arp(7P) Protocols arp(7P)NAME
arp, ARP - Address Resolution Protocol
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/fcntl.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <net/if_arp.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
d = open ("/dev/arp", oflag);
DESCRIPTION
ARP is a protocol used to map dynamically between Internet Protocol
(IP) and Ethernet addresses. It is used by all Ethernet datalink
providers (interface drivers) and can be used by other datalink
providers that support broadcast, including FDDI and Token Ring. The
only network layer supported in this implementation is the Internet
Protocol, although ARP is not specific to that protocol.
ARP caches IP-to-link-layer address mappings. When an interface
requests a mapping for an address not in the cache, ARP queues the mes‐
sage that requires the mapping and broadcasts a message on the associ‐
ated network requesting the address mapping. If a response is provided,
ARP caches the new mapping and transmits any pending message. ARP will
queue a maximum of four packets while awaiting a response to a mapping
request. ARP keeps only the first four transmitted packets.
APPLICATION PROGRAMMING INTERFACE
The STREAMS device /dev/arp is not a Transport Level Interface (TLI)
transport provider and may not be used with the TLI interface.
To facilitate communications with systems that do not use ARP,
ioctl() requests are provided to enter and delete entries in the
IP-to-link address tables. Ioctls that change the table contents
require sys_net_config privilege. See privileges(5).
#include <sys/sockio.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <net/if_arp.h>
struct arpreq arpreq;
ioctl(s, SIOCSARP, (caddr_t)&arpreq);
ioctl(s, SIOCGARP, (caddr_t)&arpreq);
ioctl(s, SIOCDARP, (caddr_t)&arpreq);
SIOCSARP, SIOCGARP and SIOCDARP are BSD compatible ioctls. These ioctls
do not communicate the mac address length between the user and the ker‐
nel (and thus only work for 6 byte wide Ethernet addresses). To manage
the ARP cache for media that has different sized mac addresses, use
SIOCSXARP, SIOCGXARP and SIOCDXARP ioctls.
#include <sys/sockio.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <net/if_dl.h>
#include <net/if_arp.h>
struct xarpreq xarpreq;
ioctl(s, SIOCSXARP, (caddr_t)&xarpreq);
ioctl(s, SIOCGXARP, (caddr_t)&xarpreq);
ioctl(s, SIOCDXARP, (caddr_t)&xarpreq);
Each ioctl() request takes the same structure as an argument.
SIOCS[X]ARP sets an ARP entry, SIOCG[X]ARP gets an ARP entry, and
SIOCD[X]ARP deletes an ARP entry. These ioctl() requests may be
applied to any Internet family socket descriptors, or to a descriptor
for the ARP device. Note that SIOCS[X]ARP and SIOCD[X]ARP require a
privileged user, while SIOCG[X]ARP does not.
The arpreq structure contains
/*
* ARP ioctl request
*/
struct arpreq {
struct sockaddr arp_pa; /* protocol address */
struct sockaddr arp_ha; /* hardware address */
int arp_flags; /* flags */
};
The xarpreq structure contains:
/*
* Extended ARP ioctl request
*/
struct xarpreq {
struct sockaddr_storage xarp_pa; /* protocol address */
struct sockaddr_dl xarp_ha; /* hardware address */
int xarp_flags; /* arp_flags field values */
};
#define ATF_COM 0x2 /* completed entry (arp_ha valid) */
#define ATF_PERM 0x4 /* permanent (non-aging) entry */
#define ATF_PUBL 0x8 /* publish (respond for other host) */
#define ATF_USETRAILERS 0x10 /* send trailer packets to host */
#define ATF_AUTHORITY 0x20 /* hardware address is authoritative */
The address family for the [x]arp_pa sockaddr must be AF_INET. The
ATF_COM flag bits ([x]arp_flags) cannot be altered. ATF_USETRAILER
is not implemented on Solaris and is retained for compatibility only.
ATF_PERM makes the entry permanent (disables aging) if the ioctl()
request succeeds. ATF_PUBL specifies that the system should respond to
ARP requests for the indicated protocol address coming from other
machines. This allows a host to act as an "ARP server," which may be
useful in convincing an ARP-only machine to talk to a non-ARP machine.
ATF_AUTHORITY indicates that this machine owns the address. ARP does
not update the entry based on received packets.
The address family for the arp_ha sockaddr must be AF_UNSPEC.
Before invoking any of the SIOC*XARP ioctls, user code must fill in the
xarp_pa field with the protocol (IP) address information, similar to
the BSD variant. The SIOC*XARP ioctls come in two (legal) varieties,
depending on xarp_ha.sdl_nlen:
1. if sdl_nlen = 0, it behaves as an extended BSD ioctl. The kernel
uses the IP address to determine the network interface.
2. if (sdl_nlen > 0) and (sdl_nlen < LIFNAMSIZ), the kernel uses the
interface name in sdl_data[0] to determine the network interface;
sdl_nlen represents the length of the string (excluding terminating
null character).
3. if (sdl_nlen >= LIFNAMSIZ), an error (EINVAL) is flagged from the
ioctl.
Other than the above, the xarp_ha structure should be 0-filled except
for SIOCSXARP, where the sdl_alen field must be set to the size of
hardware address length and the hardware address itself must be placed
in the LLADDR/sdl_data[] area. (EINVAL will be returned if user speci‐
fied sdl_alen does not match the address length of the identified
interface).
On return from the kernel on a SIOCGXARP ioctl, the kernel fills in the
name of the interface (excluding terminating NULL) and its hardware
address, one after another, in the sdl_data/LLADDR area; if the two are
larger than can be held in the 244 byte sdl_data[] area, an ENOSPC
error is returned. Assuming it fits, the kernel will also set sdl_alen
with the length of hardware address, sdl_nlen with the length of name
of the interface (excluding terminating NULL), sdl_type with an IFT_*
value to indicate the type of the media, sdl_slen with 0, sdl_family
with AF_LINK and sdl_index (which if not 0) with system given index for
the interface. The information returned is very similar to that
returned via routing sockets on an RTM_IFINFO message.
ARP performs duplicate address detection for local addresses. When a
logical interface is brought up (IFF_UP) or any time the hardware link
goes up (IFF_RUNNING), ARP sends probes (ar$spa == 0) for the assigned
address. If a conflict is found, the interface is torn down. See
ifconfig(1M) for more details.
ARP watches for hosts impersonating the local host, that is, any host
that responds to an ARP request for the local host's address, and any
address for which the local host is an authority. ARP defends local
addresses and logs those with ATF_AUTHORITY set, and can tear down
local addresses on an excess of conflicts.
ARP also handles UNARP messages received from other nodes. It does
not generate these messages.
SEE ALSOarp(1M), ifconfig(1M), privileges(5), if_tcp(7P), inet(7P)
Plummer, Dave, An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol or Converting
Network Protocol Addresses to 48 bit Ethernet - Addresses for Trans‐
mission on Ethernet Hardware, RFC 826, STD 0037, November 1982.
Malkin, Gary, ARP Extension - UNARP, RFC 1868, November 1995.
DIAGNOSTICS
Several messages can be written to the system logs (by the IP module)
when errors occur. In the following examples, the hardware address
strings include colon (:) separated ASCII representations of the link
layer addresses, whose lengths depend on the underlying media (for
example, 6 bytes for Ethernet).
Node %x:%x ... %x:%x is using our IP address %d.%d.%d.%d on %s.
Duplicate IP address warning. ARP has discovered another host on a
local network that responds to mapping requests for the Internet
address of this system, and has defended the system against this
node by re-announcing the ARP entry.
%s has duplicate address %d.%d.%d.%d (in use by %x:%x ... %x:%x); dis‐
abled.
Duplicate IP address detected while performing initial probing. The
newly-configured interface has been shut down.
%s has duplicate address %d.%d.%d.%d (claimed by %x:%x ... %x:%x); dis‐
abled.
Duplicate IP address detected on a running IP interface. The con‐
flict cannot be resolved, and the interface has been disabled to
protect the network.
Recovered address %d.%d.%d.%d on %s.
An interface with a previously-conflicting IP address has been
recovered automatically and reenabled. The conflict has been
resolved.
Proxy ARP problem? Node '%x:%x ... %x:%x' is using %d.%d.%d.%d on %s
This message appears if arp(1M) has been used to create a pub‐
lished permanent (ATF_AUTHORITY) entry, and some other host on the
local network responds to mapping requests for the published ARP
entry.
SunOS 5.10 09 Mar 2007 arp(7P)