ndcfg(ADM)
ndcfg --
network driver configuration command interpreter
Synopsis
ndcfg
[-a]
[-b]
[-d X]
[-e]
[-f filename]
[-h]
[-j]
[-l filename]
[-m]
[-n]
[-q]
[-S]
[-t]
[-v]
[-D dec_number]
[-W num_secs]
ndcfg
Description
ndcfg is a general-purpose tool for installing,
configuring, modifying, and removing network drivers from the
system. It checks the network adapter driver's
bcfg(DSP)
file, ignoring any that contain errors or are not applicable
to the system, and waits for user input.
ndcfg is run automatically by
netcfg(ADM)
but can also be run by users, either directly or as part of a
pipe(S).
Driver writers can also use ndcfg to check for
syntax errors in their bcfg file.
ndcfg creates a log in the
/usr/lib/netcfg/tmp/ndcfg.log file
when network adapter drivers are configured with
either the Network Configuration Manager
or the -l option to the
netcfg(ADM)
command.
This log shows exactly what happened as the driver
was configured, including all ndcfg actions.
Command line options
ndcfg accepts the following command line options
in both interactive and batch modes:
-a-
use tab as delimiter in output
-b-
idinstall(ADM)
should run
idbuild(ADM).
-d X-
set resput delimiter to char X.
Default is space.
-e-
Treat first error condition as fatal.
-j-
Display command output as well as logging output to a file
when running with -l option.
-l filename-
Log all input and output to filename.
-t-
TCL mode.
This sets and unsets many flags.
-D dec_number-
Set debugging level to the number bitmask.
-S-
Generate missing netcfg scripts.
ndcfg will generate any
scripts missing from the /usr/lib/netcfg/query directory.
-W num_secs-
Set
RMopen
timeout
to num_secs.
Default is 60 seconds.
The following command line options
are valid only for interactive mode:
-f filename-
Check the bcfg file
specified by filename
for syntax errors.
filename must give the absolute path.
-h-
Show heading in output.
-m-
Enable more mode.
This mode can also be set with the more command
while running ndcfg.
-n-
Do not show the
ndcfg>
prompt.
-q-
Do not load default bcfg files.
-v-
Verbose mode.
Interacting with ndcfg
ndcfg can be run as either
a batch or interactive command
with a large set of commands
for examining the configuration of a network adapter card
and its associated driver(s).
Input lines to ndcfg take the form:
command [arguments]
command is one of the ndcfg commands described below;
arguments are qualifying data
for the command.
In the command descriptions:
bcfgindex-
is a number that corresponds to a bcfg file.
element-
corresponds to the netcfg chain
that describes the device (for example, en0).
The commands available within
ndcfg are grouped according to function:
General commands
! command [arg(s)]-
Run specified UNIX command from the shell.
Piping works to string together a series of commands.
auths-
Display work and maximum kernel privilege sets.
bye | exit | quit-
Quit the ndcfg program.
clear-
Clear the screen.
debug decimal_number-
Set permanent debugging level to decimal_number
for this bcfg file only.
help [arg]-
Display help for commands.
more on|off-
Turn
more(C)
mode on or off.
nlist symbol [newvalue]-
Read symbol from /dev/kmem and display its value.
If newvalue is specified,
then the contents of the symbol
are changed to newvalue.
promiscuous-
Show installed adapters that support promiscuous mode.
See the
MACIOC_PROMISC(MDI)
manual page for more information about promiscuous mode support.
quiet-
Do not display information about bcfg file errors.
showrejects-
List the bcfg files that were rejected by ndcfg
and the reason(s) why they were rejected.
tcl 0|1-
Turn TCL mode off or on.
test element-
Send out a test frame on the specified interface
to which other data link providers
on the local network should respond.
NOTE:
Some network drivers may also respond on behalf of the sending interface.
In such cases, a response of ``success'' may only indicate that
the driver saw the packet, and not that the interface is active.
verbose-
Display all information about bcfg file errors.
This is equivalent to the -v command line option.
The default behavior is to suppress
all notices and errors.
Specify bcfg files to use
bcfgpathtoindex pathname-
Show the current bcfg index
for the specified absolute pathname.
count-
Show the number of bcfg files loaded.
elementtoindex element-
Display the bcfg index for
the specified element.
loaddir pathname_hierarchy-
Load all bcfg files contained in the
pathname_hierarchy tree (usually
either /etc/inst/nics/drivers
or /etc/inst/nd/mdi).
pathname_hierarchy must give the absolute pathname.
loadfile pathname_file-
Load the specified bcfg file.
pathname_file must give the absolute pathname.
location-
Show full path name
for each bcfg file that is currently loaded.
General bcfg inquiry and manipulation commands
bcfghasverify-
Determine whether the ISA driver corresponding to
this bcfg file has
the CFG_VERIFY subroutine to the
config(D2)
entry point or, for DDI versions prior to version 8, a
_verify(D2)
entry point routine.
driver-
Show the DRIVER_NAME and bcfg index for
all loaded bcfg files.
idinstall bcfgindex actual_topology 0 lanwan args-
Install driver represented by bcfgindex into the kernel.
actual_topology is one of the following:
ETHER, TOKEN, ISDN, FDDI,
ATM, X25, FRAMERELAY, OTHER.
lanwan is set to 1 for LAN devices
and 2 for WAN devices.
args is the list of arguments
defined for this driver.
KEY= is always required,
as are any CUSTOM parameters that are defined
in the driver's
bcfg(DSP)
file.
ISA bus drivers define additional parameters
such as IRQ, IOADDR,
MEMADDR and DMA.
idmodify element variable=value-
Modify the value of variable in the resource manager.
idremove element 0-
Remove driver represented by element from the kernel.
isaautodetect get bcfgindex-
Retrieve current parameters from firmware.
isaautodetect set element-
Set parameters on firmware.
The following parameters can be set:
IOADDR, DMA,
MEMADDR, IRQ,
a CUSTOM parameter.
See
bcfg(DSP)
for more information about these parameters.
unloadall-
Unload all bcfg files from memory.
Display information from bcfg file
showalltopologies LAN|WAN-
Display all possible LAN or WAN topologies
that can be used on this machine
based on currently-loaded bcfg files.
Use the output of this command
as input to the showtopo command
and for the showserialttys command
if SERIAL appears in the list.
showbus indexnumber-
Display the BUS= values
for the specified indexnumber
in the bcfg file.
showcustom bcfgindex custom_number-
Display the contents of the specified CUSTOM[x] array
in the specified bcfg file.
showcustomnum bcfgindex-
Display the value of CUSTOM_NUM in
the specified bcfg file.
showdriver indexnumber-
Display the DRIVER_NAME values
for the specified indexnumber
in the bcfg file.
showhelpfile bcfgindex-
Display the value of HELPFILE in
the specified bcfg file.
showindex drivername-
Display the index(es) for each
DRIVER_NAME variable value
in the bcfg file.
showname indexnumber-
Display the NAME= values
for the specified indexnumber
in the bcfg file.
showrejects-
Show bcfg files that are invalid
and give the reason.
showserialttys-
Show all serial device names available for use
in the /dev/term directory.
showvariable bcfgindex variable-
Show the specified variable and value
from the bcfg file.
showtopo topo_arg-
Display all cards to install
on machines that have the topology
specified by topo_arg.
Display information from incore resource manager database
resdump [key]-
Display all parameters from incore resource manager database
(or the entry associated with the resource manager key)
with values interpreted as:
number number_range string
resget key parameter[,type]-
Display the value of the specified parameter
from the incore resource manager database.
If the parameter is unknown to the resource manager library,
you must supply type from the following:
n-
numeric
r-
numeric range
s-
string
resmgr [key]-
Dump contents of incore resource manager database
(or the entry associated with the resource manager key)
similar to
resmgr(ADM).
resput key parameter[,type]=value -
Assign the specified value to parameter
in the incore resource manager database.
If the parameter is unknown to the resource manager library,
you must supply type from the following:
n-
numeric
r-
numeric range
s-
string
resshowkey variable-
Show which resource manager key contains the
specified variable.
resshowunclaimed-
Walk through resource manager
searching for unclaimed BOARD_IDS
that match all located
bcfg(DSP)
BOARD_IDS and BUS.
Returns bcfgindex entries
for unclaimed BOARD_IDS or,
if all BOARD_IDS are claimed,
returns ERROR.
showcustomcurrent NETCFG_ELEMENT-
Display the CUSTOM parameters and values
that are currently associated with NETCFG_ELEMENT
in the incore resource manager database.
showisacurrent NETCFG_ELEMENT-
Display the attributes in the resource manager database
that are associated with NETCFG_ELEMENT.
Display bus configuration information
eisalong [reskey]-
Display EISA information in long format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
eisashort [reskey]-
Display EISA information in short format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
i2olong [reskey]-
Display I2O information in long format. An optional resource
manager key can be supplied.
i2oshort [reskey]-
Display I2O information in short format. An optional
resource manager key can be supplied.
mcalong [reskey]-
Display MCA information in long format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
mcashort [reskey]-
Display MCA information in short format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
pccardlong [reskey]-
Display PC Card information in long format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
pccardshort [reskey]-
Display PC Card information in short format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
pcilong [reskey]-
Display PCI information in long format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
pcishort [reskey]-
Display PCI information in short format.
An optional resource manager key can be supplied.
pcivendor vendorid-
Display the identified PCI vendor. vendorid
can be decimal, hex, or octal; hex numbers start with 0x,
octal number start with 0, and any other number is assumed to
be decimal.
Display ELF information
getstamp filename-
Retrieve the version stamp from
the ELF header for filename.
stamp filename text-
Embed version information in text into
the ELF header for filename.
This creates a new ELF section.
version-
Display version string from the Driver.o file
associated with this bcfg file.
The version string corresponds to the following symbol
defined in the Driver.o file:
static char _ndversion[]="my sample driver version 1.0";
netcfg displays this string when it displays card information.
Hot-plug related commands
hpslcanhotplug element-
Determine if the driver represented by element is both
DDI 8 and hot-plug capable.
hpsldump-
Dump all hot-plug structures.
hpslgetstate element-
Get current Hot Plug Services Library (HPSL) statistics
for the loaded driver represented by element.
hpslresume element-
Resume a previously suspended DDI 8 driver driver
associated with element.
hpslsuspend element-
Suspend the network adapter associated with element
by calling the DDI 8 driver driver with
CFG_SUSPEND.
Failover related commands
resetfailover backup_netX_device-
Reconfigure the specified netX device
(backup_netX_device)
as a primary device instead of a backup device.
setfailover backup_netM_device primary_netN_device-
Make the netX device specified as the first argument
(backup_netM_device)
into the backup device for the primary device specified as the second argument
(primary_netN_device).
Files
/etc/inst/nd/mdi/-
MDI driver directories
/usr/lib/netcfg/tmp/ndcfg.log-
ndcfg log for the driver configuration,
created automatically by the Network Configuration Manager
or the -l option to the
netcfg(ADM)
command.
References
bcfg(DSP),
netcfg(ADM),
dlpid(ADM),
nd(ADM),
ndstat(ADM),
netinfo(C)
``Testing and debugging MDI drivers'' in Developing MDI network adapter drivers
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 - 02 June 2005