DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
GETNETENT(3) DragonFly Library Functions Manual GETNETENT(3)
NAME
getnetent, getnetent_r, getnetbyaddr, getnetbyaddr_r, getnetbyname,
getnetbyname_r, setnetent, endnetent - get network entry
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <netdb.h>
struct netent *
getnetent(void);
int
getnetent_r(struct netent *ne, char *buffer, size_t buflen,
struct netent **result, int *h_errnop);
struct netent *
getnetbyname(const char *name);
int
getnetbyname_r(const char *name, struct netent *ne, char *buffer,
size_t buflen, struct netent **result, int *h_errnop);
struct netent *
getnetbyaddr(uint32_t net, int type);
int
getnetbyaddr_r(uint32_t addr, int af, struct netent *ne, char *buffer,
size_t buflen, struct netent **result, int *h_errnop);
void
setnetent(int stayopen);
void
endnetent(void);
DESCRIPTION
The getnetent(), getnetbyname(), and getnetbyaddr() functions each return
a pointer to an object with the following structure describing an
internet network. This structure contains either the information
obtained from the nameserver, named(8), broken-out fields of a line in
the network data base /etc/networks, or entries supplied by the yp(8)
system. The order of the lookups is controlled by the `networks' entry
in nsswitch.conf(5).
struct netent {
char *n_name; /* official name of net */
char **n_aliases; /* alias list */
int n_addrtype; /* net number type */
uint32_t n_net; /* net number */
};
The members of this structure are:
n_name The official name of the network.
n_aliases A zero terminated list of alternate names for the network.
n_addrtype The type of the network number returned; currently only
AF_INET.
n_net The network number. Network numbers are returned in machine
byte order.
The getnetent() function reads the next line of the file, opening the
file if necessary.
The setnetent() function opens and rewinds the file. If the stayopen
flag is non-zero, the net data base will not be closed after each call to
getnetbyname() or getnetbyaddr().
The endnetent() function closes the file.
The getnetbyname() function and getnetbyaddr() sequentially search from
the beginning of the file until a matching net name or net address and
type is found, or until EOF is encountered. The type argument must be
AF_INET. Network numbers are supplied in host order.
The getnetent_r(), getnetbyaddr_r(), and getnetbyname_r() functions are
reentrant versions of the above functions that take a pointer to a netent
structure which is used to store state information. The structure must
be zero-filled before it is used and should be considered opaque for the
sake of portability. These functions also take a pointer to another
netent structure which is used to store the results of the database
lookup.
RETURN VALUES
The getnetent(), getnetbyaddr(), and getnetbyname() functions return a
pointer to a netent structure on success or a null pointer if end-of-file
is reached or an error occurs.
The getnetent_r(), getnetbyaddr_r(), and getnetbyname_r() functions
return 0 on success or -1 if end-of-file is reached or an error occurs.
FILES
/etc/networks
/etc/nsswitch.conf
/etc/resolv.conf
SEE ALSO
networks(5)
RFC 1101
STANDARDS
The getnetent(), getnetbyaddr(), getnetbyname(), setnetent(), and
endnetent() functions conform to IEEE Std 1003.1-2004 ("POSIX.1").
The getnetent_r(), getnetbyaddr_r(), and getnetbyname_r() functions are
not currently standardized.
HISTORY
The getnetent(), getnetbyaddr(), getnetbyname(), setnetent(), and
endnetent() functions appeared in 4.2BSD.
The getnetent_r(), getnetbyaddr_r(), and getnetbyname_r() functions
appeared in DragonFly 2.1.
BUGS
The data space used by these functions is thread-specific; if future use
requires the data, it should be copied before any subsequent calls to
these functions overwrite it. Only Internet network numbers are
currently understood. Expecting network numbers to fit in no more than
32 bits is probably naive.
DragonFly 5.9-DEVELOPMENT May 6, 2019 DragonFly 5.9-DEVELOPMENT