diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/rfc/rfc2133.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/rfc/rfc2133.txt | 1795 |
1 files changed, 1795 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/rfc/rfc2133.txt b/doc/rfc/rfc2133.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ea66cf0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/rfc/rfc2133.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1795 @@ + + + + + + +Network Working Group R. Gilligan +Request for Comments: 2133 Freegate +Category: Informational S. Thomson + Bellcore + J. Bound + Digital + W. Stevens + Consultant + April 1997 + + Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6 + +Status of this Memo + + This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo + does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of + this memo is unlimited. + +Abstract + + The de facto standard application program interface (API) for TCP/IP + applications is the "sockets" interface. Although this API was + developed for Unix in the early 1980s it has also been implemented on + a wide variety of non-Unix systems. TCP/IP applications written + using the sockets API have in the past enjoyed a high degree of + portability and we would like the same portability with IPv6 + applications. But changes are required to the sockets API to support + IPv6 and this memo describes these changes. These include a new + socket address structure to carry IPv6 addresses, new address + conversion functions, and some new socket options. These extensions + are designed to provide access to the basic IPv6 features required by + TCP and UDP applications, including multicasting, while introducing a + minimum of change into the system and providing complete + compatibility for existing IPv4 applications. Additional extensions + for advanced IPv6 features (raw sockets and access to the IPv6 + extension headers) are defined in another document [5]. + +Table of Contents + + 1. Introduction ................................................ 2 + 2. Design Considerations ....................................... 3 + 2.1. What Needs to be Changed .................................. 3 + 2.2. Data Types ................................................ 5 + 2.3. Headers ................................................... 5 + 2.4. Structures ................................................ 5 + 3. Socket Interface ............................................ 5 + 3.1. IPv6 Address Family and Protocol Family ................... 5 + 3.2. IPv6 Address Structure .................................... 6 + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 1] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + 3.3. Socket Address Structure for 4.3BSD-Based Systems ......... 6 + 3.4. Socket Address Structure for 4.4BSD-Based Systems ......... 7 + 3.5. The Socket Functions ...................................... 8 + 3.6. Compatibility with IPv4 Applications ...................... 9 + 3.7. Compatibility with IPv4 Nodes ............................. 9 + 3.8. IPv6 Wildcard Address ..................................... 10 + 3.9. IPv6 Loopback Address ..................................... 11 + 4. Interface Identification .................................... 12 + 4.1. Name-to-Index ............................................. 13 + 4.2. Index-to-Name ............................................. 13 + 4.3. Return All Interface Names and Indexes .................... 14 + 4.4. Free Memory ............................................... 14 + 5. Socket Options .............................................. 14 + 5.1. Changing Socket Type ...................................... 15 + 5.2. Unicast Hop Limit ......................................... 16 + 5.3. Sending and Receiving Multicast Packets ................... 17 + 6. Library Functions ........................................... 19 + 6.1. Hostname-to-Address Translation ........................... 19 + 6.2. Address To Hostname Translation ........................... 22 + 6.3. Protocol-Independent Hostname and Service Name Translation 22 + 6.4. Socket Address Structure to Hostname and Service Name ..... 25 + 6.5. Address Conversion Functions .............................. 27 + 6.6. Address Testing Macros .................................... 28 + 7. Summary of New Definitions .................................. 29 + 8. Security Considerations ..................................... 31 + 9. Acknowledgments ............................................. 31 + 10. References ................................................. 31 + 11. Authors' Addresses ......................................... 32 + +1. Introduction + + While IPv4 addresses are 32 bits long, IPv6 interfaces are identified + by 128-bit addresses. The socket interface make the size of an IP + address quite visible to an application; virtually all TCP/IP + applications for BSD-based systems have knowledge of the size of an + IP address. Those parts of the API that expose the addresses must be + changed to accommodate the larger IPv6 address size. IPv6 also + introduces new features (e.g., flow label and priority), some of + which must be made visible to applications via the API. This memo + defines a set of extensions to the socket interface to support the + larger address size and new features of IPv6. + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 2] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +2. Design Considerations + + There are a number of important considerations in designing changes + to this well-worn API: + + - The API changes should provide both source and binary + compatibility for programs written to the original API. That is, + existing program binaries should continue to operate when run on + a system supporting the new API. In addition, existing + applications that are re-compiled and run on a system supporting + the new API should continue to operate. Simply put, the API + changes for IPv6 should not break existing programs. + + - The changes to the API should be as small as possible in order to + simplify the task of converting existing IPv4 applications to + IPv6. + + - Where possible, applications should be able to use this API to + interoperate with both IPv6 and IPv4 hosts. Applications should + not need to know which type of host they are communicating with. + + - IPv6 addresses carried in data structures should be 64-bit + aligned. This is necessary in order to obtain optimum + performance on 64-bit machine architectures. + + Because of the importance of providing IPv4 compatibility in the API, + these extensions are explicitly designed to operate on machines that + provide complete support for both IPv4 and IPv6. A subset of this + API could probably be designed for operation on systems that support + only IPv6. However, this is not addressed in this memo. + +2.1. What Needs to be Changed + + The socket interface API consists of a few distinct components: + + - Core socket functions. + + - Address data structures. + + - Name-to-address translation functions. + + - Address conversion functions. + + The core socket functions -- those functions that deal with such + things as setting up and tearing down TCP connections, and sending + and receiving UDP packets -- were designed to be transport + independent. Where protocol addresses are passed as function + arguments, they are carried via opaque pointers. A protocol-specific + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 3] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + address data structure is defined for each protocol that the socket + functions support. Applications must cast pointers to these + protocol-specific address structures into pointers to the generic + "sockaddr" address structure when using the socket functions. These + functions need not change for IPv6, but a new IPv6-specific address + data structure is needed. + + The "sockaddr_in" structure is the protocol-specific data structure + for IPv4. This data structure actually includes 8-octets of unused + space, and it is tempting to try to use this space to adapt the + sockaddr_in structure to IPv6. Unfortunately, the sockaddr_in + structure is not large enough to hold the 16-octet IPv6 address as + well as the other information (address family and port number) that + is needed. So a new address data structure must be defined for IPv6. + + The name-to-address translation functions in the socket interface are + gethostbyname() and gethostbyaddr(). These must be modified to + support IPv6 and the semantics defined must provide 100% backward + compatibility for all existing IPv4 applications, along with IPv6 + support for new applications. Additionally, the POSIX 1003.g work in + progress [4] specifies a new hostname-to-address translation function + which is protocol independent. This function can also be used with + IPv6. + + The address conversion functions -- inet_ntoa() and inet_addr() -- + convert IPv4 addresses between binary and printable form. These + functions are quite specific to 32-bit IPv4 addresses. We have + designed two analogous functions that convert both IPv4 and IPv6 + addresses, and carry an address type parameter so that they can be + extended to other protocol families as well. + + Finally, a few miscellaneous features are needed to support IPv6. + New interfaces are needed to support the IPv6 flow label, priority, + and hop limit header fields. New socket options are needed to + control the sending and receiving of IPv6 multicast packets. + + The socket interface will be enhanced in the future to provide access + to other IPv6 features. These extensions are described in [5]. + + + + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 4] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +2.2. Data Types + + The data types of the structure elements given in this memo are + intended to be examples, not absolute requirements. Whenever + possible, POSIX 1003.1g data types are used: u_intN_t means an + unsigned integer of exactly N bits (e.g., u_int16_t) and u_intNm_t + means an unsigned integer of at least N bits (e.g., u_int32m_t). We + also assume the argument data types from 1003.1g when possible (e.g., + the final argument to setsockopt() is a size_t value). Whenever + buffer sizes are specified, the POSIX 1003.1 size_t data type is used + (e.g., the two length arguments to getnameinfo()). + +2.3. Headers + + When function prototypes and structures are shown we show the headers + that must be #included to cause that item to be defined. + +2.4. Structures + + When structures are described the members shown are the ones that + must appear in an implementation. Additional, nonstandard members + may also be defined by an implementation. + + The ordering shown for the members of a structure is the recommended + ordering, given alignment considerations of multibyte members, but an + implementation may order the members differently. + +3. Socket Interface + + This section specifies the socket interface changes for IPv6. + +3.1. IPv6 Address Family and Protocol Family + + A new address family name, AF_INET6, is defined in <sys/socket.h>. + The AF_INET6 definition distinguishes between the original + sockaddr_in address data structure, and the new sockaddr_in6 data + structure. + + A new protocol family name, PF_INET6, is defined in <sys/socket.h>. + Like most of the other protocol family names, this will usually be + defined to have the same value as the corresponding address family + name: + + #define PF_INET6 AF_INET6 + + The PF_INET6 is used in the first argument to the socket() function + to indicate that an IPv6 socket is being created. + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 5] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +3.2. IPv6 Address Structure + + A new data structure to hold a single IPv6 address is defined as + follows: + + #include <netinet/in.h> + + struct in6_addr { + u_int8_t s6_addr[16]; /* IPv6 address */ + } + + This data structure contains an array of sixteen 8-bit elements, + which make up one 128-bit IPv6 address. The IPv6 address is stored + in network byte order. + +3.3. Socket Address Structure for 4.3BSD-Based Systems + + In the socket interface, a different protocol-specific data structure + is defined to carry the addresses for each protocol suite. Each + protocol-specific data structure is designed so it can be cast into a + protocol-independent data structure -- the "sockaddr" structure. + Each has a "family" field that overlays the "sa_family" of the + sockaddr data structure. This field identifies the type of the data + structure. + + The sockaddr_in structure is the protocol-specific address data + structure for IPv4. It is used to pass addresses between + applications and the system in the socket functions. The following + structure is defined to carry IPv6 addresses: + + #include <netinet/in.h> + + struct sockaddr_in6 { + u_int16m_t sin6_family; /* AF_INET6 */ + u_int16m_t sin6_port; /* transport layer port # */ + u_int32m_t sin6_flowinfo; /* IPv6 flow information */ + struct in6_addr sin6_addr; /* IPv6 address */ + }; + + This structure is designed to be compatible with the sockaddr data + structure used in the 4.3BSD release. + + The sin6_family field identifies this as a sockaddr_in6 structure. + This field overlays the sa_family field when the buffer is cast to a + sockaddr data structure. The value of this field must be AF_INET6. + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 6] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The sin6_port field contains the 16-bit UDP or TCP port number. This + field is used in the same way as the sin_port field of the + sockaddr_in structure. The port number is stored in network byte + order. + + The sin6_flowinfo field is a 32-bit field that contains two pieces of + information: the 24-bit IPv6 flow label and the 4-bit priority field. + The contents and interpretation of this member is unspecified at this + time. + + The sin6_addr field is a single in6_addr structure (defined in the + previous section). This field holds one 128-bit IPv6 address. The + address is stored in network byte order. + + The ordering of elements in this structure is specifically designed + so that the sin6_addr field will be aligned on a 64-bit boundary. + This is done for optimum performance on 64-bit architectures. + + Notice that the sockaddr_in6 structure will normally be larger than + the generic sockaddr structure. On many existing implementations the + sizeof(struct sockaddr_in) equals sizeof(struct sockaddr), with both + being 16 bytes. Any existing code that makes this assumption needs + to be examined carefully when converting to IPv6. + +3.4. Socket Address Structure for 4.4BSD-Based Systems + + The 4.4BSD release includes a small, but incompatible change to the + socket interface. The "sa_family" field of the sockaddr data + structure was changed from a 16-bit value to an 8-bit value, and the + space saved used to hold a length field, named "sa_len". The + sockaddr_in6 data structure given in the previous section cannot be + correctly cast into the newer sockaddr data structure. For this + reason, the following alternative IPv6 address data structure is + provided to be used on systems based on 4.4BSD: + + #include <netinet/in.h> + + #define SIN6_LEN + + struct sockaddr_in6 { + u_char sin6_len; /* length of this struct */ + u_char sin6_family; /* AF_INET6 */ + u_int16m_t sin6_port; /* transport layer port # */ + u_int32m_t sin6_flowinfo; /* IPv6 flow information */ + struct in6_addr sin6_addr; /* IPv6 address */ + }; + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 7] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The only differences between this data structure and the 4.3BSD + variant are the inclusion of the length field, and the change of the + family field to a 8-bit data type. The definitions of all the other + fields are identical to the structure defined in the previous + section. + + Systems that provide this version of the sockaddr_in6 data structure + must also declare SIN6_LEN as a result of including the + <netinet/in.h> header. This macro allows applications to determine + whether they are being built on a system that supports the 4.3BSD or + 4.4BSD variants of the data structure. + +3.5. The Socket Functions + + Applications call the socket() function to create a socket descriptor + that represents a communication endpoint. The arguments to the + socket() function tell the system which protocol to use, and what + format address structure will be used in subsequent functions. For + example, to create an IPv4/TCP socket, applications make the call: + + s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0); + + To create an IPv4/UDP socket, applications make the call: + + s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0); + + Applications may create IPv6/TCP and IPv6/UDP sockets by simply using + the constant PF_INET6 instead of PF_INET in the first argument. For + example, to create an IPv6/TCP socket, applications make the call: + + s = socket(PF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, 0); + + To create an IPv6/UDP socket, applications make the call: + + s = socket(PF_INET6, SOCK_DGRAM, 0); + + Once the application has created a PF_INET6 socket, it must use the + sockaddr_in6 address structure when passing addresses in to the + system. The functions that the application uses to pass addresses + into the system are: + + bind() + connect() + sendmsg() + sendto() + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 8] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The system will use the sockaddr_in6 address structure to return + addresses to applications that are using PF_INET6 sockets. The + functions that return an address from the system to an application + are: + + accept() + recvfrom() + recvmsg() + getpeername() + getsockname() + + No changes to the syntax of the socket functions are needed to + support IPv6, since all of the "address carrying" functions use an + opaque address pointer, and carry an address length as a function + argument. + +3.6. Compatibility with IPv4 Applications + + In order to support the large base of applications using the original + API, system implementations must provide complete source and binary + compatibility with the original API. This means that systems must + continue to support PF_INET sockets and the sockaddr_in address + structure. Applications must be able to create IPv4/TCP and IPv4/UDP + sockets using the PF_INET constant in the socket() function, as + described in the previous section. Applications should be able to + hold a combination of IPv4/TCP, IPv4/UDP, IPv6/TCP and IPv6/UDP + sockets simultaneously within the same process. + + Applications using the original API should continue to operate as + they did on systems supporting only IPv4. That is, they should + continue to interoperate with IPv4 nodes. + +3.7. Compatibility with IPv4 Nodes + + The API also provides a different type of compatibility: the ability + for IPv6 applications to interoperate with IPv4 applications. This + feature uses the IPv4-mapped IPv6 address format defined in the IPv6 + addressing architecture specification [2]. This address format + allows the IPv4 address of an IPv4 node to be represented as an IPv6 + address. The IPv4 address is encoded into the low-order 32 bits of + the IPv6 address, and the high-order 96 bits hold the fixed prefix + 0:0:0:0:0:FFFF. IPv4-mapped addresses are written as follows: + + ::FFFF:<IPv4-address> + + These addresses are often generated automatically by the + gethostbyname() function when the specified host has only IPv4 + addresses (as described in Section 6.1). + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 9] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + Applications may use PF_INET6 sockets to open TCP connections to IPv4 + nodes, or send UDP packets to IPv4 nodes, by simply encoding the + destination's IPv4 address as an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address, and + passing that address, within a sockaddr_in6 structure, in the + connect() or sendto() call. When applications use PF_INET6 sockets + to accept TCP connections from IPv4 nodes, or receive UDP packets + from IPv4 nodes, the system returns the peer's address to the + application in the accept(), recvfrom(), or getpeername() call using + a sockaddr_in6 structure encoded this way. + + Few applications will likely need to know which type of node they are + interoperating with. However, for those applications that do need to + know, the IN6_IS_ADDR_V4MAPPED() macro, defined in Section 6.6, is + provided. + +3.8. IPv6 Wildcard Address + + While the bind() function allows applications to select the source IP + address of UDP packets and TCP connections, applications often want + the system to select the source address for them. With IPv4, one + specifies the address as the symbolic constant INADDR_ANY (called the + "wildcard" address) in the bind() call, or simply omits the bind() + entirely. + + Since the IPv6 address type is a structure (struct in6_addr), a + symbolic constant can be used to initialize an IPv6 address variable, + but cannot be used in an assignment. Therefore systems provide the + IPv6 wildcard address in two forms. + + The first version is a global variable named "in6addr_any" that is an + in6_addr structure. The extern declaration for this variable is + defined in <netinet/in.h>: + + extern const struct in6_addr in6addr_any; + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 10] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + Applications use in6addr_any similarly to the way they use INADDR_ANY + in IPv4. For example, to bind a socket to port number 23, but let + the system select the source address, an application could use the + following code: + + struct sockaddr_in6 sin6; + . . . + sin6.sin6_family = AF_INET6; + sin6.sin6_flowinfo = 0; + sin6.sin6_port = htons(23); + sin6.sin6_addr = in6addr_any; /* structure assignment */ + . . . + if (bind(s, (struct sockaddr *) &sin6, sizeof(sin6)) == -1) + . . . + + The other version is a symbolic constant named IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT and + is defined in <netinet/in.h>. This constant can be used to + initialize an in6_addr structure: + + struct in6_addr anyaddr = IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT; + + Note that this constant can be used ONLY at declaration time. It can + not be used to assign a previously declared in6_addr structure. For + example, the following code will not work: + + /* This is the WRONG way to assign an unspecified address */ + struct sockaddr_in6 sin6; + . . . + sin6.sin6_addr = IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT; /* will NOT compile */ + + Be aware that the IPv4 INADDR_xxx constants are all defined in host + byte order but the IPv6 IN6ADDR_xxx constants and the IPv6 + in6addr_xxx externals are defined in network byte order. + +3.9. IPv6 Loopback Address + + Applications may need to send UDP packets to, or originate TCP + connections to, services residing on the local node. In IPv4, they + can do this by using the constant IPv4 address INADDR_LOOPBACK in + their connect(), sendto(), or sendmsg() call. + + IPv6 also provides a loopback address to contact local TCP and UDP + services. Like the unspecified address, the IPv6 loopback address is + provided in two forms -- a global variable and a symbolic constant. + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 11] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The global variable is an in6_addr structure named + "in6addr_loopback." The extern declaration for this variable is + defined in <netinet/in.h>: + + extern const struct in6_addr in6addr_loopback; + + Applications use in6addr_loopback as they would use INADDR_LOOPBACK + in IPv4 applications (but beware of the byte ordering difference + mentioned at the end of the previous section). For example, to open + a TCP connection to the local telnet server, an application could use + the following code: + + struct sockaddr_in6 sin6; + . . . + sin6.sin6_family = AF_INET6; + sin6.sin6_flowinfo = 0; + sin6.sin6_port = htons(23); + sin6.sin6_addr = in6addr_loopback; /* structure assignment */ + . . . + if (connect(s, (struct sockaddr *) &sin6, sizeof(sin6)) == -1) + . . . + + The symbolic constant is named IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK_INIT and is defined + in <netinet/in.h>. It can be used at declaration time ONLY; for + example: + + struct in6_addr loopbackaddr = IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK_INIT; + + Like IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT, this constant cannot be used in an assignment + to a previously declared IPv6 address variable. + +4. Interface Identification + + This API uses an interface index (a small positive integer) to + identify the local interface on which a multicast group is joined + (Section 5.3). Additionally, the advanced API [5] uses these same + interface indexes to identify the interface on which a datagram is + received, or to specify the interface on which a datagram is to be + sent. + + Interfaces are normally known by names such as "le0", "sl1", "ppp2", + and the like. On Berkeley-derived implementations, when an interface + is made known to the system, the kernel assigns a unique positive + integer value (called the interface index) to that interface. These + are small positive integers that start at 1. (Note that 0 is never + used for an interface index.) There may be gaps so that there is no + current interface for a particular positive interface index. + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 12] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + This API defines two functions that map between an interface name and + index, a third function that returns all the interface names and + indexes, and a fourth function to return the dynamic memory allocated + by the previous function. How these functions are implemented is + left up to the implementation. 4.4BSD implementations can implement + these functions using the existing sysctl() function with the + NET_RT_LIST command. Other implementations may wish to use ioctl() + for this purpose. + +4.1. Name-to-Index + + The first function maps an interface name into its corresponding + index. + + #include <net/if.h> + + unsigned int if_nametoindex(const char *ifname); + + If the specified interface does not exist, the return value is 0. + +4.2. Index-to-Name + + The second function maps an interface index into its corresponding + name. + + #include <net/if.h> + + char *if_indextoname(unsigned int ifindex, char *ifname); + + The ifname argument must point to a buffer of at least IFNAMSIZ bytes + into which the interface name corresponding to the specified index is + returned. (IFNAMSIZ is also defined in <net/if.h> and its value + includes a terminating null byte at the end of the interface name.) + This pointer is also the return value of the function. If there is + no interface corresponding to the specified index, NULL is returned. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 13] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +4.3. Return All Interface Names and Indexes + + The final function returns an array of if_nameindex structures, one + structure per interface. + + #include <net/if.h> + + struct if_nameindex { + unsigned int if_index; /* 1, 2, ... */ + char *if_name; /* null terminated name: "le0", ... */ + }; + + struct if_nameindex *if_nameindex(void); + + The end of the array of structures is indicated by a structure with + an if_index of 0 and an if_name of NULL. The function returns a NULL + pointer upon an error. + + The memory used for this array of structures along with the interface + names pointed to by the if_name members is obtained dynamically. + This memory is freed by the next function. + +4.4. Free Memory + + The following function frees the dynamic memory that was allocated by + if_nameindex(). + + #include <net/if.h> + + void if_freenameindex(struct if_nameindex *ptr); + + The argument to this function must be a pointer that was returned by + if_nameindex(). + +5. Socket Options + + A number of new socket options are defined for IPv6. All of these + new options are at the IPPROTO_IPV6 level. That is, the "level" + parameter in the getsockopt() and setsockopt() calls is IPPROTO_IPV6 + when using these options. The constant name prefix IPV6_ is used in + all of the new socket options. This serves to clearly identify these + options as applying to IPv6. + + The declaration for IPPROTO_IPV6, the new IPv6 socket options, and + related constants defined in this section are obtained by including + the header <netinet/in.h>. + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 14] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +5.1. Changing Socket Type + + Unix allows open sockets to be passed between processes via the + exec() call and other means. It is a relatively common application + practice to pass open sockets across exec() calls. Thus it is + possible for an application using the original API to pass an open + PF_INET socket to an application that is expecting to receive a + PF_INET6 socket. Similarly, it is possible for an application using + the extended API to pass an open PF_INET6 socket to an application + using the original API, which would be equipped only to deal with + PF_INET sockets. Either of these cases could cause problems, because + the application that is passed the open socket might not know how to + decode the address structures returned in subsequent socket + functions. + + To remedy this problem, a new setsockopt() option is defined that + allows an application to "convert" a PF_INET6 socket into a PF_INET + socket and vice versa. + + An IPv6 application that is passed an open socket from an unknown + process may use the IPV6_ADDRFORM setsockopt() option to "convert" + the socket to PF_INET6. Once that has been done, the system will + return sockaddr_in6 address structures in subsequent socket + functions. + + An IPv6 application that is about to pass an open PF_INET6 socket to + a program that is not be IPv6 capable can "downgrade" the socket to + PF_INET before calling exec(). After that, the system will return + sockaddr_in address structures to the application that was exec()'ed. + Be aware that you cannot downgrade an IPv6 socket to an IPv4 socket + unless all nonwildcard addresses already associated with the IPv6 + socket are IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses. + + The IPV6_ADDRFORM option is valid at both the IPPROTO_IP and + IPPROTO_IPV6 levels. The only valid option values are PF_INET6 and + PF_INET. For example, to convert a PF_INET6 socket to PF_INET, a + program would call: + + int addrform = PF_INET; + + if (setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_ADDRFORM, + (char *) &addrform, sizeof(addrform)) == -1) + perror("setsockopt IPV6_ADDRFORM"); + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 15] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + An application may use IPV6_ADDRFORM with getsockopt() to learn + whether an open socket is a PF_INET of PF_INET6 socket. For example: + + int addrform; + size_t len = sizeof(addrform); + + if (getsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_ADDRFORM, + (char *) &addrform, &len) == -1) + perror("getsockopt IPV6_ADDRFORM"); + else if (addrform == PF_INET) + printf("This is an IPv4 socket.\n"); + else if (addrform == PF_INET6) + printf("This is an IPv6 socket.\n"); + else + printf("This system is broken.\n"); + +5.2. Unicast Hop Limit + + A new setsockopt() option controls the hop limit used in outgoing + unicast IPv6 packets. The name of this option is IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS, + and it is used at the IPPROTO_IPV6 layer. The following example + illustrates how it is used: + + int hoplimit = 10; + + if (setsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS, + (char *) &hoplimit, sizeof(hoplimit)) == -1) + perror("setsockopt IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS"); + + When the IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS option is set with setsockopt(), the + option value given is used as the hop limit for all subsequent + unicast packets sent via that socket. If the option is not set, the + system selects a default value. The integer hop limit value (called + x) is interpreted as follows: + + x < -1: return an error of EINVAL + x == -1: use kernel default + 0 <= x <= 255: use x + x >= 256: return an error of EINVAL + + + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 16] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS option may be used with getsockopt() to + determine the hop limit value that the system will use for subsequent + unicast packets sent via that socket. For example: + + int hoplimit; + size_t len = sizeof(hoplimit); + + if (getsockopt(s, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS, + (char *) &hoplimit, &len) == -1) + perror("getsockopt IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS"); + else + printf("Using %d for hop limit.\n", hoplimit); + +5.3. Sending and Receiving Multicast Packets + + IPv6 applications may send UDP multicast packets by simply specifying + an IPv6 multicast address in the address argument of the sendto() + function. + + Three socket options at the IPPROTO_IPV6 layer control some of the + parameters for sending multicast packets. Setting these options is + not required: applications may send multicast packets without using + these options. The setsockopt() options for controlling the sending + of multicast packets are summarized below: + + IPV6_MULTICAST_IF + + Set the interface to use for outgoing multicast packets. The + argument is the index of the interface to use. + + Argument type: unsigned int + + IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS + + Set the hop limit to use for outgoing multicast packets. + (Note a separate option - IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS - is provided to + set the hop limit to use for outgoing unicast packets.) The + interpretation of the argument is the same as for the + IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS option: + + x < -1: return an error of EINVAL + x == -1: use kernel default + 0 <= x <= 255: use x + x >= 256: return an error of EINVAL + + Argument type: int + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 17] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP + + Controls whether outgoing multicast packets sent should be + delivered back to the local application. A toggle. If the + option is set to 1, multicast packets are looped back. If it + is set to 0, they are not. + + Argument type: unsigned int + + The reception of multicast packets is controlled by the two + setsockopt() options summarized below: + + IPV6_ADD_MEMBERSHIP + + Join a multicast group on a specified local interface. If + the interface index is specified as 0, the kernel chooses the + local interface. For example, some kernels look up the + multicast group in the normal IPv6 routing table and using + the resulting interface. + + Argument type: struct ipv6_mreq + + IPV6_DROP_MEMBERSHIP + + Leave a multicast group on a specified interface. + + Argument type: struct ipv6_mreq + + The argument type of both of these options is the ipv6_mreq + structure, defined as: + + #include <netinet/in.h> + + struct ipv6_mreq { + struct in6_addr ipv6mr_multiaddr; /* IPv6 multicast addr */ + unsigned int ipv6mr_interface; /* interface index */ + }; + + Note that to receive multicast datagrams a process must join the + multicast group and bind the UDP port to which datagrams will be + sent. Some processes also bind the multicast group address to the + socket, in addition to the port, to prevent other datagrams destined + to that same port from being delivered to the socket. + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 18] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +6. Library Functions + + New library functions are needed to perform a variety of operations + with IPv6 addresses. Functions are needed to lookup IPv6 addresses + in the Domain Name System (DNS). Both forward lookup (hostname-to- + address translation) and reverse lookup (address-to-hostname + translation) need to be supported. Functions are also needed to + convert IPv6 addresses between their binary and textual form. + +6.1. Hostname-to-Address Translation + + The commonly used function gethostbyname() remains unchanged as does + the hostent structure to which it returns a pointer. Existing + applications that call this function continue to receive only IPv4 + addresses that are the result of a query in the DNS for A records. + (We assume the DNS is being used; some environments may be using a + hosts file or some other name resolution system, either of which may + impede renumbering. We also assume that the RES_USE_INET6 resolver + option is not set, which we describe in more detail shortly.) + + Two new changes are made to support IPv6 addresses. First, the + following function is new: + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <netdb.h> + + struct hostent *gethostbyname2(const char *name, int af); + + The af argument specifies the address family. The default operation + of this function is simple: + + - If the af argument is AF_INET, then a query is made for A + records. If successful, IPv4 addresses are returned and the + h_length member of the hostent structure will be 4, else the + function returns a NULL pointer. + + - If the af argument is AF_INET6, then a query is made for AAAA + records. If successful, IPv6 addresses are returned and the + h_length member of the hostent structure will be 16, else the + function returns a NULL pointer. + + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 19] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The second change, that provides additional functionality, is a new + resolver option RES_USE_INET6, which is defined as a result of + including the <resolv.h> header. (This option is provided starting + with the BIND 4.9.4 release.) There are three ways to set this + option. + + - The first way is + + res_init(); + _res.options |= RES_USE_INET6; + + and then call either gethostbyname() or gethostbyname2(). This + option then affects only the process that is calling the + resolver. + + - The second way to set this option is to set the environment + variable RES_OPTIONS, as in RES_OPTIONS=inet6. (This example is + for the Bourne and Korn shells.) This method affects any + processes that see this environment variable. + + - The third way is to set this option in the resolver configuration + file (normally /etc/resolv.conf) and the option then affects all + applications on the host. This final method should not be done + until all applications on the host are capable of dealing with + IPv6 addresses. + + There is no priority among these three methods. When the + RES_USE_INET6 option is set, two changes occur: + + - gethostbyname(host) first calls gethostbyname2(host, AF_INET6) + looking for AAAA records, and if this fails it then calls + gethostbyname2(host, AF_INET) looking for A records. + + - gethostbyname2(host, AF_INET) always returns IPv4-mapped IPv6 + addresses with the h_length member of the hostent structure set + to 16. + + An application must not enable the RES_USE_INET6 option until it is + prepared to deal with 16-byte addresses in the returned hostent + structure. + + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 20] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The following table summarizes the operation of the existing + gethostbyname() function, the new function gethostbyname2(), along + with the new resolver option RES_USE_INET6. + ++------------------+---------------------------------------------------+ +| | RES_USE_INET6 option | +| +-------------------------+-------------------------+ +| | off | on | ++------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------+ +| |Search for A records. |Search for AAAA records. | +| gethostbyname | If found, return IPv4 | If found, return IPv6 | +| (host) | addresses (h_length=4). | addresses (h_length=16).| +| | Else error. | Else search for A | +| | | records. If found, | +| |Provides backward | return IPv4-mapped IPv6 | +| | compatibility with all | addresses (h_length=16).| +| | existing IPv4 appls. | Else error. | ++------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------+ +| |Search for A records. |Search for A records. | +| gethostbyname2 | If found, return IPv4 | If found, return | +| (host, AF_INET) | addresses (h_length=4). | IPv4-mapped IPv6 | +| | Else error. | addresses (h_length=16).| +| | | Else error. | ++------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------+ +| |Search for AAAA records. |Search for AAAA records. | +| gethostbyname2 | If found, return IPv6 | If found, return IPv6 | +| (host, AF_INET6) | addresses (h_length=16).| addresses (h_length=16).| +| | Else error. | Else error. | ++------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------+ + + It is expected that when a typical naive application that calls + gethostbyname() today is modified to use IPv6, it simply changes the + program to use IPv6 sockets and then enables the RES_USE_INET6 + resolver option before calling gethostbyname(). This application + will then work with either IPv4 or IPv6 peers. + + Note that gethostbyname() and gethostbyname2() are not thread-safe, + since both return a pointer to a static hostent structure. But + several vendors have defined a thread-safe gethostbyname_r() function + that requires four additional arguments. We expect these vendors to + also define a gethostbyname2_r() function. + + + + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 21] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +6.2. Address To Hostname Translation + + The existing gethostbyaddr() function already requires an address + family argument and can therefore work with IPv6 addresses: + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <netdb.h> + + struct hostent *gethostbyaddr(const char *src, int len, int af); + + One possible source of confusion is the handling of IPv4-mapped IPv6 + addresses and IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses. This is addressed in + [6] and involves the following logic: + + 1. If af is AF_INET6, and if len equals 16, and if the IPv6 address + is an IPv4-mapped IPv6 address or an IPv4-compatible IPv6 + address, then skip over the first 12 bytes of the IPv6 address, + set af to AF_INET, and set len to 4. + + 2. If af is AF_INET, then query for a PTR record in the in- + addr.arpa domain. + + 3. If af is AF_INET6, then query for a PTR record in the ip6.int + domain. + + 4. If the function is returning success, and if af equals AF_INET, + and if the RES_USE_INET6 option was set, then the single address + that is returned in the hostent structure (a copy of the first + argument to the function) is returned as an IPv4-mapped IPv6 + address and the h_length member is set to 16. + + All four steps listed are performed, in order. The same caveats + regarding a thread-safe version of gethostbyname() that were made at + the end of the previous section apply here as well. + +6.3. Protocol-Independent Hostname and Service Name Translation + + Hostname-to-address translation is done in a protocol-independent + fashion using the getaddrinfo() function that is taken from the + Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) POSIX 1003.1g + (Protocol Independent Interfaces) work in progress specification [4]. + + The official specification for this function will be the final POSIX + standard. We are providing this independent description of the + function because POSIX standards are not freely available (as are + IETF documents). Should there be any discrepancies between this + description and the POSIX description, the POSIX description takes + precedence. + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 22] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <netdb.h> + + int getaddrinfo(const char *hostname, const char *servname, + const struct addrinfo *hints, + struct addrinfo **res); + + The addrinfo structure is defined as: + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <netdb.h> + + struct addrinfo { + int ai_flags; /* AI_PASSIVE, AI_CANONNAME */ + int ai_family; /* PF_xxx */ + int ai_socktype; /* SOCK_xxx */ + int ai_protocol; /* 0 or IPPROTO_xxx for IPv4 and IPv6 */ + size_t ai_addrlen; /* length of ai_addr */ + char *ai_canonname; /* canonical name for hostname */ + struct sockaddr *ai_addr; /* binary address */ + struct addrinfo *ai_next; /* next structure in linked list */ + }; + + The return value from the function is 0 upon success or a nonzero + error code. The following names are the nonzero error codes from + getaddrinfo(), and are defined in <netdb.h>: + + EAI_ADDRFAMILY address family for hostname not supported + EAI_AGAIN temporary failure in name resolution + EAI_BADFLAGS invalid value for ai_flags + EAI_FAIL non-recoverable failure in name resolution + EAI_FAMILY ai_family not supported + EAI_MEMORY memory allocation failure + EAI_NODATA no address associated with hostname + EAI_NONAME hostname nor servname provided, or not known + EAI_SERVICE servname not supported for ai_socktype + EAI_SOCKTYPE ai_socktype not supported + EAI_SYSTEM system error returned in errno + + The hostname and servname arguments are pointers to null-terminated + strings or NULL. One or both of these two arguments must be a non- + NULL pointer. In the normal client scenario, both the hostname and + servname are specified. In the normal server scenario, only the + servname is specified. A non-NULL hostname string can be either a + host name or a numeric host address string (i.e., a dotted-decimal + IPv4 address or an IPv6 hex address). A non-NULL servname string can + be either a service name or a decimal port number. + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 23] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The caller can optionally pass an addrinfo structure, pointed to by + the third argument, to provide hints concerning the type of socket + that the caller supports. In this hints structure all members other + than ai_flags, ai_family, ai_socktype, and ai_protocol must be zero + or a NULL pointer. A value of PF_UNSPEC for ai_family means the + caller will accept any protocol family. A value of 0 for ai_socktype + means the caller will accept any socket type. A value of 0 for + ai_protocol means the caller will accept any protocol. For example, + if the caller handles only TCP and not UDP, then the ai_socktype + member of the hints structure should be set to SOCK_STREAM when + getaddrinfo() is called. If the caller handles only IPv4 and not + IPv6, then the ai_family member of the hints structure should be set + to PF_INET when getaddrinfo() is called. If the third argument to + getaddrinfo() is a NULL pointer, this is the same as if the caller + had filled in an addrinfo structure initialized to zero with + ai_family set to PF_UNSPEC. + + Upon successful return a pointer to a linked list of one or more + addrinfo structures is returned through the final argument. The + caller can process each addrinfo structure in this list by following + the ai_next pointer, until a NULL pointer is encountered. In each + returned addrinfo structure the three members ai_family, ai_socktype, + and ai_protocol are the corresponding arguments for a call to the + socket() function. In each addrinfo structure the ai_addr member + points to a filled-in socket address structure whose length is + specified by the ai_addrlen member. + + If the AI_PASSIVE bit is set in the ai_flags member of the hints + structure, then the caller plans to use the returned socket address + structure in a call to bind(). In this case, if the hostname + argument is a NULL pointer, then the IP address portion of the socket + address structure will be set to INADDR_ANY for an IPv4 address or + IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT for an IPv6 address. + + If the AI_PASSIVE bit is not set in the ai_flags member of the hints + structure, then the returned socket address structure will be ready + for a call to connect() (for a connection-oriented protocol) or + either connect(), sendto(), or sendmsg() (for a connectionless + protocol). In this case, if the hostname argument is a NULL pointer, + then the IP address portion of the socket address structure will be + set to the loopback address. + + If the AI_CANONNAME bit is set in the ai_flags member of the hints + structure, then upon successful return the ai_canonname member of the + first addrinfo structure in the linked list will point to a null- + terminated string containing the canonical name of the specified + hostname. + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 24] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + All of the information returned by getaddrinfo() is dynamically + allocated: the addrinfo structures, and the socket address structures + and canonical host name strings pointed to by the addrinfo + structures. To return this information to the system the function + freeaddrinfo() is called: + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <netdb.h> + + void freeaddrinfo(struct addrinfo *ai); + + The addrinfo structure pointed to by the ai argument is freed, along + with any dynamic storage pointed to by the structure. This operation + is repeated until a NULL ai_next pointer is encountered. + + To aid applications in printing error messages based on the EAI_xxx + codes returned by getaddrinfo(), the following function is defined. + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <netdb.h> + + char *gai_strerror(int ecode); + + The argument is one of the EAI_xxx values defined earlier and the + eturn value points to a string describing the error. If the argument + is not one of the EAI_xxx values, the function still returns a + pointer to a string whose contents indicate an unknown error. + +6.4. Socket Address Structure to Hostname and Service Name + + The POSIX 1003.1g specification includes no function to perform the + reverse conversion from getaddrinfo(): to look up a hostname and + service name, given the binary address and port. Therefore, we + define the following function: + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <netdb.h> + + int getnameinfo(const struct sockaddr *sa, size_t salen, + char *host, size_t hostlen, + char *serv, size_t servlen, + int flags); + + This function looks up an IP address and port number provided by the + caller in the DNS and system-specific database, and returns text + strings for both in buffers provided by the caller. The function + indicates successful completion by a zero return value; a non-zero + return value indicates failure. + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 25] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The first argument, sa, points to either a sockaddr_in structure (for + IPv4) or a sockaddr_in6 structure (for IPv6) that holds the IP + address and port number. The salen argument gives the length of the + sockaddr_in or sockaddr_in6 structure. + + The function returns the hostname associated with the IP address in + the buffer pointed to by the host argument. The caller provides the + size of this buffer via the hostlen argument. The service name + associated with the port number is returned in the buffer pointed to + by serv, and the servlen argument gives the length of this buffer. + The caller specifies not to return either string by providing a zero + value for the hostlen or servlen arguments. Otherwise, the caller + must provide buffers large enough to hold the hostname and the + service name, including the terminating null characters. + + Unfortunately most systems do not provide constants that specify the + maximum size of either a fully-qualified domain name or a service + name. Therefore to aid the application in allocating buffers for + these two returned strings the following constants are defined in + <netdb.h>: + + #define NI_MAXHOST 1025 + #define NI_MAXSERV 32 + + The first value is actually defined as the constant MAXDNAME in + recent versions of BIND's <arpa/nameser.h> header (older versions of + BIND define this constant to be 256) and the second is a guess based + on the services listed in the current Assigned Numbers RFC. + + The final argument is a flag that changes the default actions of this + function. By default the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) for the + host is looked up in the DNS and returned. If the flag bit NI_NOFQDN + is set, only the hostname portion of the FQDN is returned for local + hosts. + + If the flag bit NI_NUMERICHOST is set, or if the host's name cannot + be located in the DNS, the numeric form of the host's address is + returned instead of its name (e.g., by calling inet_ntop() instead of + gethostbyaddr()). If the flag bit NI_NAMEREQD is set, an error is + returned if the host's name cannot be located in the DNS. + + If the flag bit NI_NUMERICSERV is set, the numeric form of the + service address is returned (e.g., its port number) instead of its + name. The two NI_NUMERICxxx flags are required to support the "-n" + flag that many commands provide. + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 26] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + A fifth flag bit, NI_DGRAM, specifies that the service is a datagram + service, and causes getservbyport() to be called with a second + argument of "udp" instead of its default of "tcp". This is required + for the few ports (512-514) that have different services for UDP and + TCP. + + These NI_xxx flags are defined in <netdb.h> along with the AI_xxx + flags already defined for getaddrinfo(). + +6.5. Address Conversion Functions + + The two functions inet_addr() and inet_ntoa() convert an IPv4 address + between binary and text form. IPv6 applications need similar + functions. The following two functions convert both IPv6 and IPv4 + addresses: + + #include <sys/socket.h> + #include <arpa/inet.h> + + int inet_pton(int af, const char *src, void *dst); + + const char *inet_ntop(int af, const void *src, + char *dst, size_t size); + + The inet_pton() function converts an address in its standard text + presentation form into its numeric binary form. The af argument + specifies the family of the address. Currently the AF_INET and + AF_INET6 address families are supported. The src argument points to + the string being passed in. The dst argument points to a buffer into + which the function stores the numeric address. The address is + returned in network byte order. Inet_pton() returns 1 if the + conversion succeeds, 0 if the input is not a valid IPv4 dotted- + decimal string or a valid IPv6 address string, or -1 with errno set + to EAFNOSUPPORT if the af argument is unknown. The calling + application must ensure that the buffer referred to by dst is large + enough to hold the numeric address (e.g., 4 bytes for AF_INET or 16 + bytes for AF_INET6). + + If the af argument is AF_INET, the function accepts a string in the + standard IPv4 dotted-decimal form: + + ddd.ddd.ddd.ddd + + where ddd is a one to three digit decimal number between 0 and 255. + Note that many implementations of the existing inet_addr() and + inet_aton() functions accept nonstandard input: octal numbers, + hexadecimal numbers, and fewer than four numbers. inet_pton() does + not accept these formats. + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 27] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + If the af argument is AF_INET6, then the function accepts a string in + one of the standard IPv6 text forms defined in Section 2.2 of the + addressing architecture specification [2]. + + The inet_ntop() function converts a numeric address into a text + string suitable for presentation. The af argument specifies the + family of the address. This can be AF_INET or AF_INET6. The src + argument points to a buffer holding an IPv4 address if the af + argument is AF_INET, or an IPv6 address if the af argument is + AF_INET6. The dst argument points to a buffer where the function + will store the resulting text string. The size argument specifies + the size of this buffer. The application must specify a non-NULL dst + argument. For IPv6 addresses, the buffer must be at least 46-octets. + For IPv4 addresses, the buffer must be at least 16-octets. In order + to allow applications to easily declare buffers of the proper size to + store IPv4 and IPv6 addresses in string form, the following two + constants are defined in <netinet/in.h>: + + #define INET_ADDRSTRLEN 16 + #define INET6_ADDRSTRLEN 46 + + The inet_ntop() function returns a pointer to the buffer containing + the text string if the conversion succeeds, and NULL otherwise. Upon + failure, errno is set to EAFNOSUPPORT if the af argument is invalid + or ENOSPC if the size of the result buffer is inadequate. + +6.6. Address Testing Macros + + The following macros can be used to test for special IPv6 addresses. + + #include <netinet/in.h> + + int IN6_IS_ADDR_UNSPECIFIED (const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_LOOPBACK (const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_MULTICAST (const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_LINKLOCAL (const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_SITELOCAL (const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_V4MAPPED (const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_V4COMPAT (const struct in6_addr *); + + int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_NODELOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_LINKLOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_SITELOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_ORGLOCAL (const struct in6_addr *); + int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_GLOBAL (const struct in6_addr *); + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 28] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + The first seven macros return true if the address is of the specified + type, or false otherwise. The last five test the scope of a + multicast address and return true if the address is a multicast + address of the specified scope or false if the address is either not + a multicast address or not of the specified scope. + +7. Summary of New Definitions + + The following list summarizes the constants, structure, and extern + definitions discussed in this memo, sorted by header. + + <net/if.h> IFNAMSIZ + <net/if.h> struct if_nameindex{}; + + <netdb.h> AI_CANONNAME + <netdb.h> AI_PASSIVE + <netdb.h> EAI_ADDRFAMILY + <netdb.h> EAI_AGAIN + <netdb.h> EAI_BADFLAGS + <netdb.h> EAI_FAIL + <netdb.h> EAI_FAMILY + <netdb.h> EAI_MEMORY + <netdb.h> EAI_NODATA + <netdb.h> EAI_NONAME + <netdb.h> EAI_SERVICE + <netdb.h> EAI_SOCKTYPE + <netdb.h> EAI_SYSTEM + <netdb.h> NI_DGRAM + <netdb.h> NI_MAXHOST + <netdb.h> NI_MAXSERV + <netdb.h> NI_NAMEREQD + <netdb.h> NI_NOFQDN + <netdb.h> NI_NUMERICHOST + <netdb.h> NI_NUMERICSERV + <netdb.h> struct addrinfo{}; + + <netinet/in.h> IN6ADDR_ANY_INIT + <netinet/in.h> IN6ADDR_LOOPBACK_INIT + <netinet/in.h> INET6_ADDRSTRLEN + <netinet/in.h> INET_ADDRSTRLEN + <netinet/in.h> IPPROTO_IPV6 + <netinet/in.h> IPV6_ADDRFORM + <netinet/in.h> IPV6_ADD_MEMBERSHIP + <netinet/in.h> IPV6_DROP_MEMBERSHIP + <netinet/in.h> IPV6_MULTICAST_HOPS + <netinet/in.h> IPV6_MULTICAST_IF + <netinet/in.h> IPV6_MULTICAST_LOOP + <netinet/in.h> IPV6_UNICAST_HOPS + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 29] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + <netinet/in.h> SIN6_LEN + <netinet/in.h> extern const struct in6_addr in6addr_any; + <netinet/in.h> extern const struct in6_addr in6addr_loopback; + <netinet/in.h> struct in6_addr{}; + <netinet/in.h> struct ipv6_mreq{}; + <netinet/in.h> struct sockaddr_in6{}; + + <resolv.h> RES_USE_INET6 + + <sys/socket.h> AF_INET6 + <sys/socket.h> PF_INET6 + + + The following list summarizes the function and macro prototypes + discussed in this memo, sorted by header. + +<arpa/inet.h> int inet_pton(int, const char *, void *); +<arpa/inet.h> const char *inet_ntop(int, const void *, + char *, size_t); + +<net/if.h> char *if_indextoname(unsigned int, char *); +<net/if.h> unsigned int if_nametoindex(const char *); +<net/if.h> void if_freenameindex(struct if_nameindex *); +<net/if.h> struct if_nameindex *if_nameindex(void); + +<netdb.h> int getaddrinfo(const char *, const char *, + const struct addrinfo *, + struct addrinfo **); +<netdb.h> int getnameinfo(const struct sockaddr *, size_t, + char *, size_t, char *, size_t, int); +<netdb.h> void freeaddrinfo(struct addrinfo *); +<netdb.h> char *gai_strerror(int); +<netdb.h> struct hostent *gethostbyname(const char *); +<netdb.h> struct hostent *gethostbyaddr(const char *, int, int); +<netdb.h> struct hostent *gethostbyname2(const char *, int); + +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_LINKLOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_LOOPBACK(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_GLOBAL(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_LINKLOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_NODELOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_ORGLOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_MC_SITELOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_MULTICAST(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_SITELOCAL(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_UNSPECIFIED(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_V4COMPAT(const struct in6_addr *); +<netinet/in.h> int IN6_IS_ADDR_V4MAPPED(const struct in6_addr *); + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 30] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + +8. Security Considerations + + IPv6 provides a number of new security mechanisms, many of which need + to be accessible to applications. A companion memo detailing the + extensions to the socket interfaces to support IPv6 security is being + written [3]. + +9. Acknowledgments + + Thanks to the many people who made suggestions and provided feedback + to to the numerous revisions of this document, including: Werner + Almesberger, Ran Atkinson, Fred Baker, Dave Borman, Andrew Cherenson, + Alex Conta, Alan Cox, Steve Deering, Richard Draves, Francis Dupont, + Robert Elz, Marc Hasson, Tim Hartrick, Tom Herbert, Bob Hinden, Wan- + Yen Hsu, Christian Huitema, Koji Imada, Markus Jork, Ron Lee, Alan + Lloyd, Charles Lynn, Jack McCann, Dan McDonald, Dave Mitton, Thomas + Narten, Erik Nordmark, Josh Osborne, Craig Partridge, Jean-Luc + Richier, Erik Scoredos, Keith Sklower, Matt Thomas, Harvey Thompson, + Dean D. Throop, Karen Tracey, Glenn Trewitt, Paul Vixie, David + Waitzman, Carl Williams, and Kazuhiko Yamamoto, + + The getaddrinfo() and getnameinfo() functions are taken from an + earlier Work in Progress by Keith Sklower. As noted in that + document, William Durst, Steven Wise, Michael Karels, and Eric Allman + provided many useful discussions on the subject of protocol- + independent name-to-address translation, and reviewed early versions + of Keith Sklower's original proposal. Eric Allman implemented the + first prototype of getaddrinfo(). The observation that specifying + the pair of name and service would suffice for connecting to a + service independent of protocol details was made by Marshall Rose in + a proposal to X/Open for a "Uniform Network Interface". + + Craig Metz made many contributions to this document. Ramesh Govindan + made a number of contributions and co-authored an earlier version of + this memo. + +10. References + + [1] Deering, S., and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6) + Specification", RFC 1883, December 1995. + + [2] Hinden, R., and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture", + RFC 1884, December 1995. + + [3] McDonald, D., "A Simple IP Security API Extension to BSD Sockets", + Work in Progress. + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 31] + +RFC 2133 IPv6 Socket Interface Extensions April 1997 + + + [4] IEEE, "Protocol Independent Interfaces", IEEE Std 1003.1g, DRAFT + 6.3, November 1995. + + [5] Stevens, W., and M. Thomas, "Advanced Sockets API for IPv6", + Work in Progress. + + [6] Vixie, P., "Reverse Name Lookups of Encapsulated IPv4 Addresses in + IPv6", Work in Progress. + +11. Authors' Addresses + + Robert E. Gilligan + Freegate Corporation + 710 Lakeway Dr. STE 230 + Sunnyvale, CA 94086 + + Phone: +1 408 524 4804 + EMail: gilligan@freegate.net + + + Susan Thomson + Bell Communications Research + MRE 2P-343, 445 South Street + Morristown, NJ 07960 + + Phone: +1 201 829 4514 + EMail: set@thumper.bellcore.com + + + Jim Bound + Digital Equipment Corporation + 110 Spitbrook Road ZK3-3/U14 + Nashua, NH 03062-2698 + + Phone: +1 603 881 0400 + Email: bound@zk3.dec.com + + + W. Richard Stevens + 1202 E. Paseo del Zorro + Tucson, AZ 85718-2826 + + Phone: +1 520 297 9416 + EMail: rstevens@kohala.com + + + + + + + +Gilligan, et. al. Informational [Page 32] + |