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ip(8)
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IP(8)				     Linux				 IP(8)

NAME
       ip - show / manipulate routing, network devices, interfaces and tunnels

SYNOPSIS
       ip [ OPTIONS ] OBJECT { COMMAND |  help }


       ip [ -force ]  -batch filename


       OBJECT := {  address | addrlabel | fou | help | ila | ioam | l2tp |
	       link | macsec | maddress | monitor | mptcp | mroute | mrule |
	       neighbor | neighbour | netconf | netns | nexthop | ntable |
	       ntbl | route | rule | sr | tap | tcpmetrics | token | tunnel |
	       tuntap | vrf | xfrm }


       OPTIONS := {  -V[ersion] | -h[uman-readable] | -s[tatistics] |
	       -d[etails] | -r[esolve] | -iec | -f[amily] { inet | inet6 |
	       link } |	 -4 | -6 | -B | -0 | -l[oops] { maximum-addr-flush-
	       attempts } | -o[neline] | -rc[vbuf] [size] | -t[imestamp] |
	       -ts[hort] | -n[etns] name | -N[umeric] | -a[ll] | -c[olor] |
	       -br[ief] | -j[son] | -p[retty] }


OPTIONS
       -V, -Version
	      Print the version of the ip utility and exit.


       -h, -human, -human-readable
	      output statistics with human readable values followed by suffix.


       -b, -batch <FILENAME>
	      Read commands from provided file or standard input and invoke
	      them.  First failure will cause termination of ip.


       -force Don't terminate ip on errors in batch mode.  If there were any
	      errors during execution of the commands, the application return
	      code will be non zero.


       -s, -stats, -statistics
	      Output more information. If the option appears twice or more,
	      the amount of information increases.  As a rule, the information
	      is statistics or some time values.


       -d, -details
	      Output more detailed information.


       -l, -loops <COUNT>
	      Specify maximum number of loops the 'ip address flush' logic
	      will attempt before giving up. The default is 10.	 Zero (0)
	      means loop until all addresses are removed.


       -f, -family <FAMILY>
	      Specifies the protocol family to use. The protocol family
	      identifier can be one of inet, inet6, bridge, mpls or link.  If
	      this option is not present, the protocol family is guessed from
	      other arguments. If the rest of the command line does not give
	      enough information to guess the family, ip falls back to the
	      default one, usually inet or any.	 link is a special family
	      identifier meaning that no networking protocol is involved.


       -4     shortcut for -family inet.


       -6     shortcut for -family inet6.


       -B     shortcut for -family bridge.


       -M     shortcut for -family mpls.


       -0     shortcut for -family link.


       -o, -oneline
	      output each record on a single line, replacing line feeds with
	      the '\' character. This is convenient when you want to count
	      records with wc(1) or to grep(1) the output.


       -r, -resolve
	      use the system's name resolver to print DNS names instead of
	      host addresses.


       -n, -netns <NETNS>
	      switches ip to the specified network namespace NETNS.  Actually
	      it just simplifies executing of:

	      ip netns exec NETNS ip [ OPTIONS ] OBJECT { COMMAND |  help }

	      to

	      ip -n[etns] NETNS [ OPTIONS ] OBJECT { COMMAND |	help }


       -N, -Numeric
	      Print the number of protocol, scope, dsfield, etc directly
	      instead of converting it to human readable name.


       -a, -all
	      executes specified command over all objects, it depends if
	      command supports this option.


       -c[color][={always|auto|never}
	      Configure color output. If parameter is omitted or always, color
	      output is enabled regardless of stdout state. If parameter is
	      auto, stdout is checked to be a terminal before enabling color
	      output. If parameter is never, color output is disabled. If
	      specified multiple times, the last one takes precedence. This
	      flag is ignored if -json is also given.

	      Used color palette can be influenced by COLORFGBG environment
	      variable (see ENVIRONMENT).


       -t, -timestamp
	      display current time when using monitor option.


       -ts, -tshort
	      Like -timestamp, but use shorter format.


       -rc, -rcvbuf<SIZE>
	      Set the netlink socket receive buffer size, defaults to 1MB.


       -iec   print human readable rates in IEC units (e.g. 1Ki = 1024).


       -br, -brief
	      Print only basic information in a tabular format for better
	      readability. This option is currently only supported by ip addr
	      show , ip link show & ip neigh show commands.


       -j, -json
	      Output results in JavaScript Object Notation (JSON).


       -p, -pretty
	      The default JSON format is compact and more efficient to parse
	      but hard for most users to read.	This flag adds indentation for
	      readability.


       -echo  Request the kernel to send the applied configuration back.


IP - COMMAND SYNTAX
   OBJECT
       address
	      - protocol (IP or IPv6) address on a device.


       addrlabel
	      - label configuration for protocol address selection.


       fou    - Foo-over-UDP receive port configuration.


       ila    - manage identifier locator addresses (ILA).


       ioam   - manage IOAM namespaces and IOAM schemas.


       l2tp   - tunnel ethernet over IP (L2TPv3).


       link   - network device.


       macsec - MACsec device configuration.


       maddress
	      - multicast address.


       monitor
	      - watch for netlink messages.


       mptcp  - manage MPTCP path manager.


       mroute - multicast routing cache entry.


       mrule  - rule in multicast routing policy database.


       neighbour
	      - manage ARP or NDISC cache entries.


       netconf
	      - network configuration monitoring.


       netns  - manage network namespaces.


       nexthop
	      - manage nexthop objects.


       ntable - manage the neighbor cache's operation.


       route  - routing table entry.


       rule   - rule in routing policy database.


       sr     - manage IPv6 segment routing.


       stats  - manage and show interface statistics.


       tcp_metrics/tcpmetrics
	      - manage TCP Metrics.


       token  - manage tokenized interface identifiers.


       tunnel - tunnel over IP.


       tuntap - manage TUN/TAP devices.


       vrf    - manage virtual routing and forwarding devices.


       xfrm   - manage IPSec policies.


       The names of all objects may be written in full or abbreviated form,
       for example address can be abbreviated as addr or just a.


   COMMAND
       Specifies the action to perform on the object.  The set of possible
       actions depends on the object type.  As a rule, it is possible to add,
       delete and show (or list ) objects, but some objects do not allow all
       of these operations or have some additional commands. The help command
       is available for all objects. It prints out a list of available
       commands and argument syntax conventions.

       If no command is given, some default command is assumed.	 Usually it is
       list or, if the objects of this class cannot be listed, help.


ENVIRONMENT
       COLORFGBG
	      If set, it's value is used for detection whether background is
	      dark or light and use contrast colors for it.

	      COLORFGBG environment variable usually contains either two or
	      three values separated by semicolons; we want the last value in
	      either case.  If this value is 0-6 or 8, chose colors suitable
	      for dark background:

	      COLORFGBG=";0" ip -c a


EXIT STATUS
       Exit status is 0 if command was successful, and 1 if there is a syntax
       error.  If an error was reported by the kernel exit status is 2.


EXAMPLES
       ip addr
	   Shows addresses assigned to all network interfaces.

       ip neigh
	   Shows the current neighbour table in kernel.

       ip link set x up
	   Bring up interface x.

       ip link set x down
	   Bring down interface x.

       ip route
	   Show table routes.


HISTORY
       ip was written by Alexey N. Kuznetsov and added in Linux 2.2.

SEE ALSO
       ip-address(8), ip-addrlabel(8), ip-fou(8), ip-ioam(8), ip-l2tp(8),
       ip-link(8), ip-macsec(8), ip-maddress(8), ip-monitor(8), ip-mptcp(8),
       ip-mroute(8), ip-neighbour(8), ip-netconf(8), ip-netns(8),
       ip-nexthop(8), ip-ntable(8), ip-route(8), ip-rule(8), ip-sr(8),
       ip-stats(8), ip-tcp_metrics(8), ip-token(8), ip-tunnel(8), ip-vrf(8),
       ip-xfrm(8)
       IP Command reference ip-cref.ps

REPORTING BUGS
       Report any bugs to the Network Developers mailing list
       <netdev@vger.kernel.org> where the development and maintenance is
       primarily done.	You do not have to be subscribed to the list to send a
       message there.


AUTHOR
       Original Manpage by Michail Litvak <mci@owl.openwall.com>

iproute2			  20 Dec 2011				 IP(8)

ip(8)

ip \- show / manipulate routing, network devices, interfaces and tunnels

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System Information

iproute2 1.0.0
Updated 20 Dec 2011
Maintained by Unknown

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