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ARP(4P)								       ARP(4P)

NAME
       arp - Address Resolution Protocol

SYNOPSIS
       pseudo-device ether

DESCRIPTION
       ARP  is	a  protocol used to dynamically map between DARPA Internet and
       10Mb/s Ethernet addresses.  It is  used	by  all	 the  10Mb/s  Ethernet
       interface  drivers.   It	 is  not  specific to Internet protocols or to
       10Mb/s Ethernet, but this implementation currently supports  only  that
       combination.

       ARP  caches  Internet-Ethernet  address	mappings.   When  an interface
       requests a mapping for an address not in	 the  cache,  ARP  queues  the
       message	which  requires	 the  mapping  and broadcasts a message on the
       associated network requesting the address mapping.  If  a  response  is
       provided,  the  new  mapping  is	 cached	 and  any  pending  message is
       transmitted.  ARP will queue at most one packet	while  waiting	for  a
       mapping	 request   to	be   responded	to;  only  the	most  recently
       ``transmitted'' packet is kept.

       To facilitate communications with systems which do not use ARP,	ioctls
       are  provided  to  enter and delete entries in the Internet-to-Ethernet
       tables.	Usage:

	    #include <sys/ioctl.h>
	    #include <sys/socket.h>
	    #include <net/if.h>
	    struct arpreq arpreq;

	    ioctl(s, SIOCSARP, (caddr_t)&arpreq);
	    ioctl(s, SIOCGARP, (caddr_t)&arpreq);
	    ioctl(s, SIOCDARP, (caddr_t)&arpreq);
       Each ioctl takes the same structure as an argument.  SIOCSARP  sets  an
       ARP  entry,  SIOCGARP  gets  an	ARP entry, and SIOCDARP deletes an ARP
       entry.  These ioctls may be applied to any  socket  descriptor  s,  but
       only by the super-user.	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 */
	      };
	      /*  arp_flags field values */
	      #define ATF_COM			 0x02/* completed entry (arp_ha valid) */
	      #define  ATF_PERM		0x04	 /* permanent entry */
	      #define  ATF_PUBL		0x08	 /* publish (respond for other host) */
	      #define  ATF_USETRAILERS	0x10	 /* send trailer packets to host */

       The  address  family  for  the arp_pa sockaddr must be AF_INET; for the
       arp_ha sockaddr it must be AF_UNSPEC.  The only flag bits which may  be
       written	are  ATF_PERM,	ATF_PUBL and ATF_USETRAILERS.  ATF_PERM causes
       the entry to be permanent if the ioctl  call  succeeds.	 The  peculiar
       nature  of  the	ARP  tables may cause the ioctl to fail if more than 8
       (permanent) Internet host addresses hash to the	same  slot.   ATF_PUBL
       specifies  that	the  ARP  code	should respond to ARP requests for the
       indicated host 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.

       ARP is also used to negotiate the use  of  trailer  IP  encapsulations;
       trailers	 are an alternate encapsulation used to allow efficient packet
       alignment for large  packets  despite  variable-sized  headers.	 Hosts
       which  wish  to	receive	 trailer encapsulations so indicate by sending
       gratuitous ARP translation replies along with replies to	 IP  requests;
       they are also sent in reply to IP translation replies.  The negotiation
       is thus fully symmetrical, in that either or  both  hosts  may  request
       trailers.   The	ATF_USETRAILERS	 flag is used to record the receipt of
       such a reply, and enables the transmission of trailer packets  to  that
       host.

       ARP  watches  passively	for hosts impersonating the local host (i.e. a
       host which responds to an ARP mapping  request  for  the	 local	host's
       address).

DIAGNOSTICS
       duplicate  IP  address!! sent from ethernet address: %x:%x:%x:%x:%x:%x.
       ARP has discovered another host on the local network which responds  to
       mapping requests for its own Internet address.

SEE ALSO
       ec(4), de(4), il(4), inet(4F), arp(8C), ifconfig(8C)
       ``An  Ethernet  Address	Resolution  Protocol,''	 RFC826, Dave Plummer,
       Network Information Center, SRI.
       ``Trailer Encapsulations,''  RFC893,  S.J.  Leffler  and	 M.J.  Karels,
       Network Information Center, SRI.

BUGS
       ARP  packets  on	 the  Ethernet use only 42 bytes of data; however, the
       smallest legal Ethernet packet is 60 bytes (not including  CRC).	  Some
       systems may not enforce the minimum packet size, others will.

4.2 Berkeley Distribution	 May 15, 1986			       ARP(4P)
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