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1 | .\" Copyright (c) 1983, 1990, 1991, 1993 |
2 | .\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. | |
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9 | .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright | |
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20 | .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND | |
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31 | .\" | |
32 | .\" From: @(#)inet.3 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/4/93 | |
33 | .\" $FreeBSD: src/lib/libc/net/inet.3,v 1.19 2001/10/01 16:08:55 ru Exp $ | |
34 | .\" | |
35 | .Dd June 17, 1996 | |
36 | .Dt INET 3 | |
37 | .Os | |
38 | .Sh NAME | |
39 | .Nm inet_aton , | |
40 | .Nm inet_addr , | |
41 | .Nm inet_network , | |
42 | .Nm inet_ntoa , | |
43 | .Nm inet_ntop , | |
44 | .Nm inet_pton , | |
45 | .Nm inet_makeaddr , | |
46 | .Nm inet_lnaof , | |
47 | .Nm inet_netof | |
48 | .Nd Internet address manipulation routines | |
49 | .Sh LIBRARY | |
50 | .Lb libc | |
51 | .Sh SYNOPSIS | |
52 | .In sys/types.h | |
53 | .In sys/socket.h | |
54 | .In netinet/in.h | |
55 | .In arpa/inet.h | |
56 | .Ft int | |
57 | .Fn inet_aton "const char *cp" "struct in_addr *pin" | |
58 | .Ft in_addr_t | |
59 | .Fn inet_addr "const char *cp" | |
60 | .Ft in_addr_t | |
61 | .Fn inet_network "const char *cp" | |
62 | .Ft char * | |
63 | .Fn inet_ntoa "struct in_addr in" | |
64 | .Ft const char * | |
65 | .Fn inet_ntop "int af" "const void *src" "char *dst" "size_t size" | |
66 | .Ft int | |
67 | .Fn inet_pton "int af" "const char *src" "void *dst" | |
68 | .Ft struct in_addr | |
69 | .Fn inet_makeaddr "in_addr_t net" "in_addr_t lna" | |
70 | .Ft in_addr_t | |
71 | .Fn inet_lnaof "struct in_addr in" | |
72 | .Ft in_addr_t | |
73 | .Fn inet_netof "struct in_addr in" | |
74 | .Sh DESCRIPTION | |
75 | The routines | |
76 | .Fn inet_aton , | |
77 | .Fn inet_addr | |
78 | and | |
79 | .Fn inet_network | |
80 | interpret character strings representing | |
81 | numbers expressed in the Internet standard | |
82 | .Ql .\& | |
83 | notation. | |
84 | .Pp | |
85 | The | |
86 | .Fn inet_pton | |
87 | function converts a presentation format address (that is, printable form | |
88 | as held in a character string) to network format (usually a | |
89 | .Ft struct in_addr | |
90 | or some other internal binary representation, in network byte order). | |
91 | It returns 1 if the address was valid for the specified address family, or | |
92 | 0 if the address wasn't parseable in the specified address family, or -1 | |
93 | if some system error occurred (in which case | |
94 | .Va errno | |
95 | will have been set). | |
96 | This function is presently valid for | |
97 | .Dv AF_INET | |
98 | and | |
99 | .Dv AF_INET6 . | |
100 | .Pp | |
101 | The | |
102 | .Fn inet_aton | |
103 | routine interprets the specified character string as an Internet address, | |
104 | placing the address into the structure provided. | |
105 | It returns 1 if the string was successfully interpreted, | |
106 | or 0 if the string is invalid. | |
107 | The | |
108 | .Fn inet_addr | |
109 | and | |
110 | .Fn inet_network | |
111 | functions return numbers suitable for use | |
112 | as Internet addresses and Internet network | |
113 | numbers, respectively. | |
114 | .Pp | |
115 | The function | |
116 | .Fn inet_ntop | |
117 | converts an address from network format (usually a | |
118 | .Ft struct in_addr | |
119 | or some other binary form, in network byte order) to presentation format | |
120 | (suitable for external display purposes). | |
121 | It returns NULL if a system error occurs (in which case, | |
122 | .Va errno | |
123 | will have been set), or it returns a pointer to the destination string. | |
124 | This function is presently valid for | |
125 | .Dv AF_INET | |
126 | and | |
127 | .Dv AF_INET6 . | |
128 | .Pp | |
129 | The routine | |
130 | .Fn inet_ntoa | |
131 | takes an Internet address and returns an | |
132 | .Tn ASCII | |
133 | string representing the address in | |
134 | .Ql .\& | |
135 | notation. The routine | |
136 | .Fn inet_makeaddr | |
137 | takes an Internet network number and a local | |
138 | network address and constructs an Internet address | |
139 | from it. The routines | |
140 | .Fn inet_netof | |
141 | and | |
142 | .Fn inet_lnaof | |
143 | break apart Internet host addresses, returning | |
144 | the network number and local network address part, | |
145 | respectively. | |
146 | .Pp | |
147 | All Internet addresses are returned in network | |
148 | order (bytes ordered from left to right). | |
149 | All network numbers and local address parts are | |
150 | returned as machine byte order integer values. | |
151 | .Sh INTERNET ADDRESSES | |
152 | Values specified using the | |
153 | .Ql .\& | |
154 | notation take one | |
155 | of the following forms: | |
156 | .Bd -literal -offset indent | |
157 | a.b.c.d | |
158 | a.b.c | |
159 | a.b | |
160 | a | |
161 | .Ed | |
162 | .Pp | |
163 | When four parts are specified, each is interpreted | |
164 | as a byte of data and assigned, from left to right, | |
165 | to the four bytes of an Internet address. Note | |
166 | that when an Internet address is viewed as a 32-bit | |
167 | integer quantity on the | |
168 | .Tn VAX | |
169 | the bytes referred to | |
170 | above appear as | |
171 | .Dq Li d.c.b.a . | |
172 | That is, | |
173 | .Tn VAX | |
174 | bytes are | |
175 | ordered from right to left. | |
176 | .Pp | |
177 | When a three part address is specified, the last | |
178 | part is interpreted as a 16-bit quantity and placed | |
179 | in the right-most two bytes of the network address. | |
180 | This makes the three part address format convenient | |
181 | for specifying Class B network addresses as | |
182 | .Dq Li 128.net.host . | |
183 | .Pp | |
184 | When a two part address is supplied, the last part | |
185 | is interpreted as a 24-bit quantity and placed in | |
186 | the right most three bytes of the network address. | |
187 | This makes the two part address format convenient | |
188 | for specifying Class A network addresses as | |
189 | .Dq Li net.host . | |
190 | .Pp | |
191 | When only one part is given, the value is stored | |
192 | directly in the network address without any byte | |
193 | rearrangement. | |
194 | .Pp | |
195 | All numbers supplied as | |
196 | .Dq parts | |
197 | in a | |
198 | .Ql .\& | |
199 | notation | |
200 | may be decimal, octal, or hexadecimal, as specified | |
201 | in the C language (i.e., a leading 0x or 0X implies | |
202 | hexadecimal; otherwise, a leading 0 implies octal; | |
203 | otherwise, the number is interpreted as decimal). | |
204 | .Pp | |
205 | The | |
206 | .Fn inet_aton | |
207 | and | |
208 | .Fn inet_ntoa | |
209 | functions are semi-deprecated in favor of the | |
210 | .Xr addr2ascii 3 | |
211 | family. However, since those functions are not yet widely implemented, | |
212 | portable programs cannot rely on their presence and will continue | |
213 | to use the | |
214 | .Xr inet 3 | |
215 | functions for some time. | |
216 | .Sh DIAGNOSTICS | |
217 | The constant | |
218 | .Dv INADDR_NONE | |
219 | is returned by | |
220 | .Fn inet_addr | |
221 | and | |
222 | .Fn inet_network | |
223 | for malformed requests. | |
224 | .Sh SEE ALSO | |
225 | .Xr addr2ascii 3 , | |
226 | .Xr byteorder 3 , | |
227 | .Xr gethostbyname 3 , | |
228 | .Xr getnetent 3 , | |
229 | .Xr inet_net 3 , | |
230 | .Xr hosts 5 , | |
231 | .Xr networks 5 | |
232 | .Rs | |
233 | .%R RFC | |
234 | .%N 2373 | |
235 | .%D July 1998 | |
236 | .%T "IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture" | |
237 | .Re | |
238 | .Sh STANDARDS | |
239 | The | |
240 | .Fn inet_ntop | |
241 | and | |
242 | .Fn inet_pton | |
243 | functions conform to | |
244 | .St -xns5.2 . | |
245 | Note that | |
246 | .Fn inet_pton | |
247 | does not accept 1-, 2-, or 3-part dotted addresses; all four parts | |
248 | must be specified. | |
249 | This is a narrower input set than that accepted by | |
250 | .Fn inet_aton . | |
251 | .Sh HISTORY | |
252 | These | |
253 | functions appeared in | |
254 | .Bx 4.2 . | |
255 | .Sh BUGS | |
256 | The value | |
257 | .Dv INADDR_NONE | |
258 | (0xffffffff) is a valid broadcast address, but | |
259 | .Fn inet_addr | |
260 | cannot return that value without indicating failure. | |
261 | The newer | |
262 | .Fn inet_aton | |
263 | function does not share this problem. | |
264 | The problem of host byte ordering versus network byte ordering is | |
265 | confusing. | |
266 | The string returned by | |
267 | .Fn inet_ntoa | |
268 | resides in a static memory area. | |
269 | .Pp | |
270 | Inet_addr should return a | |
271 | .Fa struct in_addr . |