ROUTE(4P)                         Protocols                        ROUTE(4P)
NAME
       route - kernel packet forwarding database
SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/types.h>
       #include <sys/socket.h>
       #include <net/if.h>
       #include <net/route.h>       
int socket(
PF_ROUTE, 
SOCK_RAW, 
int protocol);
DESCRIPTION
       UNIX provides some packet routing facilities. The kernel maintains a
       routing information database, which is used in selecting the
       appropriate network interface when transmitting packets.
       A user process (or possibly multiple co-operating processes)
       maintains this database by sending messages over a special kind of
       socket. This supplants fixed size 
ioctl(2)'s specified in       
routing(4P). Routing table changes can only be carried out by the
       superuser.
       The operating system might spontaneously emit routing messages in
       response to external events, such as receipt of a re-direct, or
       failure to locate a suitable route for a request. The message types
       are described in greater detail below.
       Routing database entries come in two flavors: entries for a specific
       host, or entries for all hosts on a generic subnetwork (as specified
       by a bit mask and value under the mask). The effect of wildcard or
       default route can be achieved by using a mask of all zeros, and there
       can be hierarchical routes.
       When the system is booted and addresses are assigned to the network
       interfaces, the internet protocol family installs a routing table
       entry for each interface when it is ready for traffic. Normally the
       protocol specifies the route through each interface as a 
direct       connection to the destination host or network.  If the route is
       direct, the transport layer of a protocol family usually requests the
       packet be sent to the same host specified in the packet.  Otherwise,
       the interface is requested to address the packet to the gateway
       listed in the routing entry, that is, the packet is forwarded.
       When routing a packet, the kernel attempts to find the most specific
       route matching the destination. If no entry is found, the destination
       is declared to be unreachable, and a routing-miss message is
       generated if there are any listeners on the routing control socket
       (described below). If there are two different mask and value-under-
       the-mask pairs that match, the more specific is the one with more
       bits in the mask. A route to a host is regarded as being supplied
       with a mask of as many ones as there are bits in the destination.
       A wildcard routing entry is specified with a zero destination address
       value, and a mask of all zeroes. Wildcard routes are used when the
       system fails to find other routes matching the destination. The
       combination of wildcard routes and routing redirects can provide an
       economical mechanism for routing traffic.
       One opens the channel for passing routing control messages by using
       the socket call. There can be more than one routing socket open per
       system.
       Messages are formed by a header followed by a small number of       
sockaddrs, whose length depend on the address family. 
sockaddrs are
       interpreted by position. An example of a type of message with three
       addresses might be a 
CIDR prefix route: Destination, Netmask, and
       Gateway. The interpretation of which addresses are present is given
       by a bit mask within the header, and the sequence is least
       significant to most significant bit within the vector.
       Any messages sent to the kernel are returned, and copies are sent to
       all interested listeners. The kernel provides the process 
ID of the
       sender, and the sender can use an additional sequence field to
       distinguish between outstanding messages. However, message replies
       can be lost when kernel buffers are exhausted.
       The 
protocol parameter specifies which messages an application
       listening on the routing socket is interested in seeing, based on the
       address family of the 
sockaddrs present. Currently, you can specify       
AF_INET and 
AF_INET6 to filter the messages seen by the listener, or
       alternatively, you can specify 
AF_UNSPEC to indicate that the
       listener is interested in all routing messages.
       The kernel might reject certain messages, and indicates this by
       filling in the 
rtm_errno field of the 
rt_msghdr struct (see below).
       The following codes are returned:       
EEXIST                  If requested to duplicate an existing entry       
ESRCH                  If requested to delete a non-existent entry       
ENOBUFS                  If insufficient resources were available to install a new
                  route.       
EPERM                  If the calling process does not have appropriate
                  privileges to alter the routing table.
       In the current implementation, all routing processes run locally, and
       the values for 
rtm_errno are available through the normal 
errno       mechanism, even if the routing reply message is lost.
       A process can avoid the expense of reading replies to its own
       messages by issuing a 
setsockopt(3SOCKET) call indicating that the       
SO_USELOOPBACK option at the 
SOL_SOCKET level is to be turned off.  A
       process can ignore all messages from the routing socket by doing a       
shutdown(3SOCKET) system call for further input.
       By default, underlying IP interfaces in an IPMP group are not visible
       to routing sockets. As such, routing sockets do not receive events
       related to underlying IP interface in an IPMP group. For consistency,
       when an IP interface is placed into an IPMP group, 
RTM_DELADDR       messages are generated for each 
IFF_UP address that is not migrated
       to the corresponding IPMP IP interface and an 
RTM_IFINFO message is
       sent indicating the interface is down. Similarly, when an underlying
       interface is removed from an IPMP group, an 
RTM_IFINFO message is
       sent indicating the interface is again up and 
RTM_NEWADDR messages
       are generated for each 
IFF_UP address found on the interface.
       The 
RT_AWARE socket option at the 
SOL_ROUTE level allows an
       application to indicate its awareness of certain features, which
       control routing socket behavior. The supported values are:       
RTAW_DEFAULT                           Default awareness.       
RTAW_UNDER_IPMP                           IPMP underlying interface awareness. When
                           enabled, underlying IP interfaces in an IPMP
                           group remain visible to the routing socket and
                           events related to them continue to be generated.
       An 
RTM_ADD request tied to an underlying IP interface in an IPMP
       group is translated to an 
RTM_ADD request for its corresponding IPMP
       IP interface.  All routing socket requests other than 
RTM_ADD and       
RTM_GET  fail when issued on an underlying IP interface in an IPMP
       group.
       If a route is in use when it is deleted, the routing entry is marked
       down and removed from the routing table, but the resources associated
       with it are not reclaimed until all references to it are released.
       The 
RTM_IFINFO, 
RTM_NEWADDR, and 
RTM_ADD messages associated with
       interface configuration (setting the 
IFF_UP bit) are normally delayed
       until after Duplicate Address Detection completes. Thus, applications
       that configure interfaces and wish to wait until the interface is
       ready can wait until 
RTM_IFINFO is returned and 
SIOCGLIFFLAGS shows
       that 
IFF_DUPLICATE is not set.
   Messages
       User processes can obtain information about the routing entry to a
       specific destination by using a 
RTM_GET message.
       Messages include:
         #define RTM_ADD      0x1   /* Add Route */
         #define RTM_DELETE   0x2   /* Delete Route */
         #define RTM_CHANGE   0x3   /* Change Metrics, Flags, or Gateway */
         #define RTM_GET      0x4   /* Report Information */
         #define RTM_LOSING   0x5   /* Kernel Suspects Partitioning */
         #define RTM_REDIRECT 0x6   /* Told to use different route */
         #define RTM_MISS     0x7   /* Lookup failed on this address */
         #define RTM_LOCK     0x8   /* fix specified metrics */
         #define RTM_OLDADD   0x9   /* caused by SIOCADDRT */
         #define RTM_OLDDEL   0xa   /* caused by SIOCDELRT */
         #define RTM_RESOLVE  0xb   /* request to resolve dst to LL addr */
         #define RTM_NEWADDR  0xc   /* address being added to iface */
         #define RTM_DELADDR  0xd   /* address being removed from iface */
         #define RTM_IFINFO   0xe   /* iface going up/down etc. */
       A message header consists of:
         struct rt_msghdr {
           ushort_t rtm_msglen;    /* to skip over non-understood messages */
           uchar_t  rtm_version;   /* future binary compatibility */
           uchar_t  rtm_type;      /* message type */
           ushort_t rtm_index;     /* index for associated ifp */
           pid_t   rtm_pid;        /* identify sender */
           int     rtm_addrs;      /* bitmask identifying sockaddrs in msg */
           int     rtm_seq;        /* for sender to identify action */
           int     rtm_errno;      /* why failed */
           int     rtm_flags;      /*  flags,  incl  kern  &  message, e.g., DONE */
           int     rtm_use;        /* from rtentry */
           uint_t  rtm_inits;      /* which values we are initializing */
           struct  rt_metrics rtm_rmx;   /* metrics themselves */
         };
       where
         struct rt_metrics {
           uint32_t rmx_locks;      /* Kernel must leave  these  values alone */
           uint32_t rmx_mtu;        /* MTU for this path */
           uint32_t rmx_hopcount;   /* max hops expected */
           uint32_t rmx_expire;     /* lifetime for route, e.g., redirect */
           uint32_t rmx_recvpipe;   /* inbound delay-bandwidth  product */
           uint32_t rmx_sendpipe;   /* outbound delay-bandwidth product */
           uint32_t rmx_ssthresh;   /* outbound gateway buffer limit */
           uint32_t rmx_rtt;        /* estimated round trip time */
           uint32_t rmx_rttvar;     /* estimated rtt variance */
           uint32_t rmx_pksent;     /* packets sent using this route */
         };
         /* Flags include the values */
         #define RTF_UP         0x1     /* route usable */
         #define RTF_GATEWAY    0x2     /* destination is a gateway */
         #define RTF_HOST       0x4     /* host entry (net otherwise) */
         #define RTF_REJECT     0x8     /* host or net unreachable */
         #define RTF_DYNAMIC    0x10    /* created dynamically(by redirect) */
         #define RTF_MODIFIED   0x20    /* modified dynamically(by redirect) */
         #define RTF_DONE       0x40    /* message confirmed */
         #define RTF_MASK       0x80    /* subnet mask present */
         #define RTF_CLONING    0x100   /* generate new routes on use */
         #define RTF_XRESOLVE   0x200   /* external daemon resolves name */
         #define RTF_LLINFO     0x400   /* generated by ARP */
         #define RTF_STATIC     0x800   /* manually added */
         #define RTF_BLACKHOLE  0x1000  /* just discard pkts (during updates) */
         #define RTF_PRIVATE    0x2000  /* do not advertise this route */
         #define RTF_PROTO2     0x4000  /* protocol specific routing flag #2 */
         #define RTF_PROTO1     0x8000  /* protocol specific routing flag #1 */
         /* Specifiers for metric values in rmx_locks and rtm_inits are */
         #define RTV_MTU        0x1     /* init or lock _mtu */
         #define RTV_HOPCOUNT   0x2     /* init or lock _hopcount */
         #define RTV_EXPIRE     0x4     /* init or lock _expire */
         #define RTV_RPIPE      0x8     /* init or lock _recvpipe */
         #define RTV_SPIPE      0x10    /* init or lock _sendpipe */
         #define RTV_SSTHRESH   0x20    /* init or lock _ssthresh */
         #define RTV_RTT        0x40    /* init or lock _rtt */
         #define RTV_RTTVAR     0x80    /* init or lock _rttvar */
         /* Specifiers for which addresses are present in  the  messages are */
         #define RTA_DST        0x1     /* destination sockaddr present */
         #define RTA_GATEWAY    0x2     /* gateway sockaddr present */
         #define RTA_NETMASK    0x4     /* netmask sockaddr present */
         #define RTA_GENMASK    0x8     /* cloning mask sockaddr present */
         #define RTA_IFP        0x10    /* interface name sockaddr present */
         #define RTA_IFA        0x20    /* interface addr sockaddr present */
         #define RTA_AUTHOR     0x40    /* sockaddr for author of redirect */
         #define RTA_BRD        0x80    /* for NEWADDR, broadcast or p-p dest addr */
SEE ALSO
       ioctl(2), 
setsockopt(3SOCKET), 
shutdown(3SOCKET), 
sockaddr(3SOCKET),       
routing(4P)NOTES
       Some of the metrics might not be implemented and return zero. The
       implemented metrics are set in 
rtm_inits.
                                April 9, 2016                      ROUTE(4P)