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man pages section 5: File Formats

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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

networks(5)

Name

networks - network name database

Synopsis

/etc/inet/networks
/etc/networks

Description

The networks file is a local source of information regarding the networks a system may need to know the names of. The networks file can be used in conjunction with, or instead of, other networks sources, including the NIS maps networks.byname and networks.byaddr, and ipNetwork objects in an LDAP directory. Programs use the getnetbyname(3C) routines to access this information.

The network file has a single line for each network, with the following information:

official-network-name network-number aliases

Items are separated by any number of SPACE or TAB characters. A ‘#’ indicates the beginning of a comment. Characters up to the end of the line are not interpreted by routines which search the file.

Network numbers may be specified in the conventional dot (‘.’) notation using the inet_network(3C) routine. Network names may contain any printable character other than a field delimiter, NEWLINE, or comment character.

See Also

getnetbyaddr(3C), getnetbyname(3C), inet_network(3C), nsswitch.conf(5)

Notes

The official SVR4 name of the networks file is /etc/inet/networks. The symbolic link /etc/networks exists for BSD compatibility.

The network number in networks database is the host address shifted to the right by the number of 0 bits in the address mask. For example, for the address 24.132.47.86 that has a mask of fffffe00, its network number is 803351. This is obtained when the address is shifted right by 9 bits. The address maps to 12.66.23. The trailing 0 bits should not be specified. The network number here is different from that described in netmasks(5). For this example, the entry in netmasks would be 24.132.46.0 fffffe00.