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netstat(TC)


netstat -- show network status

Syntax

netstat [ -AaiLmnrsu ] [ -f address_family ] [ -I interface ] [ -M corefile ]
[ -N system ] [ -p protocol_name] [ -w interval ] [ [ interval ] [ system ] [ corefile ] ]

Description

The netstat command symbolically displays the contents of various network-related data structures. The options have the following meanings:

-A
Show the address of any associated protocol control blocks; used for debugging.

-a
Show the state of all sockets; sockets used by server processes are not shown in the default display

-f address_family
Limit statistics and control block displays to address_family. The only address_family values currently supported are inet and unix.

-i
Show the state of interfaces which have been auto-configured (interfaces statically configured into a system, but not located at boot time, are not shown).

-I interface
Show interface state for interface only.

-L
Display Global Multiprocessor Locking Statistics.

-m
Show STREAMS memory usage. If the -a flag is used in conjunction with -m, then additional information about the allocation of message blocks for networking data structures is shown as well.

-M corefile
Use corefile as the system core image instead of the default /dev/kmem. (See ``Limitations''.)

-n
Show network addresses as numbers (normally netstat interprets addresses and attempts to display them symbolically).

-N system
Use system as the system namelist instead of the default /unix. (See ``Limitations''.)

-p protocol_name
Limit statistics and control block displays to protocol-name, for example, tcp.

-r
Show the routing tables.

-s
Show per-protocol statistics.

-u
Equivalent to specifying -f unix.

-w interval
Show statistics regarding packet traffic on the configured network interfaces, sampling and displaying an update every interval seconds.
The arguments interval, system, and corefile are the old syntax alternative to specifying the -w, -N, and -M options. (See ``Limitations''.)

Address and port formats

In all displays, address formats are of the form host.port or network (if a socket's address specifies a network but no specific host address). When known, host addresses, network addresses, and port numbers are displayed symbolically. The symbolic name for a network address is obtained from the database /etc/networks. The symbolic name for a host address is obtained from the database /etc/hosts, unless the system is using the Domain Name Service (DNS); in this later case the symbolic name is obtained from the DNS name resolver. The symbolic name for a port is obtained from the database /etc/services. If a symbolic name for an address or port is unknown, or if the -n option is specified, the address is printed in the Internet ``dot format'' (refer to hosts(SFF) for more information regarding this format) and the port is identified by its number. Unspecified, or ``wildcard,'' addresses and ports appear as ``*''.

Display formats

There are a number of display formats, depending on the information presented.

The default display appears when netstat is invoked without any options. This display, about active sockets, shows the local and remote addresses, send and receive queue sizes (in bytes), protocol, and, optionally, the internal state of the protocol.

The -i interface display provides a table of cumulative statistics regarding packets transferred, errors, and collisions. The network address (currently Internet specific) of the interface and the maximum transmission unit (``mtu'') are also displayed. If the -a flag is used in conjunction with the -i flag, information about multicast addresses will also be displayed.

The -r routing table display indicates the available routes and their status. Each route consists of a destination host or network and a gateway to use in forwarding packets. The Flags field shows the state of the route (``U'' if ``up''), and whether the route is to a gateway (``G''). Direct routes are created for each interface attached to the local host. The Refs field gives the current number of active uses of the route. Connection-oriented protocols normally hold on to a single route for the duration of a connection, while connectionless protocols obtain a route then discard it. The Use field provides a count of the number of packets sent using that route. The Interface field indicates the network interface utilized for the route.

If the -a option is used in conjunction with the -r option, link-level (ARP) routes will be displayed as well as regular IP-level routes. In addition, some flags that are normally suppressed (``M, N, P'') will be displayed.

Additional flags that may be shown in the routing table display are:


``-''
The route is currently marked as ``losing'' because the kernel has detected a transmission problem.

``C''
The route is a ``cloning'' route via an interface. New routes for specific destinations will be derived from this route.

``D''
The route was created as the result of a redirect message being received.

``H''
The route is to a host.

``L''
The route has associated link-level information, such as an ARP entry.

``M''
The route has been modified since its creation, possibly due to a redirect.

``N''
The Path MTU discovery algorithm has discovered a new MTU for this route.

``P''
Path MTU discovery is being performed on this route.

``R''
The route is marked as ``reject'' to prevent any traffic from flowing to this destination.

``S''
The route was statically configured.

``X''
The route is resolved externally by a user-level process. This is not supported in the current implementation.
The -w display consists of a column summarizing information for a default single interface and a column summarizing information for all interfaces. The default single interface may be changed by specifying a different interface using the -I option. The first line of each screen of information contains a summary since the system was last rebooted. Subsequent lines of output show values accumulated over the preceding interval.

Diagnostics

Interface statistics are dependent on the link driver. If it does not attach itself to the ifstats structure in the kernel or support the MACIOC_GETSTAT ioctl, the message No Statistics Available will be printed for that interface.

Limitations

Use of the old syntax for specifying interval, system, and corefile (that is. without a preceding argument) is discouraged, as support for this may disappear in the future.

As netstat gets most of its information from mechanisms other than reading kernel memory, it can only be used on a running system. system and corefile do not provide the ability to examine system dump images. They allow netstat to find the correct kernel image after a kernel relink has renamed the kernel from which the system was rebooted.

See also

hosts(SFF), networks(SFF), protocols(SFF), services(SFF)
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003