getnetent

NAME
SYNTAX
DESCRIPTION
FILES
DIAGNOSTICS
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
BUGS

NAME

getnetent, getnetbyaddr, getnetbyname, setnetent, endnetent - get networks entry

SYNTAX

#include <netdb.h>

struct netent *getnetent()

struct netent *getnetbyname(name)
char *
name;

struct netent *getnetbyaddr(net, type)
long
net; int type;

void setnetent(stayopen)
int
stayopen;

void endnetent()

DESCRIPTION

The getnetent, getnetbyname, and getnetbyaddr subroutines each return a pointer to an object with the following structure containing the broken-out fields of a line in the networks database.

struct

netent {

char

*n_name;

/* official name of net */

char

**n_aliases;

/* alias list */

int

n_addrtype;

/* net number type */

long

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: AF_INET.

n_net

The network number. Network numbers are returned in machine byte order.

If the stayopen flag on a setnetent subroutine is NULL, the networks database is opened. Otherwise the setnetent has the effect of rewinding the networks database. The endnetent may be called to close the networks database when processing is complete.

The getnetent subroutine simply reads the next line while getnetbyname and getnetbyaddr search until a matching name or net number is found (or until EOF is encountered). The type must be AF_INET. The getnetent subroutine keeps a pointer in the database, allowing successive calls to be used to search the entire file.

A call to setnetent must be made before a while loop using getnetent in order to perform initialization and an endnetent must be used after the loop. Both getnetbyname and getnetbyaddr make calls to setnetent and endnetent .

FILES

/etc/networks

DIAGNOSTICS

Null pointer (0) returned on EOF or error.

SEE ALSO

networks(@FORMAT_EXT@)
RFC 1101

HISTORY

The getnetent(), getnetbyaddr(), getnetbyname(), setnetent(), and endnetent() functions appeared in 4.2BSD.

BUGS

The data space used by these functions is static; 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.