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NETSTAT(1)		    General Commands Manual		    NETSTAT(1)

NAME
       netstat -- show network status and statistics

SYNOPSIS
       netstat	[-j	     jail]	    [--libxo]	      [-46AaCLnPRSTWx]
		[-f protocol_family | -p protocol]

       netstat -i | -I interface
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-46abdhnW]	[-f address_family] [-M	 core]
		[-N system]

       netstat -w wait
		[-j   jail]   [--libxo]	  [-I	interface]  [-46d]  [-M	 core]
		[-N system] [-q	howmany]

       netstat -s
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-46sz] [-f	protocol_family	| -p protocol]
		[-M core] [-N system]

       netstat -i | -I interface -s
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-46s] [-f protocol_family | -p  protocol]
		[-M core] [-N system]

       netstat -m
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-M	core] [-N system]

       netstat -B
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-z] [-I interface]

       netstat -r
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-46nW] [-F	fibnum]	[-f address_family]

       netstat -rs
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-s] [-M core] [-N system]

       netstat -g
		[-j jail] [--libxo] [-46W] [-f address_family]

       netstat -gs
		[-j  jail]  [--libxo]  [-46s]  [-f  address_family]  [-M core]
		[-N system]

       netstat -Q
		[-j jail] [--libxo]

DESCRIPTION
       The netstat command shows the contents of various network-related  data
       structures.   The  arguments passed determine which of the below	output
       formats the command uses.

       netstat [-46AaCLnRSTWx] [-f protocol_family | -p	protocol] [-j jail]
	       Display a list of active	sockets	(protocol control blocks)  for
	       each network protocol.

	       The  default display for	active sockets shows the local and re-
	       mote addresses, send and	receive	queue sizes (in	bytes),	proto-
	       col, and	the internal state of the protocol.   Address  formats
	       are of the form "host.port" or "network.port" if	a socket's ad-
	       dress  specifies	 a network but no specific host	address.  When
	       known, the host and network addresses  are  displayed  symboli-
	       cally  according	to the databases hosts(5) and networks(5), re-
	       spectively.  If a symbolic name for an address is  unknown,  or
	       if  the	-n option is specified,	the address is printed numeri-
	       cally, according	to the address family.	For  more  information
	       regarding  the  Internet	 IPv4  "dot format", refer to inet(3).
	       Unspecified, or "wildcard", addresses and ports appear as "*".

	       --libxo
		       Generate	output via libxo(3) in a selection of  differ-
		       ent   human   and   machine   readable	formats.   See
		       xo_parse_args(3)	for details on command line arguments.

	       -4      Show IPv4 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -A      Show the	address	of a protocol control block (PCB)  as-
		       sociated	with a socket; used for	debugging.

	       -a      Show the	state of all sockets; normally sockets used by
		       server processes	are not	shown.

	       -c      Show the	used TCP stack for each	session.

	       -C      Show  the  congestion  control algorithm	and diagnostic
		       information of TCP sockets.

	       -L      Show the	size of	the various listen queues.  The	 first
		       count  shows  the number	of unaccepted connections, the
		       second count shows the amount of	unaccepted  incomplete
		       connections,  and the third count is the	maximum	number
		       of queued connections.

	       -n      Do not resolve numeric addresses	and  port  numbers  to
		       names.  See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -P      Display the log ID for each socket.

	       -R      Display	the  flowid  and  flowtype  for	 each  socket.
		       flowid is a 32 bit  hardware  specific  identifier  for
		       each  flow.  flowtype defines which protocol fields are
		       hashed to produce the id.  A complete listing is	avail-
		       able in sys/mbuf.h under	M_HASHTYPE_*.

	       -S      Show network addresses as numbers (as with -n) but show
		       ports symbolically.

	       -T      Display diagnostic information  from  the  TCP  control
		       block.	Fields include the number of packets requiring
		       retransmission, received	out-of-order, and those	adver-
		       tising a	zero-sized window.

	       -W      Avoid truncating	addresses even	if  this  causes  some
		       fields to overflow.

	       -x      Display socket buffer and TCP timer statistics for each
		       internet	socket.

		       The  -x	flag causes netstat to output all the informa-
		       tion recorded about data	stored in the socket  buffers.
		       The fields are:

		       R-HIWA	 Receive buffer	high water mark, in bytes.
		       S-HIWA	 Send buffer high water	mark, in bytes.
		       R-LOWA	 Receive buffer	low water mark,	in bytes.
		       S-LOWA	 Send buffer low water mark, in	bytes.
		       R-BCNT	 Receive buffer	byte count.
		       S-BCNT	 Send buffer byte count.
		       R-BMAX	 Maximum bytes that can	be used	in the receive
				 buffer.
		       S-BMAX	 Maximum  bytes	 that  can be used in the send
				 buffer.
		       rexmt	 Time, in seconds, to fire  Retransmit	Timer,
				 or 0 if not armed.
		       persist	 Time,	 in   seconds,	 to   fire  Retransmit
				 Persistence, or 0 if not armed.
		       keep	 Time, in seconds, to fire Keep	Alive, or 0 if
				 not armed.
		       2msl	 Time, in seconds,  to	fire  2*msl  TIME_WAIT
				 Timer,	or 0 if	not armed.
		       delack	 Time,	in seconds, to fire Delayed ACK	Timer,
				 or 0 if not armed.
		       rcvtime	 Time, in seconds, since last packet received.

	       -f protocol_family
		       Filter by protocol_family.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

	       -p protocol
		       Filter by protocol.  See	"GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat	-i | -I	interface  [-46abdhnW]	[-f address_family]  [-M core]
	       [-N system] [-j jail]
	       Show  the state of all network interfaces or a single interface
	       which have been auto-configured (interfaces statically  config-
	       ured  into  a  system,  but  not	 located  at boot time are not
	       shown).	An asterisk ("*") after	an  interface  name  indicates
	       that the	interface is "down".

	       When  netstat  is  invoked  with	 -i  (all  interfaces)	or  -I
	       interface, it provides a	table of cumulative statistics regard-
	       ing packets transferred,	errors,	and collisions.	  The  network
	       addresses  of  the  interface and the maximum transmission unit
	       ("mtu") are also	displayed.  If both -i and -I  are  specified,
	       -I overrides any	instances of -i.

	       -4      Show IPv4 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -a      Multicast addresses currently in	use are	shown for each
		       Ethernet	 interface  and	for each IP interface address.
		       Multicast addresses are shown on	separate lines follow-
		       ing the interface address with which they  are  associ-
		       ated.

	       -b      Show the	number of bytes	in and out.

	       -d      Show the	number of dropped packets.

	       -h      Print all counters in human readable form.

	       -n      Do  not	resolve	 numeric addresses and port numbers to
		       names.  See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -W      Avoid truncating	addresses even	if  this  causes  some
		       fields  to  overflow.  See "GENERAL OPTIONS".  However,
		       in most cases field widths are determined automatically
		       with the	-i option, and this option has little effect.

	       -f protocol_family
		       Filter by protocol_family.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat	 -w wait   [-I interface]   [-46d]    [-M core]	   [-N system]
	       [-q howmany] [-j	jail]
	       At intervals of wait seconds, display the information regarding
	       packet traffic on all configured	network	interfaces or a	single
	       interface.

	       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.  By default,	 this  display	summa-
	       rizes  information  for all interfaces.	Information for	a spe-
	       cific interface may be displayed	with the -I interface option.

	       -I interface
		       Only show information regarding interface

	       -4      Show IPv4 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -d      Show the	number of dropped packets.

	       -M      Use an alternative core.	 See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use  an	alternative  kernel   image.	See   "GENERAL
		       OPTIONS".

	       -q      Exit after howmany outputs.

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat	 -s   [-46sz]	[-f protocol_family | -p protocol]   [-M core]
	       [-N system] [-j jail]
	       Display system-wide statistics for each network protocol.

	       -4      Show IPv4 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -s      If -s is	repeated, counters with	a value	 of  zero  are
		       suppressed.

	       -z      Reset statistic counters	after displaying them.

	       -f protocol_family
		       Filter by protocol_family.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

	       -p protocol
		       Filter by protocol.  See	"GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -M      Use an alternative core.	 See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use an alternative kernel image See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat	-i | -I	interface -s [-46s] [-f	protocol_family	| -p protocol]
	       [-M core] [-N system] [-j jail]
	       Display per-interface statistics	for each network protocol.  If
	       both -i and -I are specified, -I	overrides any instances	of -i.

	       -4      Show IPv4 only See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -s      If -s is	repeated, counters with	a value	 of  zero  are
		       suppressed.

	       -f protocol_family
		       Filter by protocol_family.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

	       -p protocol
		       Filter by protocol.  See	"GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -M      Use an alternative core See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use an alternative kernel image See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat -m [-M core] [-N	system]	[-j jail]
	       Show  statistics	 recorded  by  the  memory management routines
	       (mbuf(9)).  The	network	 manages  a  private  pool  of	memory
	       buffers.

	       -M      Use an alternative core See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use an alternative kernel image See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat -B [-z] [-I interface] [-j jail]
	       Show  statistics	about bpf(4) peers.  This includes information
	       like how	many packets have been matched,	dropped	 and  received
	       by  the bpf device, also	information about current buffer sizes
	       and device states.

	       The bpf(4) flags	displayed when netstat is invoked with the  -B
	       option  represent  the  underlying  parameters of the bpf peer.
	       Each flag is represented	as a single lower  case	 letter.   The
	       mapping	between	 the  letters and flags	in order of appearance
	       are:

	       p    Set	if listening promiscuously
	       i    BIOCIMMEDIATE has been set on the device
	       f    BIOCGHDRCMPLT status:  source  link	 addresses  are	 being
		    filled automatically
	       s    BIOCGSEESENT  status:  see packets originating locally and
		    remotely on	the interface.
	       a    Packet reception generates a signal
	       l    BIOCLOCK status: descriptor	has been locked

	       For more	information about these	flags, please refer to bpf(4).

	       -z      Reset statistic counters	after displaying them.

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat	 -r   [-46AnW]	 [-F fibnum]   [-f address_family]   [-M core]
	       [-N system] [-j jail]
	       Display the contents of routing tables.

	       When  netstat  is  invoked with the routing table option	-r, it
	       lists the available routes and their status.  Each  route  con-
	       sists of	a destination host or network, and a gateway to	use in
	       forwarding  packets.  The flags field shows a collection	of in-
	       formation about the route stored	as binary choices.  The	 indi-
	       vidual  flags  are discussed in more detail in the route(8) and
	       route(4)	manual pages.  The mapping between letters  and	 flags
	       is:

	       1    RTF_PROTO1	     Protocol specific routing flag #1
	       2    RTF_PROTO2	     Protocol specific routing flag #2
	       3    RTF_PROTO3	     Protocol specific routing flag #3
	       B    RTF_BLACKHOLE    Just discard pkts (during updates)
	       b    RTF_BROADCAST    The route represents a broadcast address
	       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 ad-
	       dress of	the outgoing interface.	 The refcnt  field  gives  the
	       current	number	of  active uses	of the route.  Connection ori-
	       ented protocols normally	hold on	to a single route for the  du-
	       ration  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.

	       -4      Show IPv4 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only.	See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -n      Do  not	resolve	 numeric addresses and port numbers to
		       names.  See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -W      Show the	path MTU for each route, and  print  interface
		       names with a wider field	size.

	       -F      Display	the  routing table with	the number fibnum.  If
		       the specified fibnum is -1 or -F	is not specified,  the
		       default routing table is	displayed.

	       -f      Display	  the	routing	  table	  for	a   particular
		       address_family.

	       -M      Use an alternative core See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use an alternative kernel image See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat -rs [-s]	[-M core] [-N system] [-j jail]
	       Display routing statistics.

	       -s      If -s is	repeated, counters with	a value	 of  zero  are
		       suppressed.

	       -M      Use an alternative core See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use an alternative kernel image See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat -g [-46W] [-f address_family] [-M core] [-N system] [-j jail]
	       Display the contents of the multicast virtual interface tables,
	       and  multicast forwarding caches.  Entries in these tables will
	       appear only when	the kernel is  actively	 forwarding  multicast
	       sessions.  This option is applicable only to the	inet and inet6
	       address families.

	       -4      Show IPv4 only See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -W      Avoid  truncating  addresses  even  if this causes some
		       fields to overflow.

	       -f protocol_family
		       Filter by protocol_family.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

	       -M      Use an alternative core See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use an alternative kernel image See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat -gs [-46s] [-f address_family] [-M core]	[-N system] [-j	jail]
	       Show multicast routing statistics.

	       -4      Show IPv4 only See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -6      Show IPv6 only See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -s      If -s is	repeated, counters with	a value	 of  zero  are
		       suppressed.

	       -f protocol_family
		       Filter by protocol_family.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

	       -M      Use an alternative core See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -N      Use an alternative kernel image See "GENERAL OPTIONS".

	       -j jail
		       Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

       netstat -Q [-j jail]
	       Show netisr(9) statistics.  The flags field shows available ISR
	       handlers:

	       C    NETISR_SNP_FLAGS_M2CPUID	   Able	to map mbuf to cpu id
	       D    NETISR_SNP_FLAGS_DRAINEDCPU	   Has queue drain handler
	       F    NETISR_SNP_FLAGS_M2FLOW	   Able	to map mbuf to flow id
	       -j jail Run inside a jail.  See "GENERAL	OPTIONS".

   GENERAL OPTIONS
       Some options have the general meaning:

       -4    Is	shorthand for -f inet (Show only IPv4)

       -6    Is	shorthand for -f inet6 (Show only IPv6)

       -f address_family, -p protocol
	     Limit display to those records of the specified address_family or
	     a	single protocol.  The following	address	families and protocols
	     are recognized:

	     Family			 Protocols
	     inet (AF_INET)		 divert, icmp, igmp, ip,  ipsec,  pim,
					 sctp, tcp, udp
	     inet6 (AF_INET6)		 icmp6,	 ip6, ipsec6, rip6, sctp, tcp,
					 udp
	     pfkey (PF_KEY)		 pfkey
	     netgraph, ng (AF_NETGRAPH)	 ctrl, data
	     unix (AF_UNIX)
	     link (AF_LINK)

	     The program will complain if protocol is unknown or if  there  is
	     no	statistics routine for it.

       -M    Extract  values  associated with the name list from the specified
	     core instead of the default /dev/kmem.

       -N    Extract the name list from	the specified system  instead  of  the
	     default, which is the kernel image	the system has booted from.

       -n    Show  network  addresses  and ports as numbers.  Normally netstat
	     attempts to resolve addresses and ports, and display them symbol-
	     ically.

       -W    Wider output; expand address fields, etc,	to  avoid  truncation.
	     Non-numeric  values  such as domain names may still be truncated;
	     use the -n	option if necessary to avoid ambiguity.

       -j jail
	     Perform the actions inside	the jail.  This	allows	network	 state
	     to	be accessed even if the	netstat	binary is not available	in the
	     jail.

EXAMPLES
       Show  packet traffic information	(packets, bytes, errors, packet	drops,
       etc) for	interface re0 updated every 2 seconds and exit	after  5  out-
       puts:

	     $ netstat -w 2 -q 5 -I re0

       Show statistics for ICMP	on any interface:

	     $ netstat -s -p icmp

       Show routing tables:

	     $ netstat -r

       Same as above, but without resolving numeric addresses and port numbers
       to names:

	     $ netstat -rn

SEE ALSO
       fstat(1),   nfsstat(1),	 procstat(1),  ps(1),  sockstat(1),  libxo(3),
       xo_parse_args(3),  bpf(4),  inet(4),   route(4),	  unix(4),   hosts(5),
       networks(5), protocols(5), services(5), iostat(8), route(8), vmstat(8),
       mbuf(9)

HISTORY
       The netstat command appeared in 4.2BSD.

       IPv6 support was	added by WIDE/KAME project.

BUGS
       The notion of errors is ill-defined.

FreeBSD	13.2			August 14, 2023			    NETSTAT(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | BUGS

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