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7 .TH IPADM 1M "May 14, 2012"
8 .SH NAME
9 ipadm \- configure IP network interfaces and protocol properties.
10 .SH SYNOPSIS
11 .LP
12 .nf
13 \fBipadm\fR create-if [\fB-t\fR] \fIinterface\fR
14 .fi
15
16 .LP
17 .nf
18 \fBipadm\fR disable-if [\fB-t\fR] \fIinterface\fR
19 .fi
20
21 .LP
22 .nf
23 \fBipadm\fR enable-if [\fB-t\fR] \fIinterface\fR
24 .fi
25
26 .LP
27 .nf
28 \fBipadm\fR delete-if \fIinterface\fR
29 .fi
30
31 .LP
32 .nf
33 \fBipadm\fR show-if [[\fB-p\fR] \fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fIinterface\fR]
34 .fi
35
36 .LP
37 .nf
38 \fBipadm\fR set-ifprop [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR=<\fIvalue\fR[,...]> \fB-m\fR \fIprotocol\fR \fIinterface\fR
39 .fi
40
41 .LP
42 .nf
43 \fBipadm\fR reset-ifprop [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR \fB-m\fR \fIprotocol\fR \fIinterface\fR
44 .fi
45
46 .LP
47 .nf
48 \fBipadm\fR show-ifprop [[\fB-c\fR]\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR,...] [\fB-m\fR \fIprotocol\fR]
49 [\fIinterface\fR]
50 .fi
51
52 .LP
53 .nf
54 \fBipadm\fR create-addr [\fB-t\fR] \fB-T\fR static [\fB-d\fR]
55 \fB-a\fR {local|remote}=\fIaddr\fR[/\fIprefixlen\fR],... \fIaddrobj\fR
56 .fi
57
58 .LP
59 .nf
60 \fBipadm\fR create-addr [\fB-t\fR] \fB-T\fR dhcp [\fB-w\fR \fIseconds\fR | forever ] \fIaddrobj\fR
61 .fi
62
63 .LP
64 .nf
65 \fBipadm\fR create-addr [\fB-t\fR] \fB-T\fR addrconf [\fB-i\fR \fIinterface-id\fR]
66 [\fB-p\fR {stateful|stateless}={yes|no},..] \fIaddrobj\fR
67 .fi
68
69 .LP
70 .nf
71 \fBipadm\fR down-addr [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR
72 .fi
73
74 .LP
75 .nf
76 \fBipadm\fR up-addr [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR
77 .fi
78
79 .LP
80 .nf
81 \fBipadm\fR disable-addr [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR
82 .fi
83
84 .LP
85 .nf
86 \fBipadm\fR enable-addr [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR
87 .fi
88
89 .LP
90 .nf
91 \fBipadm\fR refresh-addr [\fB-i\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR
92 .fi
93
94 .LP
95 .nf
96 \fBipadm\fR delete-addr [\fB-r\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR
97 .fi
98
99 .LP
100 .nf
101 \fBipadm\fR show-addr [[\fB-p\fR] \fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fIaddrobj\fR]
102 .fi
103
104 .LP
105 .nf
106 \fBipadm\fR set-addrprop [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR=<\fIvalue\fR[,...]> \fIaddrobj\fR
107 .fi
108
109 .LP
110 .nf
111 \fBipadm\fR reset-addrprop [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR=<\fIvalue\fR[,...]> \fIaddrobj\fR
112 .fi
113
114 .LP
115 .nf
116 \fBipadm\fR show-addrprop [[\fB-c\fR] \fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR,...] [\fIaddrobj\fR]
117 .fi
118
119 .LP
120 .nf
121 \fBipadm\fR set-prop [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR[+|-]=<\fIvalue\fR[,...]> \fIprotocol\fR
122 .fi
123
124 .LP
125 .nf
126 \fBipadm\fR reset-prop [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR \fIprotocol\fR
127 .fi
128
129 .LP
130 .nf
131 \fBipadm\fR show-prop [[\fB-c\fR] \fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR[,...]] [\fIprotocol\fR]
132 .fi
133
134 .SH DESCRIPTION
135 .sp
136 .LP
137
138 The \fBipadm\fR command is a stable replacement for the \fBifconfig\fR(1M) and
139 \fBndd\fR(1M) commands. It is used to create IP interfaces and to confgure IP
140 addresses on those interfaces. It is also used to get, set or reset properties
141 on interfaces, addresses and protocols.
142 .LP
143 For subcommands that take an \fIaddrobj\fR, the \fIaddrobj\fR specifies a
144 unique address on the system. It is made up of two parts, delimited by a '/'.
145 The first part is the name of the interface and the second part is a string up
146 to 32 characters long. For example, "lo0/v4" is a loopback interface
147 addrobj name.
148 .LP
149 For subcommands that take a \fIprotocol\fR, this can be one of
150 the following values: ip, ipv4, ipv6, icmp, tcp, sctp or udp.
151
152 .SH SUBCOMMANDS
153 .sp
154 .LP
155 The following subcommands are supported:
156 .sp
157 .ne 2
158 .na
159 \fB\fBcreate-if\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIinterface\fR\fR
160 .ad
161 .sp .6
162 .RS 4n
163 The \fBcreate-if\fR subcommand is used to create an IP interface that will
164 handle both IPv4 and IPv6 packets. The interface will be enabled as part of
165 the creation process. The IPv4 interface will have the address 0.0.0.0.
166 The IPv6 interface will have the adress ::.
167 .sp
168 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
169 that the creation is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
170 .sp
171
172 .RE
173
174 .sp
175 .ne 2
176 .na
177 \fB\fBdisable-if\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIinterface\fR\fR
178 .ad
179 .sp .6
180 .RS 4n
181 The \fBdisable-if\fR subcommand is used to disable an IP interface.
182 .sp
183 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
184 that the disable is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
185 .sp
186
187 .RE
188
189 .sp
190 .ne 2
191 .na
192 \fB\fBenable-if\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIinterface\fR\fR
193 .ad
194 .sp .6
195 .RS 4n
196 The \fBenable-if\fR subcommand is used to enable an IP interface.
197 .sp
198 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
199 that the enable is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
200 .sp
201
202 .RE
203
204 .sp
205 .ne 2
206 .na
207 \fB\fbdelete-if\fR \fIinterface\fR\fR
208 .ad
209 .sp .6
210 .RS 4n
211 The \fBdelete-if\fR subcommand is used to permanently delete an IP interface.
212 .sp
213
214 .RE
215
216 .sp
217 .ne 2
218 .na
219 \fB\fBshow-if\fR [[\fB-p\fR] \fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fIinterface\fR]\fR
220 .ad
221 .sp .6
222 .RS 4n
223 The \fBshow-if\fR subcommand is used to show the current IP interface
224 configuration.
225 .sp
226 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--parsable\fR) prints
227 the output in a parsable format.
228 .sp
229 The \fB-o\fR option (also \fB--output\fR) is used
230 to select which fields will be shown. The field value can be one of the
231 following names:
232 .sp
233 .ne 2
234 .na
235 .RS 4n
236 \fBALL\fR
237 .ad
238 .RS 4n
239 Display all fields
240 .RE
241
242 .sp
243 .ne 2
244 .na
245 \fBIFNAME\fR
246 .ad
247 .RS 4n
248 The name of the interface
249 .RE
250
251 .sp
252 .ne 2
253 .na
254 \fBSTATE\fR
255 .ad
256 .RS 4n
257 The state can be one of the following values:
258 .sp
259 .ne 2
260 .na
261 .RS 4n
262 ok - resources for the interface have been allocated
263 .sp
264 offline - the interface is offline
265 .sp
266 failed - the interface's datalink is down
267 .sp
268 down - the interface is down
269 .sp
270 disabled - the interface is disabled
271 .RE
272 .RE
273
274 .sp
275 .ne 2
276 .na
277 \fBCURRENT\fR
278 .ad
279 .RS 4n
280 A set of single character flags indicating the following:
281 .sp
282 .ne 2
283 .na
284 .RS 4n
285 b - broadcast (mutually exclusive with 'p')
286 .br
287 m - multicast
288 .br
289 p - point-to-point (mutually exclusive with 'b')
290 .br
291 v - virtual interface
292 .br
293 I - IPMP
294 .br
295 s - IPMP standby
296 .br
297 i - IPMP inactive
298 .br
299 V - VRRP
300 .br
301 a - VRRP accept mode
302 .br
303 4 - IPv4
304 .br
305 6 - IPv6
306 .RE
307 .RE
308
309 .sp
310 .ne 2
311 .na
312 \fBPERSISTENT\fR
313 .ad
314 .RS 4n
315 A set of single character flags showing what configuration will be used the
316 next time the interface is enabled:
317 .sp
318 .ne 2
319 .na
320 .RS 4n
321 s - IPMP standby
322 .br
323 4 - IPv4
324 .br
325 6 - IPv6
326 .RE
327 .RE
328 .RE
329
330 .RE
331
332 .sp
333 .ne 2
334 .na
335 \fB\fBset-ifprop\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR=<\fIvalue\fR[,...]> \fB-m\fR \fIprotocol\fR \fIinterface\fR\fR
336 .ad
337 .sp .6
338 .RS 4n
339 The \fBset-ifprop\fR subcommand is used to set a property's value(s) on the IP
340 interface.
341 .sp
342 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
343 that the setting is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
344 .sp
345 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) specifies the property name and
346 value(s). The property name can be one of the following:
347 .sp
348 .ne 2
349 .na
350
351 .RS 4n
352
353 \fBarp\fR
354 .ad
355 .RS 4n
356 Enables ("on") or disables ("off") ARP.
357 .RE
358
359 .sp
360 .ne 2
361 .na
362 \fBexchange_routes\fR
363 .ad
364 .RS 4n
365 Enables ("on") or disables ("off") the exchange of routing data.
366 .RE
367
368 .sp
369 .ne 2
370 .na
371 \fBforwarding\fR
372 .ad
373 .RS 4n
374 Enables ("on") or disables ("off") IP forwarding.
375 .RE
376
377 .sp
378 .ne 2
379 .na
380 \fBmetric\fR
381 .ad
382 .RS 4n
383 Set the routing metric to the numeric value. The value is treated as extra
384 hops to the destination.
385 .RE
386
387 .sp
388 .ne 2
389 .na
390 \fBmtu\fR
391 .ad
392 .RS 4n
393 Set the maximum transmission unit to the numeric value.
394 .RE
395
396 .sp
397 .ne 2
398 .na
399 \fBnud\fR
400 .ad
401 .RS 4n
402 Enables ("on") or disables ("off") neighbor unreachability detection.
403 .RE
404
405 .sp
406 .ne 2
407 .na
408 \fBusesrc\fR
409 .ad
410 .RS 4n
411 Indicates which interface to use for source address selection. A value
412 "none" may also be used.
413 .RE
414 .RE
415
416 .sp
417 The \fB-m\fR option (also \fB--module\fR) specifies which protocol
418 the setting applies to.
419 .sp
420
421 .RE
422
423 .sp
424 .ne 2
425 .na
426 \fB\fBreset-ifprop\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR \fB-m\fR \fIprotocol\fR \fIinterface\fR\fR
427 .ad
428 .sp .6
429 .RS 4n
430 The \fBreset-ifprop\fR subcommand is used to reset an IP interface's property
431 value to the default.
432 .sp
433 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
434 that the disable is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
435 .sp
436 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) specifies the property name.
437 See the \fBset-ifprop\fR subcommand for the list of property names.
438 .sp
439 The \fB-m\fR option (also \fB--module\fR) specifies which protocol
440 the setting applies to.
441 .sp
442
443 .RE
444
445 .sp
446 .ne 2
447 .na
448 \fB\fBshow-ifprop\fR [[\fB-c\fR]\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR,...] [\fB-m\fR \fIprotocol\fR]
449 [\fIinterface\fR]\fR
450 .ad
451 .sp .6
452 .RS 4n
453 The \fBshow-ifprop\fR subcommand is used to display the property values
454 for one or all of the IP interfaces.
455 .sp
456 The \fB-c\fR option (also \fB--parsable\fR) prints
457 the output in a parsable format.
458 .sp
459 The \fB-o\fR option (also \fB--output\fR) is used
460 to select which fields will be shown. The field value can be one of the
461 following names:
462 .sp
463 .ne 2
464 .na
465 .RS 4n
466 \fBALL\fR
467 .ad
468 .RS 4n
469 Display all fields
470 .RE
471
472 .sp
473 .ne 2
474 .na
475 \fBIFNAME\fR
476 .ad
477 .RS 4n
478 The name of the interface
479 .RE
480
481 .sp
482 .ne 2
483 .na
484 \fBPROPERTY\fR
485 .ad
486 .RS 4n
487 The name of the property
488 .RE
489
490 .sp
491 .ne 2
492 .na
493 \fBPROTO\fR
494 .ad
495 .RS 4n
496 The name of the protocol
497 .RE
498
499 .sp
500 .ne 2
501 .na
502 \fBPERM\fR
503 .ad
504 .RS 4n
505 If the property is readable ("r") and/or writable ("w").
506 .RE
507
508 .sp
509 .ne 2
510 .na
511 \fBCURRENT\fR
512 .ad
513 .RS 4n
514 The value of the property
515 .RE
516
517 .sp
518 .ne 2
519 .na
520 \fBPERSISTENT\fR
521 .ad
522 .RS 4n
523 The persistent value of the property
524 .RE
525
526 .sp
527 .ne 2
528 .na
529 \fBDEFAULT\fR
530 .ad
531 .RS 4n
532 The default value of the property
533 .RE
534
535 .sp
536 .ne 2
537 .na
538 \fBPOSSIBLE\fR
539 .ad
540 .RS 4n
541 The possible values for the property
542 .RE
543 .RE
544
545 .sp
546 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) is used
547 to specify which properties to display. See the \fBset-ifprop\fR
548 subcommand for the list of property names.
549 .sp
550 The \fB-m\fR option (also \fB--module\fR) specifies which protocol
551 to display.
552 .sp
553
554 .RE
555
556 .sp
557 .ne 2
558 .na
559 \fB\fBcreate-addr\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-T\fR static [\fB-d\fR] \\
560 \fB-a\fR {local|remote}=\fIaddr\fR[/\fIprefixlen\fR],... \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
561 .br
562 \fB\fBcreate-addr\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-T\fR dhcp [\fB-w\fR \fIseconds\fR | forever ] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
563 .br
564 \fB\fBcreate-addr\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-T\fR addrconf [\fB-i\fR \fIinterface-id\fR] \\
565 [\fB-p\fR {stateful|stateless}={yes|no},..] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
566 .ad
567 .sp .6
568 .RS 4n
569 The \fBcreate-addr\fR subcommand is used to set an address on an IP interface.
570 The address will be enabled but can disabled using the \fBdisable-addr\fR
571 subcommand. This subcommand has three different forms, depending on the
572 value of the \fB-T\fR option.
573 .sp
574 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
575 that the address is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
576 .sp
577 The \fB-T\fR static option creates a static addrobj. This takes the following
578 options:
579 .RS 4n
580
581 The \fB-d\fR option (also \fB--down\fR) means the address is down.
582 .sp
583 The \fB-a\fR option (also \fB--address\fR) specifies the address.
584 The "local" or "remote" prefix can be used for a point-to-point interface.
585 In this case, both addresses must be given.
586 Otherwise, the equal sign ("=") should be omitted and the address should be
587 provided by itself and with no second address.
588 .sp
589
590 .RE
591
592 The \fB-T\fR dhcp option causes the address to be obtained via DHCP.
593 This takes the following options:
594 .RS 4n
595
596 The \fB-w\fR option (also \fB--wait\fR) gives the time, in seconds,
597 that the command should wait to obtain an address.
598 .sp
599
600 .RE
601
602 The \fB-T\fR addrconf option creates an auto-configured address.
603 This takes the following options:
604 .RS 4n
605
606 The \fB-i\fR option (also \fB--interface-id\fR) gives the interface ID to
607 be used.
608 .sp
609 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) indicates which method of
610 auto-configuration should be used.
611 .sp
612
613 .RE
614 .RE
615
616 .sp
617 .ne 2
618 .na
619 \fB\fBdown-addr\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
620 .ad
621 .sp .6
622 .RS 4n
623 The \fBdown-addr\fR subcommand is used to down the address. This will
624 stop packets from being sent or received.
625 .sp
626 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
627 that the down is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
628 .sp
629
630 .RE
631
632 .sp
633 .ne 2
634 .na
635 \fB\fBup-addr\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
636 .ad
637 .sp .6
638 .RS 4n
639 The \fBup-addr\fR subcommand is used to up the address. This will
640 enable packets to be sent and received.
641 .sp
642 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
643 that the up is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
644 .sp
645
646 .RE
647
648 .sp
649 .ne 2
650 .na
651 \fB\fBdisable-addr\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
652 .ad
653 .sp .6
654 .RS 4n
655 The \fBdisable-addr\fR subcommand is used to disable the address.
656 .sp
657 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
658 that the disable is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
659 .sp
660
661 .RE
662
663 .sp
664 .ne 2
665 .na
666 \fB\fBenable-addr\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
667 .ad
668 .sp .6
669 .RS 4n
670 The \fBenable-addr\fR subcommand is used to enable the address.
671 .sp
672 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
673 that the enable is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
674 .sp
675
676 .RE
677
678 .sp
679 .ne 2
680 .na
681 \fB\fBrefresh-addr\fR [\fB-i\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
682 .ad
683 .sp .6
684 .RS 4n
685 The \fBrefresh-addr\fR subcommand is used to extend the lease for DHCP
686 addresses. It also restarts duplicate address detection for Static addresses.
687 .sp
688 The \fB-i\fR option (also \fB--inform\fR) means
689 that the network configuration will be obtained from DHCP without taking
690 a lease on the address.
691 .sp
692
693 .RE
694
695 .sp
696 .ne 2
697 .na
698 \fB\fBdelete-addr\fR [\fB-r\fR] \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
699 .ad
700 .sp .6
701 .RS 4n
702 The \fBdelete-addr\fR subcommand deletes the given address.
703 .sp
704 The \fB-r\fR option (also \fB--release\fR) is used for DHCP-assigned
705 addresses to indicate that the address should be released.
706 .sp
707
708 .RE
709
710 .sp
711 .ne 2
712 .na
713 \fB\fBshow-addr\fR [[\fB-p\fR] \fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fIaddrobj\fR]\fR
714 .ad
715 .sp .6
716 .RS 4n
717 The \fBshow-addr\fR subcommand is used to show the current address properties.
718 .sp
719 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--parsable\fR) prints
720 the output in a parsable format.
721 .sp
722 The \fB-o\fR option (also \fB--output\fR) is used
723 to select which fields will be shown. The field value can be one of the
724 following names:
725 .sp
726 .ne 2
727 .na
728 .RS 4n
729 \fBALL\fR
730 .ad
731 .RS 4n
732 Display all fields
733 .RE
734
735 .sp
736 .ne 2
737 .na
738 \fBADDROBJ\fR
739 .ad
740 .RS 4n
741 The name of the address
742 .RE
743
744 .sp
745 .ne 2
746 .na
747 \fBTYPE\fR
748 .ad
749 .RS 4n
750 The type of the address. It can be "static", "dhcp" or "addrconf".
751 .RE
752
753 .sp
754 .ne 2
755 .na
756 \fBSTATE\fR
757 .ad
758 .RS 4n
759 The state of the address. It can be one of the following values:
760 .sp
761 .ne 2
762 .na
763 .RS 4n
764 disabled s see the \fBdisable-addr\fR subcommand
765 .sp
766 down - see the \fBdown-addr\fR subcommand
767 .sp
768 duplicate - the address is a duplicate
769 .sp
770 inaccessible - the interface for this address has failed
771 .sp
772 ok - the address is up
773 .sp
774 tentative - duplicate address detection in progress
775 .RE
776 .RE
777
778 .sp
779 .ne 2
780 .na
781 \fBCURRENT\fR
782 .ad
783 .RS 4n
784 A set of single character flags indicating the following:
785 .sp
786 .ne 2
787 .na
788 .RS 4n
789 U - up
790 .br
791 u - unnumbered (matches another local address)
792 .br
793 p - private, not advertised to routing
794 .br
795 t - temporary IPv6 address
796 .br
797 d - deprecated (not used for outgoing packets)
798 .RE
799 .RE
800
801 .sp
802 .ne 2
803 .na
804 \fBPERSISTENT\fR
805 .ad
806 .RS 4n
807 A set of single character flags showing the configuration which will be used
808 when the address is enabled.
809 .sp
810 .ne 2
811 .na
812 .RS 4n
813 U - up
814 .br
815 p - private, not advertised to routing
816 .br
817 d - deprecated (not used for outgoing packets)
818 .RE
819 .RE
820
821 .sp
822 .ne 2
823 .na
824 \fBADDR\fR
825 .ad
826 .RS 4n
827 The address
828 .RE
829 .RE
830
831 .RE
832
833 .sp
834 .ne 2
835 .na
836 \fB\fBset-addrprop\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR=<\fIvalue\fR[,...]> \fIaddrobj\fR
837 .ad
838 .sp .6
839 .RS 4n
840 The \fBset-addrprop\fR subcommand is used to set a property's value(s) on the
841 addrobj.
842 .sp
843 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
844 that the setting is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
845 .sp
846 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) specifies the property name and
847 value(s). The property name can be one of the following:
848 .sp
849 .ne 2
850 .na
851
852 .RS 4n
853
854 \fBbroadcast\fR
855 .ad
856 .RS 4n
857 The broadcast address (read-only)
858 .RE
859
860 .sp
861 .ne 2
862 .na
863 \fBdeprecated\fR
864 .ad
865 .RS 4n
866 The address should not be used to send packets but can still receive packets.
867 Can be "on" or "off".
868 .RE
869
870 .sp
871 .ne 2
872 .na
873 \fBprefixlen\fR
874 .ad
875 .RS 4n
876 The number of bits in the IPv4 netmask or IPv6 prefix.
877 .RE
878
879 .sp
880 .ne 2
881 .na
882 \fBprivate\fR
883 .ad
884 .RS 4n
885 The address is not advertised to routing.
886 Can be "on" or "off".
887 .RE
888
889 .sp
890 .ne 2
891 .na
892 \fBtransmit\fR
893 .ad
894 .RS 4n
895 Packets can be transmitted.
896 Can be "on" or "off".
897 .RE
898
899 .sp
900 .ne 2
901 .na
902 \fBzone\fR
903 .ad
904 .RS 4n
905 The zone the addrobj is in.
906 .RE
907
908 .RE
909 .RE
910
911 .sp
912 .ne 2
913 .na
914 \fB\fBreset-addrprop\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR \fIaddrobj\fR\fR
915 .ad
916 .sp .6
917 .RS 4n
918 The \fBreset-addrprop\fR subcommand is used to reset an addrobj's property
919 value to the default.
920 .sp
921 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
922 that the disable is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
923 .sp
924 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) specifies the property name.
925 See the \fBset-addrprop\fR subcommand for the list of property names.
926 .sp
927
928 .RE
929
930 .sp
931 .ne 2
932 .na
933 \fB\fBshow-addrprop\fR [[\fB-c\fR]\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR,...] \fIaddrobj\fR]
934 .ad
935 .sp .6
936 .RS 4n
937 The \fBshow-addrprop\fR subcommand is used to display the property values
938 for one or all of the addrobjs.
939 .sp
940 The \fB-c\fR option (also \fB--parsable\fR) prints
941 the output in a parsable format.
942 .sp
943 The \fB-o\fR option (also \fB--output\fR) is used
944 to select which fields will be shown. The field value can be one of the
945 following names:
946 .sp
947 .ne 2
948 .na
949 .RS 4n
950 \fBALL\fR
951 .ad
952 .RS 4n
953 Display all fields
954 .RE
955
956 .sp
957 .ne 2
958 .na
959 \fBADDROBJ\fR
960 .ad
961 .RS 4n
962 The name of the addrobj
963 .RE
964
965 .sp
966 .ne 2
967 .na
968 \fBPROPERTY\fR
969 .ad
970 .RS 4n
971 The name of the property
972 .RE
973
974 .sp
975 .ne 2
976 .na
977 \fBPERM\fR
978 .ad
979 .RS 4n
980 If the property is readable ("r") and/or writable ("w").
981 .RE
982
983 .sp
984 .ne 2
985 .na
986 \fBCURRENT\fR
987 .ad
988 .RS 4n
989 The value of the property
990 .RE
991
992 .sp
993 .ne 2
994 .na
995 \fBPERSISTENT\fR
996 .ad
997 .RS 4n
998 The persistent value of the property
999 .RE
1000
1001 .sp
1002 .ne 2
1003 .na
1004 \fBDEFAULT\fR
1005 .ad
1006 .RS 4n
1007 The default value of the property
1008 .RE
1009
1010 .sp
1011 .ne 2
1012 .na
1013 \fBPOSSIBLE\fR
1014 .ad
1015 .RS 4n
1016 The possible values for the property
1017 .RE
1018 .RE
1019
1020 .sp
1021 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) is used
1022 to specify which properties to display. See the \fBset-addrprop\fR
1023 subcommand for the list of property names.
1024 .sp
1025
1026 .RE
1027
1028 .sp
1029 .ne 2
1030 .na
1031 \fB\fBset-prop\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR[+|-]=<\fIvalue\fR[,...]> \fIprotocol\fR
1032 .ad
1033 .sp .6
1034 .RS 4n
1035 The \fBset-prop\fR subcommand is used to set a property's value(s) on the
1036 protocol.
1037 .sp
1038 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
1039 that the setting is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
1040 .sp
1041 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) specifies the property name and
1042 value(s). The optional [+|-] syntax can be used to add/remove values from the
1043 current list of values on the property.
1044 The property name can be one of the following:
1045 .sp
1046 .ne 2
1047 .na
1048
1049 .RS 4n
1050
1051 \fBecn\fR
1052 .ad
1053 .RS 4n
1054 Explicit congestion control (TCP-only)
1055 Can be "never", "passive" or "active".
1056 .RE
1057
1058 \fBextra_priv_ports\fR
1059 .ad
1060 .RS 4n
1061 Additional privileged ports (SCTP, TCP or UDP)
1062 .RE
1063
1064 \fBforwarding\fR
1065 .ad
1066 .RS 4n
1067 Packet forwarding is enabled.
1068 Can be "on" or "off".
1069 .RE
1070
1071 \fBhoplimit\fR
1072 .ad
1073 .RS 4n
1074 The IPv6 hoplimit.
1075 .RE
1076
1077 \fBlargest_anon_port\fR
1078 .ad
1079 .RS 4n
1080 Largest ephemeral port (SCTP, TCP or UDP)
1081 .RE
1082
1083 \fBmax_buf\fR
1084 .ad
1085 .RS 4n
1086 Maximum receive or send buffer size (ICMP, SCTP, TCP, or UDP). This also
1087 sets the upper limit for the \fBrecv_buf\fB and \fBsend_buf\fB properties.
1088 .RE
1089
1090 \fBrecv_buf\fR
1091 .ad
1092 .RS 4n
1093 Default receive buffer size (ICMP, SCTP, TCP, or UDP). The maximum value for
1094 this property is controlled by the \fBmax_buf\fR property.
1095 .RE
1096
1097 \fBsack\fR
1098 .ad
1099 .RS 4n
1100 Selective acknowledgement (TCP).
1101 Can be "active", "passive" or "never".
1102 .RE
1103
1104 \fBsend_buf\fR
1105 .ad
1106 .RS 4n
1107 Default send buffer size (ICMP, SCTP, TCP, or UDP). The maximum value for
1108 this property is controlled by the \fBmax_buf\fR property.
1109 .RE
1110
1111 \fBsmallest_anon_port\fR
1112 .ad
1113 .RS 4n
1114 Smallest ephemeral port (SCTP, TCP or UDP)
1115 .RE
1116
1117 \fBsmallest_nonpriv_port\fR
1118 .ad
1119 .RS 4n
1120 Smallest non-privileged port (SCTP, TCP or UDP)
1121 .RE
1122
1123 \fBttl\fR
1124 .ad
1125 .RS 4n
1126 The IPv4 time-to-live.
1127 .RE
1128
1129 .RE
1130 .RE
1131
1132 .sp
1133 .ne 2
1134 .na
1135 \fB\fBreset-prop\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR \fIprotocol\fR\fR
1136 .ad
1137 .sp .6
1138 .RS 4n
1139 The \fBreset-prop\fR subcommand is used to reset a protocol's property
1140 value to the default.
1141 .sp
1142 The \fB-t\fR option (also \fB--temporary\fR) means
1143 that the disable is temporary and will not be persistent across reboots.
1144 .sp
1145 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) specifies the property name.
1146 See the \fBset-prop\fR subcommand for the list of property names.
1147 .sp
1148
1149 .RE
1150
1151 .sp
1152 .ne 2
1153 .na
1154 \fB\fBshow-prop\fR [[\fB-c\fR]\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR[,...]] [\fB-p\fR \fIprop\fR,...] \fIprotocol\fR]
1155 .ad
1156 .sp .6
1157 .RS 4n
1158 The \fBshow-prop\fR subcommand is used to display the property values
1159 for one or all of the protocols.
1160 .sp
1161 The \fB-c\fR option (also \fB--parsable\fR) prints
1162 the output in a parsable format.
1163 .sp
1164 The \fB-o\fR option (also \fB--output\fR) is used
1165 to select which fields will be shown. The field value can be one of the
1166 following names:
1167 .sp
1168 .ne 2
1169 .na
1170 .RS 4n
1171 \fBALL\fR
1172 .ad
1173 .RS 4n
1174 Display all fields
1175 .RE
1176
1177 .sp
1178 .ne 2
1179 .na
1180 \fBPROTO\fR
1181 .ad
1182 .RS 4n
1183 The name of the protocol
1184 .RE
1185
1186 .sp
1187 .ne 2
1188 .na
1189 \fBPROPERTY\fR
1190 .ad
1191 .RS 4n
1192 The name of the property
1193 .RE
1194
1195 .sp
1196 .ne 2
1197 .na
1198 \fBPERM\fR
1199 .ad
1200 .RS 4n
1201 If the property is readable ("r") and/or writable ("w").
1202 .RE
1203
1204 .sp
1205 .ne 2
1206 .na
1207 \fBCURRENT\fR
1208 .ad
1209 .RS 4n
1210 The value of the property
1211 .RE
1212
1213 .sp
1214 .ne 2
1215 .na
1216 \fBPERSISTENT\fR
1217 .ad
1218 .RS 4n
1219 The persistent value of the property
1220 .RE
1221
1222 .sp
1223 .ne 2
1224 .na
1225 \fBDEFAULT\fR
1226 .ad
1227 .RS 4n
1228 The default value of the property
1229 .RE
1230
1231 .sp
1232 .ne 2
1233 .na
1234 \fBPOSSIBLE\fR
1235 .ad
1236 .RS 4n
1237 The possible values for the property
1238 .RE
1239 .RE
1240
1241 .sp
1242 The \fB-p\fR option (also \fB--prop\fR) is used
1243 to specify which properties to display. See the \fBset-prop\fR
1244 subcommand for the list of property names.
1245 .sp
1246
1247 .RE
1248
1249 .SH SEE ALSO
1250 .sp
1251 .LP
1252 \fBifconfig\fR(1M), \fBdladm\fR(1M), \fBndd\fR(1M), \fBzonecfg\fR(1M),
1253 \fBarp\fR(1M), \fBcfgadm\fR(1M), \fBif_mpadm\fR(1M), \fBnsswitch.conf\fR(4),
1254 and \fBdhcp\fR(5).