This small program lists all sockets on the system seen by netlink and serves
as a simple example showing how to alloc an idiag msg cache and dump the
objects in it.
- Inet diag allows users to gather low-level socket information.
- This library provides a higher-level API for creating inetdiag requests (via
idiagnl_connect and idiagnl_send_simple) and parsing the replies (via
idiagnl_msg_parse). A cache is also provided (via idiagnl_msg_alloc_cache).
- Request and message objects provide APIs for accessing and setting the
various properties of each.
- This library also allows the user to parse the inetdiag response attributes
which contain information about traffic class, TOS, congestion, socket
memory info, and more depending on the kernel version used.
- Includes doxygen documentation.
This makes runtime removal of cache operations possible if non-safe
API is not in use by application. The non-safe API will be removed
in the next major version.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Graf <tgraf@suug.ch>
On some architectures, uint64_t is defined as:
typedef unsigned long long int __u64;
on another architectures as:
typedef unsigned long int __u64;
So, according to man 3 printf,
uint64_t should be printed as "%llu" on some architectures, and as "%lu" on another. The same for scanf.
To eliminate that challenge, there is inttypes.h, in which appropriate constants
are defined for current architecture.
32-bit types (and even 16 and 8 bit types) should be printed using such constants if
printed variable defined as uint_XXXt or intXXXt type. But in reality 32-bit and less
types does not gain run-time error (except in scanf), because they pushed to stack as
32-bit values at least. So, I decide not to fix that.
1. Fix some places where unsigned value compared < 0
2. Fix obsolete %Z specifier to more portable %z
3. Some erroneous types substitution
4. nl_msec2str() - 64-bit msec is now properly used,
Only safe changes. I mean int <--> uint32_t and signed/unsigned fixes.
Some functinos require size_t argument instead of int, but changes of
signatures of that functions is terrible thing.
Also, I do not pretend for a full list of fixes.
Just to shut up clang -Wall -Wextra
One more thing. ifindex. I don't change that because changes will
be too big for simple fix.
Introduces the functions genl_register_family() and
genl_unregister_family() to register a Generic Netlink family
which does not implement a cachable type.
API users can direct received messages into genl_handle_msg() which
will validate the messages and call the callback functions defined
in the commands definition.
See test/test-genl.c for an example on how to use it.
Hello,
libnl 3.2.9 does not build with musl libc, without patching.
I' using a current musl libc (http://www.etalabs.net/musl/)
with linux 2.6.32 headers.
At first there were a couple problems on the musl side, but those are
resolved.
However, I found some other issues:
First, two files were missing
#include <byteswap.h>:
lib/netfilter/log_msg.c
lib/netfilter/queue_msg.c
These files used __bswap_64 (which should be bswap_64), a macro
declared in byteswap.h
Second, I got this error after fixing that:
In file included from nf-queue.c:16:
./include/linux/netfilter.h:53: error: field in has incomplete type
./include/linux/netfilter.h:54: error: field in6 has incomplete type
I found that src/nf-queue.c is missing an
#include <netinet/in.h>
Attached is a patch which resolves these issues. I've tested with both
musl and glibc, and it builds cleanly on both.
Although it has been possible to create bonding devices, enslave and
release using the regular link API. The added API simplifies usage
and hides some of the compatibility logic.
F.e. enslave() and release() will both verify that the master assignment
has in fact been changed and return -NLE_OPNOTSUPP if it did not.
Also the API will make sure to use RTM_NEWLINK or RTM_SETLINK depending
on what is availble.
Examples are provided in src/ as nl-link-enslave.c and nl-link-release.c
It has been a request that multiple libnl versions should be installabe
in parallel.
In order to achieve this, the basename of the library was changed to
libnl-3 which reflects the 3rd generation of libnl APIs. It also means
that release based library versioning is left behind and libtool
versioning is used instead.
Projects using pkgconfig will automatically link against the new library
basename and will not notice a difference.
The SO versioning is based on the glib model:
current := 100 * minor + micro - revision
revision := revision
age := age (number of backwards compatible versions)
- removed dead functions in header files
- deprecated rtnl_class_foreach_*() functions due to their missing
handling possibility of OOM situations
- improved API documentation
Their usage is not completely safe, it is not possible to handle
the out of memory situation of the allocate filter. It is very
unlikely for this to cause any problem though.
The functions are still accessible but gcc will warn about their
deprecation.
Finally got rid of all the qdisc/class/cls code duplication in
the tc module API. The API takes care of allocation/freeing the
tc object specific data.
I hope I got it right this time.
This will fix finding libs while link, by adding them to LDFLAGS
[It's no ideal but it's less of a mess than what we have now. -tgraf]
Signed-off-by: Gery Kahn <geryk@ti.com>
Adds a family argument which allows to request link dumps for a certain
address family. This allows to f.e. dump ipv6 specific statistics and data.
nl-link-list --family inet6
- parse IFLA_IFALIAS if available
- provides API to access/change ifalias
rtnl_link_get_ifalias(link)
rtnl_link_set_ifalias(link, alias)
- extends nl-link-set to test functionality
Manually editing etc/libnl/classid before adding tc objects is a pain.
This patch adds code to attempt auto generating a unique tc id which
will then be assigned to the provided name and added to the classid
file.
This will make the following commands work with prior definitions of
the names "top" and "test"
sudo sbin/nl-qdisc-add --dev eth0 --parent root --id top htb
sudo sbin/nl-class-add --dev eth0 --parent top --id test htb --rate 100mbit
It will generate the following ids automatically:
4001: top
4001:1 test