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NS(4) Device Drivers Manual NS(4)

nsXerox Network Systems(tm) protocol family

options NS

options NSIP

pseudo-device ns

The NS protocol family is a collection of protocols layered atop the (IDP) transport layer, and using the Xerox NS address formats. The NS family provides protocol support for the SOCK_STREAM, SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_SEQPACKET, and SOCK_RAW socket types; the SOCK_RAW interface is a debugging tool, allowing you to trace all packets entering, (or with toggling kernel variable, additionally leaving) the local host.

NS addresses are 12 byte quantities, consisting of a 4 byte Network number, a 6 byte Host number and a 2 byte port number, all stored in network standard format. (on the VAX these are word and byte reversed; on the SUN they are not reversed). The include file ⟨netns/ns.h⟩ defines the NS address as a structure containing unions (for quicker comparisons).

Sockets in the Internet protocol family use the following addressing structure:

struct sockaddr_ns {
	short		sns_family;
	struct ns_addr	sns_addr;
	char		sns_zero[2];
};

where an ns_addr is composed as follows:

union ns_host {
	u_char		c_host[6];
	u_short		s_host[3];
};

union ns_net {
	u_char		c_net[4];
	u_short		s_net[2];
};

struct ns_addr {
	union ns_net	x_net;
	union ns_host	x_host;
	u_short	x_port;
};

Sockets may be created with an address of all zeroes to effect “wildcard” matching on incoming messages. The local port address specified in a bind(2) call is restricted to be greater than NSPORT_RESERVED (=3000, in ⟨netns/ns.h⟩) unless the creating process is running as the super-user, providing a space of protected port numbers.

The NS protocol family supported by the operating system is comprised of the Internet Datagram Protocol (IDP) idp(4), Error Protocol (available through IDP), and Sequenced Packet Protocol (SPP) spp(4).

SPP is used to support the SOCK_STREAM and SOCK_SEQPACKET abstraction, while IDP is used to support the SOCK_DGRAM abstraction. The Error protocol is responded to by the kernel to handle and report errors in protocol processing; it is, however, only accessible to user programs through heroic actions.

intro(3), byteorder(3), gethostbyname(3), getnetent(3), getprotoent(3), getservent(3), ns(3), intro(4), spp(4), idp(4), nsip(4)

Internet Transport Protocols, Xerox Corporation document XSIS, 028112.

An Advanced 4.3 BSD Interprocess Communication Tutorial.

The ns protocol family appeared in 4.3BSD.

BSD 4.3 November 30, 1993 NS(4)