UDPLITE(7) | Linux Programmer's Manual | UDPLITE(7) |
NAME¶
udplite - Lightweight User Datagram Protocol
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/socket.h>
sockfd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, IPPROTO_UDPLITE);
DESCRIPTION¶
This is an implementation of the Lightweight User Datagram Protocol (UDP-Lite), as described in RFC 3828.
UDP-Lite is an extension of UDP (RFC 768) to support variable-length checksums. This has advantages for some types of multimedia transport that may be able to make use of slightly damaged datagrams, rather than having them discarded by lower-layer protocols.
The variable-length checksum coverage is set via a setsockopt(2) option. If this option is not set, the only difference from UDP is in using a different IP protocol identifier (IANA number 136).
The UDP-Lite implementation is a full extension of udp(7)—that is, it shares the same API and API behavior, and in addition offers two socket options to control the checksum coverage.
Address format¶
UDP-Litev4 uses the sockaddr_in address format described in ip(7). UDP-Litev6 uses the sockaddr_in6 address format described in ipv6(7).
Socket options¶
To set or get a UDP-Lite socket option, call getsockopt(2) to read or setsockopt(2) to write the option with the option level argument set to IPPROTO_UDPLITE. In addition, all IPPROTO_UDP socket options are valid on a UDP-Lite socket. See udp(7) for more information.
The following two options are specific to UDP-Lite.
- UDPLITE_SEND_CSCOV
- This option sets the sender checksum coverage and takes an int as argument, with a checksum coverage value in the range 0..2^16-1.
- A value of 0 means that the entire datagram is always covered. Values from 1-7 are illegal (RFC 3828, 3.1) and are rounded up to the minimum coverage of 8.
- With regard to IPv6 jumbograms (RFC 2675), the UDP-Litev6 checksum coverage is limited to the first 2^16-1 octets, as per RFC 3828, 3.5. Higher values are therefore silently truncated to 2^16-1. If in doubt, the current coverage value can always be queried using getsockopt(2).
- UDPLITE_RECV_CSCOV
- This is the receiver-side analogue and uses the same argument format and value range as UDPLITE_SEND_CSCOV. This option is not required to enable traffic with partial checksum coverage. Its function is that of a traffic filter: when enabled, it instructs the kernel to drop all packets which have a coverage less than the specified coverage value.
- When the value of UDPLITE_RECV_CSCOV exceeds the actual packet coverage, incoming packets are silently dropped, but may generate a warning message in the system log.
ERRORS¶
All errors documented for udp(7) may be returned. UDP-Lite does not add further errors.
FILES¶
- /proc/net/snmp
- Basic UDP-Litev4 statistics counters.
- /proc/net/snmp6
- Basic UDP-Litev6 statistics counters.
VERSIONS¶
UDP-Litev4/v6 first appeared in Linux 2.6.20.
BUGS¶
Where glibc support is missing, the following definitions are needed:
#define IPPROTO_UDPLITE 136 #define UDPLITE_SEND_CSCOV 10 #define UDPLITE_RECV_CSCOV 11
SEE ALSO¶
ip(7), ipv6(7), socket(7), udp(7)
RFC 3828 for the Lightweight User Datagram Protocol (UDP-Lite).
Documentation/networking/udplite.txt in the Linux kernel source tree
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
2017-09-15 | Linux |