note that if the application binds to SAP of 0, then standard IEEE 802.3
474mode is assumed and the frame length is stored in place of the Ethernet type.
475Frames that arrive with the type field set to 1500 or less, are delivered
476to applications that bind to SAP 0.
477.Lp
478Ethernet drivers on the support both DLPI style 1 and style 2 operation.
479Additionally, it is possible to configure provide
480.Dq vanity
481names to interfaces using the
482.Xr dladm 1M
483.Sy rename-link
484subcommand.  Such vanity names are only accessible using DLPI style 1.
485.Sh NOTES
486There may be other mechanisms available to configure link layer properties.
487Historically the
488.Xr ndd 1M
489command, and
490.Xr driver.conf 4
491files could be used to do this.  These methods are deprecated in favor of
492.Xr dladm 1M
493properties.
494.
495.Sh INTERFACE STABILITY
496When present, the statistics and properties presented here
497are
498.Sy Committed .
499However, note that not every Ethernet device supports all of these,
500and some devices may support additional statistics and properties.
501.Lp
502The DLPI and IEEE 802.3 itself are
503.Sy Standard .
504.Sh SEE ALSO
505.Xr dladm 1M ,
506.Xr ifconfig 1M ,
507.Xr kstat 1M ,
508.Xr ndd 1M ,
509.Xr netstat 1M ,
510.Xr libdlpi 3LIB ,
511.Xr driver.conf 4 ,
512.Xr dlpi 7P
513.Rs
514.%T IEEE 802.3: Ethernet
515.%Q IEEE Standards Association
516.Re
517.Rs
518.%B Data Link Provider Interface (DLPI)
519.%Q The Open Group
520.%D 1997
521.Re
522.Rs
523.%B STREAMs Programming Guide
524.%Q Sun Microsystems, Inc.
525.%D January 2005
526.Re
527