NAME
netstat —
show network status
SYNOPSIS
netstat |
[-Aan] [-f
address_family] [-M
core] [-N
system] |
netstat |
[-dghimnrs] [-f
address_family] [-M
core] [-N
system] |
netstat |
[-dn] [-I
interface] [-M
core] [-N
system] [-w
wait] |
netstat |
[-p protocol]
[-M core]
[-N system] |
DESCRIPTION
Thenetstat command symbolically displays the contents
of various network-related data structures. There are a number of output
formats, depending on the options for the information presented. The first
form of the command displays a list of active sockets for each protocol. The
second form presents the contents of one of the other network data structures
according to the option selected. Using the third form, with a
wait interval specified, netstat
will continuously display the information regarding packet traffic on the
configured network interfaces. The fourth form displays statistics about the
named protocol.
The options have the following meaning:
-A- With the default display, show the address of any protocol control blocks associated with sockets; used for debugging.
-a- With the default display, show the state of all sockets; normally sockets used by server processes are not shown.
-d- With either interface display (option
-ior an interval, as described below), show the number of dropped packets. -faddress_family- Limit statistics or address control block reports to those of the
specified address family. The following address
families are recognized: inet, for
AF_INET, ns, forAF_NS, iso, forAF_ISO, and unix, forAF_UNIX. -g- Show information related to multicast (group address) routing. By default,
show the IP Multicast virtual-interface and routing tables. If the
-soption is also present, show multicast routing statistics. -h- Show the state of the IMP host table (obsolete).
-Iinterface- Show information about the specified interface; used with a wait interval as described below.
-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). If the
-aoptions is also present, multicast addresses currently in use are shown for each Ethernet interface and for each IP interface address. Multicast addresses are shown on separate lines following the interface address with which they are associated. -M- Extract values associated with the name list from the specified core instead of the default /dev/kmem.
-m- Show statistics recorded by the memory management routines (the network manages a private pool of memory buffers).
-N- Extract the name list from the specified system instead of the default /vmunix.
-n- Show network addresses as numbers (normally
netstatinterprets addresses and attempts to display them symbolically). This option may be used with any of the display formats. -pprotocol- Show statistics about protocol, which is either a well-known name for a protocol or an alias for it. Some protocol names and aliases are listed in the file /etc/protocols. A null response typically means that there are no interesting numbers to report. The program will complain if protocol is unknown or if there is no statistics routine for it.
-s- Show per-protocol statistics. If this option is repeated, counters with a value of zero are suppressed.
-r- Show the routing tables. When
-sis also present, show routing statistics instead. -wwait- Show network interface statistics at intervals of wait seconds.
The default display, for active sockets, shows the local and
remote addresses, send and receive queue sizes (in bytes), protocol, and the
internal state of the protocol. Address formats are of the form
``host.port'' or ``network.port'' if a socket's address specifies a network
but no specific host address. When known the host and network addresses are
displayed symbolically according to the data bases
/etc/hosts and
/etc/networks, respectively. If a symbolic name for
an address is unknown, or if the -n option is
specified, the address is printed numerically, according to the address
family. For more information regarding the Internet ``dot format,'' refer to
inet(3)). Unspecified, or ``wildcard'', addresses and ports appear as
``*''.
The interface display provides a table of cumulative statistics regarding packets transferred, errors, and collisions. The network addresses of the interface and the maximum transmission unit (``mtu'') are also displayed.
The 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 a collection of information about the route stored as binary choices. The individual flags are discussed in more detail in the route(8) and route(4) manual pages. The mapping between letters and flags is:
| 1 | RTF_PROTO2 | Protocol specific routing flag #1 |
| 2 | RTF_PROTO1 | Protocol specific routing flag #2 |
| B | RTF_BLACKHOLE | Just discard pkts (during updates) |
| C | RTF_CLONING | Generate new routes on use |
| D | RTF_DYNAMIC | Created dynamically (by redirect) |
| G | RTF_GATEWAY | Destination requires forwarding by intermediary |
| H | RTF_HOST | Host entry (net otherwise) |
| L | RTF_LLINFO | Valid protocol to link address translation. |
| M | RTF_MODIFIED | Modified dynamically (by redirect) |
| R | RTF_REJECT | Host or net unreachable |
| S | RTF_STATIC | Manually added |
| U | RTF_UP | Route usable |
| X | RTF_XRESOLVE | External daemon translates proto to link address |
Direct routes are created for each interface attached to the local host; the gateway field for such entries shows the address of the outgoing interface. The refcnt 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 while sending to the same destination. The use field provides a count of the number of packets sent using that route. The interface entry indicates the network interface utilized for the route.
When netstat is invoked with the
-w option and a wait interval
argument, it displays a running count of statistics related to network
interfaces. An obsolescent version of this option used a numeric parameter
with no option, and is currently supported for backward compatibility. This
display consists of a column for the primary interface (the first interface
found during autoconfiguration) and a column summarizing information for all
interfaces. The primary interface may be replaced with another interface
with 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.
SEE ALSO
iostat(1), nfsstat(1), ps(1), vmstat(1), hosts(5), networks(5), protocols(5), services(5), trpt(8), trsp(8)
HISTORY
The netstat command appeared in
4.2BSD.
BUGS
The notion of errors is ill-defined.