diff --git a/sbin/ifconfig/ifconfig.8 b/sbin/ifconfig/ifconfig.8
index 10d1171d4ce5..bd1a79bee897 100644
--- a/sbin/ifconfig/ifconfig.8
+++ b/sbin/ifconfig/ifconfig.8
@@ -1,3223 +1,3223 @@
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 .\"     From: @(#)ifconfig.8	8.3 (Berkeley) 1/5/94
 .\" $FreeBSD$
 .\"
 .Dd April 11, 2022
 .Dt IFCONFIG 8
 .Os
 .Sh NAME
 .Nm ifconfig
 .Nd configure network interface parameters
 .Sh SYNOPSIS
 .Nm
 .Op Fl kLmn
 .Op Fl f Ar type Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar format
 .Ar interface
 .Op Cm create
 .Oo
 .Ar address_family
 .Oo
 .Ar address
 .Op Ar dest_address
 .Oc
 .Oc
 .Op Ar parameters
 .Nm
 .Ar interface
 .Cm destroy
 .Nm
 .Fl a
 .Op Fl dkLmuv
 .Op Fl f Ar type Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar format
 .Op Fl G Ar groupname
 .Op Fl g Ar groupname
 .Op Ar address_family
 .Nm
 .Fl C
 .Nm
 .Fl g Ar groupname
 .Nm
 .Fl l
 .Op Fl du
 .Op Fl g Ar groupname
 .Op Ar address_family
 .Nm
 .Op Fl dkLmuv
 .Op Fl f Ar type Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar format
 .Sh DESCRIPTION
 The
 .Nm
 utility is used to assign an address
 to a network interface and/or configure
 network interface parameters.
 The
 .Nm
 utility must be used at boot time to define the network address
 of each interface present on a machine; it may also be used at
 a later time to redefine an interface's address
 or other operating parameters.
 .Pp
 The following options are available:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Fl a
 Display information about all interfaces in the system.
 .Pp
 The
 .Fl a
 flag may be used instead of the
 .Ar interface
 argument.
 .It Fl C
 List all the interface cloners available on the system,
 with no additional information.
 Use of this flag is mutually exclusive with all other flags and commands.
 .It Fl d
 Display only the interfaces that are down.
 .It Fl f Xo
 .Ar type Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar format Ns
 .Op Cm \&, Ns Ar type Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar format Ar ...
 .Xc
 Control the output format of
 .Nm .
 The format is specified as a comma-separated list of
 .Ar type Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar format
 pairs
 .Po see the
 .Sx EXAMPLES
 section for more information
 .Pc .
 .Pp
 The output format can also be specified via the
 .Ev IFCONFIG_FORMAT
 environment variable.
 The
 .Fl f
 flag can be supplied multiple times.
 .Pp
 The
 .Ar type Ns s
 and their associated
 .Ar format
 strings are:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width ether
 .It Cm addr
 Adjust the display of inet and inet6 addresses:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width default -compact
 .It Cm default
 Default format,
 .Cm numeric
 .It Cm fqdn
 Fully qualified domain names
 .Pq FQDN
 .It Cm host
 Unqualified hostnames
 .It Cm numeric
 Numeric format
 .El
 .It Cm ether
 Adjust the display of link-level ethernet (MAC) addresses:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width default -compact
 .It Cm colon
 Separate address segments with a colon
 .It Cm dash
 Separate address segments with a dash
 .It Cm default
 Default format,
 .Cm colon
 .El
 .It Cm inet
 Adjust the display of inet address subnet masks:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width default -compact
 .It Cm cidr
 CIDR notation, for example:
 .Ql 203.0.113.224/26
 .It Cm default
 Default format,
 .Cm hex
 .It Cm dotted
 Dotted quad notation, for example:
 .Ql 255.255.255.192
 .It Cm hex
 Hexadecimal format, for example:
 .Ql 0xffffffc0
 .El
 .It Cm inet6
 Adjust the display of inet6 address prefixes (subnet masks):
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width default -compact
 .It Cm cidr
 CIDR notation, for example:
 .Ql ::1/128
 or
 .Ql fe80::1%lo0/64
 .It Cm default
 Default format,
 .Cm numeric
 .It Cm numeric
 Integer format, for example:
 .Ql prefixlen 64
 .El
 .El
 .It Fl G Ar groupname
 Exclude members of the specified
 .Ar groupname
 from the output.
 .Ar groupname .
 .Pp
 Only one option
 .Fl G
 should be specified as later override previous ones
 .Ar groupname
 may contain shell patterns in which case it should be quoted.
 .It Fl g Ar groupname
 Limit the output to the members of the specified
 .Ar groupname .
 .Pp
 If
 .Fl g
 is specified before other significant flags like, e.g.,
 .Fl a ,
 .Fl l ,
 or
 .Fl C ,
 then
 .Nm
 lists names of interfaces beloning to
 .Ar groupname .
 Any other flags and arguments are ignored in this case.
 .Pp
 Only one option
 .Fl g
 should be specified as later override previous ones
 .Ar groupname
 may contain shell patterns in which case it should be quoted.
 .It Fl k
 Print keying information for the
 .Ar interface ,
 if available.
 .Pp
 For example, the values of 802.11 WEP keys and
 .Xr carp 4
 passphrases will be printed, if accessible to the current user.
 .Pp
 This information is not printed by default, as it may be considered
 sensitive.
 .It Fl L
 Display address lifetime for IPv6 addresses as time offset string.
 .It Fl l
 List all available interfaces on the system,
 with no other additional information.
 .Pp
 If an
 .Ar address_family
 is specified, only interfaces of that type will be listed.
 .Pp
 If the
 .Ar address_family
 is set to
 .Cm ether ,
 then
 .Fl l
 will exclude loopback interfaces from the list of Ethernet interfaces.
 This is a special case, because all the other synonyms of the
 .Cm link
 address family will include loopback interfaces in the list.
 .Pp
 Use of this flag is mutually exclusive
 with all other flags and commands, except for
 .Fl d ,
 .Fl g ,
 and
 .Fl u .
 .It Fl m
 Display the capability list and all
 of the supported media for the specified interface.
 .It Fl n
 Disable automatic loading of network interface drivers.
 .Pp
 If the network interface driver is not present in the kernel then
 .Nm
 will attempt to load it.
 This flag disables this behavior.
 .It Fl u
 Display only the interfaces that are up.
 .It Fl v
 Get more verbose status for an interface.
 .It Ar address
 For the DARPA-Internet family,
 the address is either a host name present in the host name data
 base,
 .Xr hosts 5 ,
 or a DARPA Internet address expressed in the Internet standard
 .Dq dot notation .
 .Pp
 It is also possible to use the CIDR notation (also known as the
 slash notation) to include the netmask.
 That is, one can specify an address like
 .Li 192.168.0.1/16 .
 .Pp
 For the
 .Cm inet6
 family, it is also possible to specify the prefix length using the slash
 notation, like
 .Li ::1/128 .
 See the
 .Cm prefixlen
 parameter below for more information.
 .Pp
 The link-level
 .Pq Cm link
 address
 is specified as a series of colon-separated hex digits.
 This can be used to, for example,
 set a new MAC address on an Ethernet interface, though the
 mechanism used is not Ethernet specific.
 .Pp
 Use the
 .Cm random
 keyword to set a randomly generated MAC address.
 A randomly-generated MAC address might be the same as one already in use
 in the network.
 Such duplications are extremely unlikely.
 .Pp
 If the interface is already
 up when the link-level address is modified,
 it will be briefly brought down and
 then brought back up again in order to ensure that the receive
 filter in the underlying Ethernet hardware is properly reprogrammed.
 .It Ar address_family
 Specify the
 address family
 which affects interpretation of the remaining parameters.
 Since an interface can receive transmissions in differing protocols
 with different naming schemes, specifying the address family is recommended.
 The address or protocol families currently
 supported are:
 .Bl -tag
 .It Cm ether
 Synonymous with
 .Cm link
 .Po with some exceptions, see
 .Fl l
 .Pc .
 .It Cm inet
 Default, if available.
 .It Cm inet6
 .It Cm link
 Default, if
 .Cm inet
 is not available.
 .It Cm lladdr
 Synonymous with
 .Cm link .
 .El
 .It Ar dest_address
 Specify the address of the correspondent on the other end
 of a point to point link.
 .It Ar interface
 This
 parameter is a string of the form
 .Dq name unit ,
 for example,
 .Dq Li em0 .
 .El
 .Pp
 The
 .Nm
 utility displays the current configuration for a network interface
 when no optional parameters are supplied.
 If a protocol family is specified,
 .Nm
 will report only the details specific to that protocol family.
 .Pp
 When no arguments are given,
 .Fl a
 is implied.
 .Pp
 Only the super-user may modify the configuration of a network interface.
 .Sh PARAMETERS
 The following
 .Ar parameter Ns s
 may be set with
 .Nm :
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm add
 Another name for the
 .Cm alias
 parameter.
 Introduced for compatibility
 with
 .Bsx .
 .It Cm alias
 Establish an additional network address for this interface.
 This is sometimes useful when changing network numbers, and
 one wishes to accept packets addressed to the old interface.
 If the address is on the same subnet as the first network address
 for this interface, a non-conflicting netmask must be given.
 Usually
 .Li 0xffffffff
 is most appropriate.
 .It Fl alias
 Remove the network address specified.
 This would be used if you incorrectly specified an alias, or it
 was no longer needed.
 If you have incorrectly set an NS address having the side effect
 of specifying the host portion, removing all NS addresses will
 allow you to respecify the host portion.
 .It Cm anycast
 (Inet6 only.)
 Specify that the address configured is an anycast address.
 Based on the current specification,
 only routers may configure anycast addresses.
 Anycast address will not be used as source address of any of outgoing
 IPv6 packets.
 .It Cm arp
 Enable the use of the Address Resolution Protocol
 .Pq Xr arp 4
 in mapping
 between network level addresses and link level addresses (default).
 This is currently implemented for mapping between DARPA Internet addresses
 and IEEE 802 48-bit MAC addresses (Ethernet, FDDI, and Token Ring addresses).
 .It Fl arp
 Disable the use of the Address Resolution Protocol
 .Pq Xr arp 4 .
 .It Cm staticarp
 If the Address Resolution Protocol is enabled,
 the host will only reply to requests for its addresses,
 and will never send any requests.
 .It Fl staticarp
 If the Address Resolution Protocol is enabled,
 the host will perform normally,
 sending out requests and listening for replies.
 .It Cm broadcast
 (Inet only.)
 Specify the address to use to represent broadcasts to the
 network.
 The default broadcast address is the address with a host part of all 1's.
 .It Cm debug
 Enable driver dependent debugging code; usually, this turns on
 extra console error logging.
 .It Fl debug
 Disable driver dependent debugging code.
 .It Cm promisc
 Put interface into permanently promiscuous mode.
 .It Fl promisc
 Disable permanently promiscuous mode.
 .It Cm delete
 Another name for the
 .Fl alias
 parameter.
 .It Cm description Ar value , Cm descr Ar value
 Specify a description of the interface.
 This can be used to label interfaces in situations where they may
 otherwise be difficult to distinguish.
 .It Cm -description , Cm -descr
 Clear the interface description.
 .It Cm down
 Mark an interface
 .Dq down .
 When an interface is marked
 .Dq down ,
 the system will not attempt to
 transmit messages through that interface.
 If possible, the interface will be reset to disable reception as well.
 This action does not automatically disable routes using the interface.
 .It Cm group Ar groupname
 Assign the interface to a
 .Dq group .
 Any interface can be in multiple groups.
 .Pp
 Cloned interfaces are members of their interface family group by default.
 For example, a PPP interface such as
 .Em ppp0
 is a member of the PPP interface family group,
 .Em ppp .
 .\" The interface(s) the default route(s) point to are members of the
 .\" .Em egress
 .\" interface group.
 .It Cm -group Ar groupname
 Remove the interface from the given
 .Dq group .
 .It Cm eui64
 (Inet6 only.)
 Fill interface index
 (lowermost 64bit of an IPv6 address)
 automatically.
 .It Cm fib Ar fib_number
 Specify interface FIB.
 A FIB
 .Ar fib_number
 is assigned to all frames or packets received on that interface.
 The FIB is not inherited, e.g., vlans or other sub-interfaces will use
 the default FIB (0) irrespective of the parent interface's FIB.
 The kernel needs to be tuned to support more than the default FIB
 using the
 .Va ROUTETABLES
 kernel configuration option, or the
 .Va net.fibs
 tunable.
 .It Cm tunnelfib Ar fib_number
 Specify tunnel FIB.
 A FIB
 .Ar fib_number
 is assigned to all packets encapsulated by tunnel interface, e.g.,
 .Xr gif 4
 and
 .Xr gre 4 .
 .It Cm maclabel Ar label
 If Mandatory Access Control support is enabled in the kernel,
 set the MAC label to
 .Ar label .
 .\" (see
 .\" .Xr maclabel 7 ) .
 .It Cm media Ar type
 If the driver supports the media selection system, set the media type
 of the interface to
 .Ar type .
 Some interfaces support the mutually exclusive use of one of several
 different physical media connectors.
 For example, a 10Mbit/s Ethernet
 interface might support the use of either AUI
 or twisted pair connectors.
 Setting the media type to
 .Cm 10base5/AUI
 would change the currently active connector to the AUI port.
 Setting it to
 .Cm 10baseT/UTP
 would activate twisted pair.
 Refer to the interfaces' driver
 specific documentation or man page for a complete list of the
 available types.
 .It Cm mediaopt Ar opts
 If the driver supports the media selection system, set the specified
 media options on the interface.
 The
 .Ar opts
 argument
 is a comma delimited list of options to apply to the interface.
 Refer to the interfaces' driver specific man page for a complete
 list of available options.
 .It Fl mediaopt Ar opts
 If the driver supports the media selection system, disable the
 specified media options on the interface.
 .It Cm mode Ar mode
 If the driver supports the media selection system, set the specified
 operating mode on the interface to
 .Ar mode .
 For IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces that support multiple operating modes
 this directive is used to select between 802.11a
 .Pq Cm 11a ,
 802.11b
 .Pq Cm 11b ,
 and 802.11g
 .Pq Cm 11g
 operating modes.
 .It Cm txrtlmt
 Set if the driver supports TX rate limiting.
 .It Cm inst Ar minst , Cm instance Ar minst
 Set the media instance to
 .Ar minst .
 This is useful for devices which have multiple physical layer interfaces
 .Pq PHYs .
 .It Cm name Ar name
 Set the interface name to
 .Ar name .
 .It Cm rxcsum , txcsum , rxcsum6 , txcsum6
 If the driver supports user-configurable checksum offloading,
 enable receive (or transmit) checksum offloading on the interface.
 The feature can be turned on selectively per protocol family.
 Use
 .Cm rxcsum6 , txcsum6
 for
 .Xr ip6 4
 or
 .Cm rxcsum , txcsum
 otherwise.
 Some drivers may not be able to enable these flags independently
 of each other, so setting one may also set the other.
 The driver will offload as much checksum work as it can reliably
 support, the exact level of offloading varies between drivers.
 .It Fl rxcsum , txcsum , rxcsum6 , txcsum6
 If the driver supports user-configurable checksum offloading,
 disable receive (or transmit) checksum offloading on the interface.
 The feature can be turned off selectively per protocol family.
 Use
 .Fl rxcsum6 , txcsum6
 for
 .Xr ip6 4
 or
 .Fl rxcsum , txcsum
 otherwise.
 These settings may not always be independent of each other.
 .It Cm tso
 If the driver supports
 .Xr tcp 4
 segmentation offloading, enable TSO on the interface.
 Some drivers may not be able to support TSO for
 .Xr ip 4
 and
 .Xr ip6 4
 packets, so they may enable only one of them.
 .It Fl tso
 If the driver supports
 .Xr tcp 4
 segmentation offloading, disable TSO on the interface.
 It will always disable TSO for
 .Xr ip 4
 and
 .Xr ip6 4 .
 .It Cm tso6 , tso4
 If the driver supports
 .Xr tcp 4
 segmentation offloading for
 .Xr ip6 4
 or
 .Xr ip 4
 use one of these to selectively enabled it only for one protocol family.
 .It Fl tso6 , tso4
 If the driver supports
 .Xr tcp 4
 segmentation offloading for
 .Xr ip6 4
 or
 .Xr ip 4
 use one of these to selectively disable it only for one protocol family.
 .It Cm lro
 If the driver supports
 .Xr tcp 4
 large receive offloading, enable LRO on the interface.
 .It Fl lro
 If the driver supports
 .Xr tcp 4
 large receive offloading, disable LRO on the interface.
 .It Cm txtls
 Transmit TLS offload encrypts Transport Layer Security (TLS) records and
 segments the encrypted record into one or more
 .Xr tcp 4
 segments over either
 .Xr ip 4
 or
 .Xr ip6 4 .
 If the driver supports transmit TLS offload,
 enable transmit TLS offload on the interface.
 Some drivers may not be able to support transmit TLS offload for
 .Xr ip 4
 and
 .Xr ip6 4
 packets, so they may enable only one of them.
 .It Fl txtls
 If the driver supports transmit TLS offload,
 disable transmit TLS offload on the interface.
 It will always disable TLS for
 .Xr ip 4
 and
 .Xr ip6 4 .
 .It Cm txtlsrtlmt
 Enable use of rate limiting (packet pacing) for TLS offload.
 .It Fl txtlsrtlmt
 Disable use of rate limiting for TLS offload.
 .It Cm mextpg
 If the driver supports extended multi-page
 .Xr mbuf 9
 buffers, enable them on the interface.
 .It Fl mextpg
 If the driver supports extended multi-page
 .Xr mbuf 9
 biffers, disable them on the interface.
 .It Cm wol , wol_ucast , wol_mcast , wol_magic
 Enable Wake On Lan (WOL) support, if available.
 WOL is a facility whereby a machine in a low power state may be woken
 in response to a received packet.
 There are three types of packets that may wake a system:
 ucast (directed solely to the machine's mac address),
 mcast (directed to a broadcast or multicast address),
 or
 magic
 .Po unicast or multicast frames with a
 .Dq magic contents
 .Pc .
 Not all devices support WOL, those that do indicate the mechanisms
 they support in their capabilities.
 .Cm wol
 is a synonym for enabling all available WOL mechanisms.
 To disable WOL use
 .Fl wol .
 .It Cm vlanmtu , vlanhwtag , vlanhwfilter , vlanhwcsum , vlanhwtso
 If the driver offers user-configurable VLAN support, enable
 reception of extended frames, tag processing in hardware,
 frame filtering in hardware, checksum offloading, or TSO on VLAN,
 respectively.
 Note that this must be configured on a physical interface associated with
 .Xr vlan 4 ,
 not on a
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface itself.
 .It Fl vlanmtu , vlanhwtag , vlanhwfilter , vlanhwcsum , vlanhwtso
 If the driver offers user-configurable VLAN support, disable
 reception of extended frames, tag processing in hardware,
 frame filtering in hardware, checksum offloading, or TSO on VLAN,
 respectively.
 .It Cm vxlanhwcsum , vxlanhwtso
 If the driver offers user-configurable VXLAN support, enable inner checksum
 offloading (receive and transmit) or TSO on VXLAN, respectively.
 Note that this must be configured on a physical interface associated with
 .Xr vxlan 4 ,
 not on a
 .Xr vxlan 4
 interface itself.
 The physical interface is either the interface specified as the vxlandev
 or the interface hosting the vxlanlocal address.
 The driver will offload as much checksum work and TSO as it can reliably
 support, the exact level of offloading may vary between drivers.
 .It Fl vxlanhwcsum , vxlanhwtso
 If the driver offers user-configurable VXLAN support, disable checksum
 offloading (receive and transmit) or TSO on VXLAN, respectively.
 .It Cm vnet Ar jail
 Move the interface to the
 .Xr jail 8 ,
 specified by name or JID.
 If the jail has a virtual network stack, the interface will disappear
 from the current environment and become visible to the jail.
 .It Fl vnet Ar jail
 Reclaim the interface from the
 .Xr jail 8 ,
 specified by name or JID.
 If the jail has a virtual network stack, the interface will disappear
 from the jail, and become visible to the current network environment.
 .It Cm polling
 Turn on
 .Xr polling 4
 feature and disable interrupts on the interface, if driver supports
 this mode.
 .It Fl polling
 Turn off
 .Xr polling 4
 feature and enable interrupt mode on the interface.
 .It Cm create
 Create the specified network pseudo-device.
 If the interface is given without a unit number, try to create a new
 device with an arbitrary unit number.
 If creation of an arbitrary device is successful, the new device name is
 printed to standard output unless the interface is renamed or destroyed
 in the same
 .Nm
 invocation.
 .It Cm destroy
 Destroy the specified network pseudo-device.
 .It Cm plumb
 Another name for the
 .Cm create
 parameter.
 Included for Solaris compatibility.
 .It Cm unplumb
 Another name for the
 .Cm destroy
 parameter.
 Included for Solaris compatibility.
 .It Cm metric Ar n
 Set the routing metric of the interface to
 .Ar n ,
 default 0.
 The routing metric is used by the routing protocol
 .Pq Xr routed 8 .
 Higher metrics have the effect of making a route
 less favorable; metrics are counted as additional hops
 to the destination network or host.
 .It Cm mtu Ar n
 Set the maximum transmission unit of the interface to
 .Ar n ,
 default is interface specific.
 The MTU is used to limit the size of packets that are transmitted on an
 interface.
 Not all interfaces support setting the MTU, and some interfaces have
 range restrictions.
 .It Cm netmask Ar mask
 .\" (Inet and ISO.)
 (Inet only.)
 Specify how much of the address to reserve for subdividing
 networks into sub-networks.
 The mask includes the network part of the local address
 and the subnet part, which is taken from the host field of the address.
 The mask can be specified as a single hexadecimal number
 with a leading
 .Ql 0x ,
 with a dot-notation Internet address,
 or with a pseudo-network name listed in the network table
 .Xr networks 5 .
 The mask contains 1's for the bit positions in the 32-bit address
 which are to be used for the network and subnet parts,
 and 0's for the host part.
 The mask should contain at least the standard network portion,
 and the subnet field should be contiguous with the network
 portion.
 .Pp
 The netmask can also be specified in CIDR notation after the address.
 See the
 .Ar address
 option above for more information.
 .It Cm prefixlen Ar len
 (Inet6 only.)
 Specify that
 .Ar len
 bits are reserved for subdividing networks into sub-networks.
 The
 .Ar len
 must be integer, and for syntactical reason it must be between 0 to 128.
 It is almost always 64 under the current IPv6 assignment rule.
 If the parameter is omitted, 64 is used.
 .Pp
 The prefix can also be specified using the slash notation after the address.
 See the
 .Ar address
 option above for more information.
 .It Cm remove
 Another name for the
 .Fl alias
 parameter.
 Introduced for compatibility
 with
 .Bsx .
 .Sm off
 .It Cm link Op Cm 0 No - Cm 2
 .Sm on
 Enable special processing of the link level of the interface.
 These three options are interface specific in actual effect, however,
 they are in general used to select special modes of operation.
 An example
 of this is to enable SLIP compression, or to select the connector type
 for some Ethernet cards.
 Refer to the man page for the specific driver
 for more information.
 .Sm off
 .It Fl link Op Cm 0 No - Cm 2
 .Sm on
 Disable special processing at the link level with the specified interface.
 .It Cm monitor
 Put the interface in monitor mode.
 No packets are transmitted, and received packets are discarded after
 .Xr bpf 4
 processing.
 .It Fl monitor
 Take the interface out of monitor mode.
 .It Cm pcp Ar priority_code_point
 Priority code point
 .Pq Dv PCP
 is an 3-bit field which refers to the IEEE 802.1p
 class of service and maps to the frame priority level.
 .It Fl pcp
 Stop tagging packets on the interface w/ the priority code point.
 .It Cm up
 Mark an interface
 .Dq up .
 This may be used to enable an interface after an
 .Dq Nm Cm down .
 It happens automatically when setting the first address on an interface.
 If the interface was reset when previously marked down,
 the hardware will be re-initialized.
 .El
 .Ss ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol Parameters
 The following parameters are for ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.
 Note that the address family keyword
 .Dq Li inet6
 is needed for them:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm accept_rtadv
 Set a flag to enable accepting ICMPv6 Router Advertisement messages.
 The
 .Xr sysctl 8
 variable
 .Va net.inet6.ip6.accept_rtadv
 controls whether this flag is set by default or not.
 .It Cm -accept_rtadv
 Clear a flag
 .Cm accept_rtadv .
 .It Cm no_radr
 Set a flag to control whether routers from which the system accepts
 Router Advertisement messages will be added to the Default Router List
 or not.
 When the
 .Cm accept_rtadv
 flag is disabled, this flag has no effect.
 The
 .Xr sysctl 8
 variable
 .Va net.inet6.ip6.no_radr
 controls whether this flag is set by default or not.
 .It Cm -no_radr
 Clear a flag
 .Cm no_radr .
 .It Cm auto_linklocal
 Set a flag to perform automatic link-local address configuration when
 the interface becomes available.
 The
 .Xr sysctl 8
 variable
 .Va net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal
 controls whether this flag is set by default or not.
 .It Cm -auto_linklocal
 Clear a flag
 .Cm auto_linklocal .
 .It Cm defaultif
 Set the specified interface as the default route when there is no
 default router.
 .It Cm -defaultif
 Clear a flag
 .Cm defaultif .
 .It Cm ifdisabled
 Set a flag to disable all of IPv6 network communications on the
 specified interface.
 Note that if there are already configured IPv6
 addresses on that interface, all of them are marked as
 .Dq tentative
 and DAD will be performed when this flag is cleared.
 .It Cm -ifdisabled
 Clear a flag
 .Cm ifdisabled .
 When this flag is cleared and
 .Cm auto_linklocal
 flag is enabled, automatic configuration of a link-local address is
 performed.
 .It Cm nud
 Set a flag to enable Neighbor Unreachability Detection.
 .It Cm -nud
 Clear a flag
 .Cm nud .
 .It Cm no_prefer_iface
 Set a flag to not honor rule 5 of source address selection in RFC 3484.
 In practice this means the address on the outgoing interface will not be
 preferred, effectively yielding the decision to the address selection
 policy table, configurable with
 .Xr ip6addrctl 8 .
 .It Cm -no_prefer_iface
 Clear a flag
 .Cm no_prefer_iface .
 .It Cm no_dad
 Set a flag to disable Duplicate Address Detection.
 .It Cm -no_dad
 Clear a flag
 .Cm no_dad .
 .El
 .Ss IPv6 Parameters
 The following parameters are specific for IPv6 addresses.
 Note that the address family keyword
 .Dq Li inet6
 is needed for them:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm autoconf
 Set the IPv6 autoconfigured address bit.
 .It Fl autoconf
 Clear the IPv6 autoconfigured address bit.
 .It Cm deprecated
 Set the IPv6 deprecated address bit.
 .It Fl deprecated
 Clear the IPv6 deprecated address bit.
 .It Cm pltime Ar n
 Set preferred lifetime for the address.
 .It Cm prefer_source
 Set a flag to prefer address as a candidate of the source address for
 outgoing packets.
 .It Cm -prefer_source
 Clear a flag
 .Cm prefer_source .
 .It Cm vltime Ar n
 Set valid lifetime for the address.
 .El
 .Ss IEEE 802.11 Wireless Interfaces Cloning Parameters
 The following parameters are specific to cloning
 IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces with the
 .Cm create
 request:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm wlandev Ar device
 Use
 .Ar device
 as the parent for the cloned device.
 .It Cm wlanmode Ar mode
 Specify the operating mode for this cloned device.
 .Ar mode
 is one of
 .Cm sta ,
 .Cm ahdemo
 (or
 .Cm adhoc-demo ) ,
 .Cm ibss
 (or
 .Cm adhoc ) ,
 .Cm ap
 (or
 .Cm hostap ) ,
 .Cm wds ,
 .Cm tdma ,
 .Cm mesh ,
 and
 .Cm monitor .
 The operating mode of a cloned interface cannot be changed.
 The
 .Cm tdma
 mode is actually implemented as an
 .Cm adhoc-demo
 interface with special properties.
 .It Cm wlanbssid Ar bssid
 The 802.11 mac address to use for the bssid.
 This must be specified at create time for a legacy
 .Cm wds
 device.
 .It Cm wlanaddr Ar address
 The local mac address.
 If this is not specified then a mac address will automatically be assigned
 to the cloned device.
 Typically this address is the same as the address of the parent device
 but if the
 .Cm bssid
 parameter is specified then the driver will craft a unique address for
 the device (if supported).
 .It Cm wdslegacy
 Mark a
 .Cm wds
 device as operating in
 .Dq legacy mode .
 Legacy
 .Cm wds
 devices have a fixed peer relationship and do not, for example, roam
 if their peer stops communicating.
 For completeness a Dynamic WDS (DWDS) interface may marked as
 .Fl wdslegacy .
 .It Cm bssid
 Request a unique local mac address for the cloned device.
 This is only possible if the device supports multiple mac addresses.
 To force use of the parent's mac address use
 .Fl bssid .
 .It Cm beacons
 Mark the cloned interface as depending on hardware support to
 track received beacons.
 To have beacons tracked in software use
 .Fl beacons .
 For
 .Cm hostap
 mode
 .Fl beacons
 can also be used to indicate no beacons should
 be transmitted; this can be useful when creating a WDS configuration but
 .Cm wds
 interfaces can only be created as companions to an access point.
 .El
 .Ss Cloned IEEE 802.11 Wireless Interface Parameters
 The following parameters are specific to IEEE 802.11 wireless interfaces
 cloned with a
 .Cm create
 operation:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm ampdu
 Enable sending and receiving AMPDU frames when using 802.11n (default).
 The 802.11n specification states a compliant station must be capable
 of receiving AMPDU frames but transmission is optional.
 Use
 .Fl ampdu
 to disable all use of AMPDU with 802.11n.
 For testing and/or to work around interoperability problems one can use
 .Cm ampdutx
 and
 .Cm ampdurx
 to control use of AMPDU in one direction.
 .It Cm ampdudensity Ar density
 Set the AMPDU density parameter used when operating with 802.11n.
 This parameter controls the inter-packet gap for AMPDU frames.
 The sending device normally controls this setting but a receiving station
 may request wider gaps.
 Legal values for
 .Ar density
 are 0, .25, .5, 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16 (microseconds).
 A value of
 .Cm -
 is treated the same as 0.
 .It Cm ampdulimit Ar limit
 Set the limit on packet size for receiving AMPDU frames when operating
 with 802.11n.
 Legal values for
 .Ar limit
 are 8192, 16384, 32768, and 65536 but one can also specify
 just the unique prefix: 8, 16, 32, 64.
 Note the sender may limit the size of AMPDU frames to be less
 than the maximum specified by the receiving station.
 .It Cm amsdu
 Enable sending and receiving AMSDU frames when using 802.11n.
 By default AMSDU is received but not transmitted.
 Use
 .Fl amsdu
 to disable all use of AMSDU with 802.11n.
 For testing and/or to work around interoperability problems one can use
 .Cm amsdutx
 and
 .Cm amsdurx
 to control use of AMSDU in one direction.
 .It Cm amsdulimit Ar limit
 Set the limit on packet size for sending and receiving AMSDU frames
 when operating with 802.11n.
 Legal values for
 .Ar limit
 are 7935 and 3839 (bytes).
 Note the sender may limit the size of AMSDU frames to be less
 than the maximum specified by the receiving station.
 Note also that devices are not required to support the 7935 limit,
 only 3839 is required by the specification and the larger value
 may require more memory to be dedicated to support functionality
 that is rarely used.
 .It Cm apbridge
 When operating as an access point, pass packets between
 wireless clients directly (default).
 To instead let them pass up through the
 system and be forwarded using some other mechanism, use
 .Fl apbridge .
 Disabling the internal bridging
 is useful when traffic is to be processed with
 packet filtering.
 .It Cm authmode Ar mode
 Set the desired authentication mode in infrastructure mode.
 Not all adapters support all modes.
 The set of
 valid modes is
 .Cm none , open , shared
 (shared key),
 .Cm 8021x
 (IEEE 802.1x),
 and
 .Cm wpa
 (IEEE WPA/WPA2/802.11i).
 The
 .Cm 8021x
 and
 .Cm wpa
 modes are only useful when using an authentication service
 (a supplicant for client operation or an authenticator when
 operating as an access point).
 Modes are case insensitive.
 .It Cm bgscan
 Enable background scanning when operating as a station.
 Background scanning is a technique whereby a station associated to
 an access point will temporarily leave the channel to scan for
 neighboring stations.
 This allows a station to maintain a cache of nearby access points
 so that roaming between access points can be done without
 a lengthy scan operation.
 Background scanning is done only when a station is not busy and
 any outbound traffic will cancel a scan operation.
 Background scanning should never cause packets to be lost though
 there may be some small latency if outbound traffic interrupts a
 scan operation.
 By default background scanning is enabled if the device is capable.
 To disable background scanning, use
 .Fl bgscan .
 Background scanning is controlled by the
 .Cm bgscanidle
 and
 .Cm bgscanintvl
 parameters.
 Background scanning must be enabled for roaming; this is an artifact
 of the current implementation and may not be required in the future.
 .It Cm bgscanidle Ar idletime
 Set the minimum time a station must be idle (not transmitting or
 receiving frames) before a background scan is initiated.
 The
 .Ar idletime
 parameter is specified in milliseconds.
 By default a station must be idle at least 250 milliseconds before
 a background scan is initiated.
 The idle time may not be set to less than 100 milliseconds.
 .It Cm bgscanintvl Ar interval
 Set the interval at which background scanning is attempted.
 The
 .Ar interval
 parameter is specified in seconds.
 By default a background scan is considered every 300 seconds (5 minutes).
 The
 .Ar interval
 may not be set to less than 15 seconds.
 .It Cm bintval Ar interval
 Set the interval at which beacon frames are sent when operating in
 ad-hoc or ap mode.
 The
 .Ar interval
 parameter is specified in TU's (1024 usecs).
 By default beacon frames are transmitted every 100 TU's.
 .It Cm bmissthreshold Ar count
 Set the number of consecutive missed beacons at which the station
 will attempt to roam (i.e., search for a new access point).
 The
 .Ar count
 parameter must be in the range 1 to 255; though the
 upper bound may be reduced according to device capabilities.
 The default threshold is 7 consecutive missed beacons; but
 this may be overridden by the device driver.
 Another name for the
 .Cm bmissthreshold
 parameter is
 .Cm bmiss .
 .It Cm bssid Ar address
 Specify the MAC address of the access point to use when operating
 as a station in a BSS network.
 This overrides any automatic selection done by the system.
 To disable a previously selected access point, supply
 .Cm any , none ,
 or
 .Cm -
 for the address.
 This option is useful when more than one access point uses the same SSID.
 Another name for the
 .Cm bssid
 parameter is
 .Cm ap .
 .It Cm burst
 Enable packet bursting.
 Packet bursting is a transmission technique whereby the wireless
 medium is acquired once to send multiple frames and the interframe
 spacing is reduced.
 This technique can significantly increase throughput by reducing
 transmission overhead.
 Packet bursting is supported by the 802.11e QoS specification
 and some devices that do not support QoS may still be capable.
 By default packet bursting is enabled if a device is capable
 of doing it.
 To disable packet bursting, use
 .Fl burst .
 .It Cm chanlist Ar channels
 Set the desired channels to use when scanning for access
 points, neighbors in an IBSS network, or looking for unoccupied
 channels when operating as an access point.
 The set of channels is specified as a comma-separated list with
 each element in the list representing either a single channel number or a range
 of the form
 .Dq Li a-b .
 Channel numbers must be in the range 1 to 255 and be permissible
 according to the operating characteristics of the device.
 .It Cm channel Ar number
 Set a single desired channel.
 Channels range from 1 to 255, but the exact selection available
 depends on the region your adaptor was manufactured for.
 Setting
 the channel to
 .Cm any ,
 or
 .Dq Cm -
 will clear any desired channel and, if the device is marked up,
 force a scan for a channel to operate on.
 Alternatively the frequency, in megahertz, may be specified
 instead of the channel number.
 .Pp
 When there are several ways to use a channel the channel
 number/frequency may be appended with attributes to clarify.
 For example, if a device is capable of operating on channel 6
 with 802.11n and 802.11g then one can specify that g-only use
 should be used by specifying
 .Cm 6:g .
 Similarly the channel width can be specified by appending it
 with
 .Dq Cm \&/ ;
 e.g.,
 .Cm 6/40
 specifies a 40MHz wide channel.
 These attributes can be combined as in:
 .Cm 6:ht/40 .
 .Pp
 The full set of flags specified following a
 .Dq Cm \&:
 are:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -compact
 .It Cm a
 802.11a
 .It Cm b
 802.11b
 .It Cm d
 Atheros Dynamic Turbo mode
 .It Cm g
 802.11g
 .It Cm h
 Same as
 .Cm n
 .It Cm n
 802.11n aka HT
 .It Cm s
 Atheros Static Turbo mode
 .It Cm t
 Atheros Dynamic Turbo mode, or appended to
 .Cm st
 and
 .Cm dt
 .El
 .Pp
 The full set of channel widths following a
 .Cm \&/
 are:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -compact
 .It Cm 5
 5MHz aka quarter-rate channel
 .It Cm 10
 10MHz aka half-rate channel
 .It Cm 20
 20MHz mostly for use in specifying
 .Cm ht20
 .It Cm 40
 40MHz mostly for use in specifying
 .Cm ht40
 .El
 .Pp
 In addition,
 a 40MHz HT channel specification may include the location
 of the extension channel by appending
 .Dq Cm \&+
 or
 .Dq Cm \&-
 for above and below,
 respectively; e.g.,
 .Cm 2437:ht/40+
 specifies 40MHz wide HT operation
 with the center channel at frequency 2437 and the extension channel above.
 .It Cm country Ar name
 Set the country code to use in calculating the regulatory constraints
 for operation.
 In particular the set of available channels, how the wireless device
 will operation on the channels, and the maximum transmit power that
 can be used on a channel are defined by this setting.
 Country/Region codes are specified as a 2-character abbreviation
 defined by ISO 3166 or using a longer, but possibly ambiguous, spelling;
 e.g., "ES" and "Spain".
 The set of country codes are taken from
 .Pa /etc/regdomain.xml
 and can also
 be viewed with the
 .Cm list countries
 request.
 Note that not all devices support changing the country code from a default
 setting; typically stored in EEPROM.
 See also
 .Cm regdomain ,
 .Cm indoor ,
 .Cm outdoor ,
 and
 .Cm anywhere .
 .It Cm dfs
 Enable Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) as specified in 802.11h.
 DFS embodies several facilities including detection of overlapping
 radar signals, dynamic transmit power control, and channel selection
 according to a least-congested criteria.
 DFS support is mandatory for some 5GHz frequencies in certain
 locales (e.g., ETSI).
 By default DFS is enabled according to the regulatory definitions
 specified in
 .Pa /etc/regdomain.xml
 and the current country code, regdomain,
 and channel.
 Note the underlying device (and driver) must support radar detection
 for full DFS support to work.
 To be fully compliant with the local regulatory agency frequencies that
 require DFS should not be used unless it is fully supported.
 Use
 .Fl dfs
 to disable this functionality for testing.
 .It Cm dotd
 Enable support for the 802.11d specification (default).
 When this support is enabled in station mode, beacon frames that advertise
 a country code different than the currently configured country code will
 cause an event to be dispatched to user applications.
 This event can be used by the station to adopt that country code and
 operate according to the associated regulatory constraints.
 When operating as an access point with 802.11d enabled the beacon and
 probe response frames transmitted will advertise the current regulatory
 domain settings.
 To disable 802.11d use
 .Fl dotd .
 .It Cm doth
 Enable 802.11h support including spectrum management.
 When 802.11h is enabled beacon and probe response frames will have
 the SpectrumMgt bit set in the capabilities field and
 country and power constraint information elements will be present.
 802.11h support also includes handling Channel Switch Announcements (CSA)
 which are a mechanism to coordinate channel changes by an access point.
 By default 802.11h is enabled if the device is capable.
 To disable 802.11h use
 .Fl doth .
 .It Cm deftxkey Ar index
 Set the default key to use for transmission.
 Typically this is only set when using WEP encryption.
 Note that you must set a default transmit key
 for the system to know which key to use in encrypting outbound traffic.
 The
 .Cm weptxkey
 is an alias for this request; it is provided for backwards compatibility.
 .It Cm dtimperiod Ar period
 Set the
 DTIM
 period for transmitting buffered multicast data frames when
 operating in ap mode.
 The
 .Ar period
 specifies the number of beacon intervals between DTIM
 and must be in the range 1 to 15.
 By default DTIM is 1 (i.e., DTIM occurs at each beacon).
 .It Cm quiet
 Enable the use of quiet IE.
 Hostap will use this to silence other
 stations to reduce interference for radar detection when
 operating on 5GHz frequency and doth support is enabled.
 Use
 .Fl quiet
 to disable this functionality.
 .It Cm quiet_period Ar period
 Set the QUIET
 .Ar period
 to the number of beacon intervals between the start of regularly
 scheduled quiet intervals defined by Quiet element.
 .It Cm quiet_count Ar count
 Set the QUIET
 .Ar count
 to the number of TBTTs until the beacon interval during which the
 next quiet interval shall start.
 A value of 1 indicates the quiet
 interval will start during the beacon interval starting at the next
 TBTT.
 A value 0 is reserved.
 .It Cm quiet_offset Ar offset
 Set the QUIET
 .Ar offset
 to the offset of the start of the quiet interval from the TBTT
 specified by the Quiet count, expressed in TUs.
 The value of the
 .Ar offset
 shall be less than one beacon interval.
 .It Cm quiet_duration Ar dur
 Set the QUIET
 .Ar dur
 to the duration of the Quiet interval, expressed in TUs.
 The value should be less than beacon interval.
 .It Cm dturbo
 Enable the use of Atheros Dynamic Turbo mode when communicating with
 another Dynamic Turbo-capable station.
 Dynamic Turbo mode is an Atheros-specific mechanism by which
 stations switch between normal 802.11 operation and a
 .Dq boosted
 mode in which a 40MHz wide channel is used for communication.
 Stations using Dynamic Turbo mode operate boosted only when the
 channel is free of non-dturbo stations; when a non-dturbo station
 is identified on the channel all stations will automatically drop
 back to normal operation.
 By default, Dynamic Turbo mode is not enabled, even if the device is capable.
 Note that turbo mode (dynamic or static) is only allowed on some
 channels depending on the regulatory constraints; use the
 .Cm list chan
 command to identify the channels where turbo mode may be used.
 To disable Dynamic Turbo mode use
 .Fl dturbo .
 .It Cm dwds
 Enable Dynamic WDS (DWDS) support.
 DWDS is a facility by which 4-address traffic can be carried between
 stations operating in infrastructure mode.
 A station first associates to an access point and authenticates using
 normal procedures (e.g., WPA).
 Then 4-address frames are passed to carry traffic for stations
 operating on either side of the wireless link.
 DWDS extends the normal WDS mechanism by leveraging existing security
 protocols and eliminating static binding.
 .Pp
 When DWDS is enabled on an access point 4-address frames received from
 an authorized station will generate a
 .Dq DWDS discovery
 event to user
 applications.
 This event should be used to create a WDS interface that is bound
 to the remote station (and usually plumbed into a bridge).
 Once the WDS interface is up and running 4-address traffic then logically
 flows through that interface.
 .Pp
 When DWDS is enabled on a station, traffic with a destination address
 different from the peer station are encapsulated in a 4-address frame
 and transmitted to the peer.
 All 4-address traffic uses the security information of the stations
 (e.g., cryptographic keys).
 A station is associated using 802.11n facilities may transport
 4-address traffic using these same mechanisms; this depends on available
 resources and capabilities of the device.
 The DWDS implementation guards against layer 2 routing loops of
 multicast traffic.
 .It Cm ff
 Enable the use of Atheros Fast Frames when communicating with
 another Fast Frames-capable station.
 Fast Frames are an encapsulation technique by which two 802.3
 frames are transmitted in a single 802.11 frame.
 This can noticeably improve throughput but requires that the
 receiving station understand how to decapsulate the frame.
 Fast frame use is negotiated using the Atheros 802.11 vendor-specific
 protocol extension so enabling use is safe when communicating with
 non-Atheros devices.
 By default, use of fast frames is enabled if the device is capable.
 To explicitly disable fast frames, use
 .Fl ff .
 .It Cm fragthreshold Ar length
 Set the threshold for which transmitted frames are broken into fragments.
 The
 .Ar length
 argument is the frame size in bytes and must be in the range 256 to 2346.
 Setting
 .Ar length
 to
 .Li 2346 ,
 .Cm any ,
 or
 .Cm -
 disables transmit fragmentation.
 Not all adapters honor the fragmentation threshold.
 .It Cm hidessid
 When operating as an access point, do not broadcast the SSID
 in beacon frames or respond to probe request frames unless
 they are directed to the ap (i.e., they include the ap's SSID).
 By default, the SSID is included in beacon frames and
 undirected probe request frames are answered.
 To re-enable the broadcast of the SSID etc., use
 .Fl hidessid .
 .It Cm ht
 Enable use of High Throughput (HT) when using 802.11n (default).
 The 802.11n specification includes mechanisms for operation
 on 20MHz and 40MHz wide channels using different signalling mechanisms
 than specified in 802.11b, 802.11g, and 802.11a.
 Stations negotiate use of these facilities, termed HT20 and HT40,
 when they associate.
 To disable all use of 802.11n use
 .Fl ht .
 To disable use of HT20 (e.g., to force only HT40 use) use
 .Fl ht20 .
 To disable use of HT40 use
 .Fl ht40 .
 .Pp
 HT configuration is used to
 .Dq auto promote
 operation
 when several choices are available.
 For example, if a station associates to an 11n-capable access point
 it controls whether the station uses legacy operation, HT20, or HT40.
 When an 11n-capable device is setup as an access point and
 Auto Channel Selection is used to locate a channel to operate on,
 HT configuration controls whether legacy, HT20, or HT40 operation is setup
 on the selected channel.
 If a fixed channel is specified for a station then HT configuration can
 be given as part of the channel specification; e.g., 6:ht/20 to setup
 HT20 operation on channel 6.
 .It Cm htcompat
 Enable use of compatibility support for pre-802.11n devices (default).
 The 802.11n protocol specification went through several incompatible iterations.
 Some vendors implemented 11n support to older specifications that
 will not interoperate with a purely 11n-compliant station.
 In particular the information elements included in management frames
 for old devices are different.
 When compatibility support is enabled both standard and compatible data
 will be provided.
 Stations that associate using the compatibility mechanisms are flagged
 in
 .Cm list sta .
 To disable compatibility support use
 .Fl htcompat .
 .It Cm htprotmode Ar technique
 For interfaces operating in 802.11n, use the specified
 .Ar technique
 for protecting HT frames in a mixed legacy/HT network.
 The set of valid techniques is
 .Cm off ,
 and
 .Cm rts
 (RTS/CTS, default).
 Technique names are case insensitive.
 .It Cm inact
 Enable inactivity processing for stations associated to an
 access point (default).
 When operating as an access point the 802.11 layer monitors
 the activity of each associated station.
 When a station is inactive for 5 minutes it will send several
 .Dq probe frames
 to see if the station is still present.
 If no response is received then the station is deauthenticated.
 Applications that prefer to handle this work can disable this
 facility by using
 .Fl inact .
 .It Cm indoor
 Set the location to use in calculating regulatory constraints.
 The location is also advertised in beacon and probe response frames
 when 802.11d is enabled with
 .Cm dotd .
 See also
 .Cm outdoor ,
 .Cm anywhere ,
 .Cm country ,
 and
 .Cm regdomain .
 .It Cm list active
 Display the list of channels available for use taking into account
 any restrictions set with the
 .Cm chanlist
 directive.
 See the description of
 .Cm list chan
 for more information.
 .It Cm list caps
 Display the adaptor's capabilities, including the operating
 modes supported.
 .It Cm list chan
 Display the list of channels available for use.
 Channels are shown with their IEEE channel number, equivalent
 frequency, and usage modes.
 Channels identified as
 .Ql 11g
 are also usable in
 .Ql 11b
 mode.
 Channels identified as
 .Ql 11a Turbo
 may be used only for Atheros' Static Turbo mode
 (specified with
 . Cm mediaopt turbo ) .
 Channels marked with a
 .Ql *
 have a regulatory constraint that they be passively scanned.
 This means a station is not permitted to transmit on the channel until
 it identifies the channel is being used for 802.11 communication;
 typically by hearing a beacon frame from an access point operating
 on the channel.
 .Cm list freq
 is another way of requesting this information.
 By default a compacted list of channels is displayed; if the
 .Fl v
 option is specified then all channels are shown.
 .It Cm list countries
 Display the set of country codes and regulatory domains that can be
 used in regulatory configuration.
 .It Cm list mac
 Display the current MAC Access Control List state.
 Each address is prefixed with a character that indicates the
 current policy applied to it:
 .Ql +
 indicates the address is allowed access,
 .Ql -
 indicates the address is denied access,
 .Ql *
 indicates the address is present but the current policy open
 (so the ACL is not consulted).
 .It Cm list mesh
 Displays the mesh routing table, used for forwarding packets on a mesh
 network.
 .It Cm list regdomain
 Display the current regulatory settings including the available channels
 and transmit power caps.
 .It Cm list roam
 Display the parameters that govern roaming operation.
 .It Cm list txparam
 Display the parameters that govern transmit operation.
 .It Cm list txpower
 Display the transmit power caps for each channel.
 .It Cm list scan
 Display the access points and/or ad-hoc neighbors
 located in the vicinity.
 This information may be updated automatically by the adapter
 with a
 .Cm scan
 request or through background scanning.
 Depending on the capabilities of the stations the following
 flags (capability codes) can be included in the output:
 .Bl -tag -width 3n
 .It Li A
 Channel agility.
 .It Li B
 PBCC modulation.
 .It Li C
 Poll request capability.
 .It Li D
 DSSS/OFDM capability.
 .It Li E
 Extended Service Set (ESS).
 Indicates that the station is part of an infrastructure network
 rather than an IBSS/ad-hoc network.
 .It Li I
 Independent Basic Service Set (IBSS).
 Indicates that the station is part of an ad-hoc network
 rather than an ESS network.
 .It Li P
 Privacy capability.
 The station requires authentication and encryption
 for all data frames exchanged within the BSS using cryptographic means
 such as WEP, TKIP, or AES-CCMP.
 .It Li R
 Robust Secure Network (RSN).
 .It Li S
 Short Preamble.
 Indicates that the network is using short preambles,
 defined in 802.11b High Rate/DSSS PHY,
 and utilizes a 56 bit sync field
 rather than the 128 bit field used in long preamble mode.
 Short preambles are used to optionally
 improve throughput performance with 802.11g and 802.11b.
 .It Li c
 Pollable capability.
 .It Li s
 Short slot time capability.
 Indicates that the 802.11g network is using a short slot time
 because there are no legacy (802.11b) stations present.
 .El
 .Pp
 By default interesting information elements captured from the neighboring
 stations are displayed at the end of each row.
 Possible elements include:
 .Cm WME
 (station supports WME),
 .Cm WPA
 (station supports WPA),
 .Cm WPS
 (station supports WPS),
 .Cm RSN
 (station supports 802.11i/RSN),
 .Cm HTCAP
 (station supports 802.11n/HT communication),
 .Cm ATH
 (station supports Atheros protocol extensions),
 .Cm VEN
 (station supports unknown vendor-specific extensions).
 If the
 .Fl v
 flag is used all the information elements and their
 contents will be shown.
 Specifying the
 .Fl v
 flag also enables display of long SSIDs.
 The
 .Cm list ap
 command is another way of requesting this information.
 .It Cm list sta
 When operating as an access point display the stations that are
 currently associated.
 When operating in ad-hoc mode display stations identified as
 neighbors in the IBSS.
 When operating in mesh mode display stations identified as
 neighbors in the MBSS.
 When operating in station mode display the access point.
 Capabilities advertised by the stations are described under
 the
 .Cm scan
 request.
 The following flags can be included in the output:
 .Bl -tag -width 3n
 .It Li A
 Authorized.
 Indicates that the station is permitted to send/receive data frames.
 .It Li E
 Extended Rate Phy (ERP).
 Indicates that the station is operating in an 802.11g network
 using extended transmit rates.
 .It Li H
 High Throughput (HT).
 Indicates that the station is using HT transmit rates.
 If a
 .Sq Li +
 follows immediately after then the station associated
 using deprecated mechanisms supported only when
 .Cm htcompat
 is enabled.
 .It Li P
 Power Save.
 Indicates that the station is operating in power save mode.
 .It Li Q
 Quality of Service (QoS).
 Indicates that the station is using QoS encapsulation for
 data frame.
 QoS encapsulation is enabled only when WME mode is enabled.
 .It Li S
 Short GI in HT 40MHz mode enabled.
 If a
 .Sq Li +
 follows immediately after then short GI in HT 20MHz mode is enabled as well.
 .It Li T
 Transitional Security Network (TSN).
 Indicates that the station associated using TSN; see also
 .Cm tsn
 below.
 .It Li W
 Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS).
 Indicates that the station associated using WPS.
 .It Li s
 Short GI in HT 20MHz mode enabled.
 .El
 .Pp
 By default information elements received from associated stations
 are displayed in a short form; the
 .Fl v
 flag causes this information to be displayed symbolically.
 .It Cm list wme
 Display the current channel parameters to use when operating in WME mode.
 If the
 .Fl v
 option is specified then both channel and BSS parameters are displayed
 for each AC (first channel, then BSS).
 When WME mode is enabled for an adaptor this information will be
 displayed with the regular status; this command is mostly useful
 for examining parameters when WME mode is disabled.
 See the description of the
 .Cm wme
 directive for information on the various parameters.
 .It Cm maxretry Ar count
 Set the maximum number of tries to use in sending unicast frames.
 The default setting is 6 but drivers may override this with a value
 they choose.
 .It Cm mcastrate Ar rate
 Set the rate for transmitting multicast/broadcast frames.
 Rates are specified as megabits/second in decimal; e.g.,\& 5.5 for 5.5 Mb/s.
 This rate should be valid for the current operating conditions;
 if an invalid rate is specified drivers are free to chose an
 appropriate rate.
 .It Cm mgtrate Ar rate
 Set the rate for transmitting management and/or control frames.
 Rates are specified as megabits/second in decimal; e.g.,\& 5.5 for 5.5 Mb/s.
 .It Cm outdoor
 Set the location to use in calculating regulatory constraints.
 The location is also advertised in beacon and probe response frames
 when 802.11d is enabled with
 .Cm dotd .
 See also
 .Cm anywhere ,
 .Cm country ,
 .Cm indoor ,
 and
 .Cm regdomain .
 .It Cm powersave
 Enable powersave operation.
 When operating as a client, the station will conserve power by
 periodically turning off the radio and listening for
 messages from the access point telling it there are packets waiting.
 The station must then retrieve the packets.
 Not all devices support power save operation as a client.
 The 802.11 specification requires that all access points support
 power save but some drivers do not.
 Use
 .Fl powersave
 to disable powersave operation when operating as a client.
 .It Cm powersavesleep Ar sleep
 Set the desired max powersave sleep time in TU's (1024 usecs).
 By default the max powersave sleep time is 100 TU's.
 .It Cm protmode Ar technique
 For interfaces operating in 802.11g, use the specified
 .Ar technique
 for protecting OFDM frames in a mixed 11b/11g network.
 The set of valid techniques is
 .Cm off , cts
 (CTS to self),
 and
 .Cm rtscts
 (RTS/CTS).
 Technique names are case insensitive.
 Not all devices support
 .Cm cts
 as a protection technique.
 .It Cm pureg
 When operating as an access point in 802.11g mode allow only
 11g-capable stations to associate (11b-only stations are not
 permitted to associate).
 To allow both 11g and 11b-only stations to associate, use
 .Fl pureg .
 .It Cm puren
 When operating as an access point in 802.11n mode allow only
 HT-capable stations to associate (legacy stations are not
 permitted to associate).
 To allow both HT and legacy stations to associate, use
 .Fl puren .
 .It Cm regdomain Ar sku
 Set the regulatory domain to use in calculating the regulatory constraints
 for operation.
 In particular the set of available channels, how the wireless device
 will operation on the channels, and the maximum transmit power that
 can be used on a channel are defined by this setting.
 Regdomain codes (SKU's) are taken from
 .Pa /etc/regdomain.xml
 and can also
 be viewed with the
 .Cm list countries
 request.
 Note that not all devices support changing the regdomain from a default
 setting; typically stored in EEPROM.
 See also
 .Cm country ,
 .Cm indoor ,
 .Cm outdoor ,
 and
 .Cm anywhere .
 .It Cm rifs
 Enable use of Reduced InterFrame Spacing (RIFS) when operating in 802.11n
 on an HT channel.
 Note that RIFS must be supported by both the station and access point
 for it to be used.
 To disable RIFS use
 .Fl rifs .
 .It Cm roam:rate Ar rate
 Set the threshold for controlling roaming when operating in a BSS.
 The
 .Ar rate
 parameter specifies the transmit rate in megabits
 at which roaming should be considered.
 If the current transmit rate drops below this setting and background scanning
 is enabled, then the system will check if a more desirable access point is
 available and switch over to it.
 The current scan cache contents are used if they are considered
 valid according to the
 .Cm scanvalid
 parameter; otherwise a background scan operation is triggered before
 any selection occurs.
 Each channel type has a separate rate threshold; the default values are:
 12 Mb/s (11a), 2 Mb/s (11b), 2 Mb/s (11g), MCS 1 (11na, 11ng).
 .It Cm roam:rssi Ar rssi
 Set the threshold for controlling roaming when operating in a BSS.
 The
 .Ar rssi
 parameter specifies the receive signal strength in dBm units
 at which roaming should be considered.
 If the current rssi drops below this setting and background scanning
 is enabled, then the system will check if a more desirable access point is
 available and switch over to it.
 The current scan cache contents are used if they are considered
 valid according to the
 .Cm scanvalid
 parameter; otherwise a background scan operation is triggered before
 any selection occurs.
 Each channel type has a separate rssi threshold; the default values are
 all 7 dBm.
 .It Cm roaming Ar mode
 When operating as a station, control how the system will
 behave when communication with the current access point
 is broken.
 The
 .Ar mode
 argument may be one of
 .Cm device
 (leave it to the hardware device to decide),
 .Cm auto
 (handle either in the device or the operating system\[em]as appropriate),
 .Cm manual
 (do nothing until explicitly instructed).
 By default, the device is left to handle this if it is
 capable; otherwise, the operating system will automatically
 attempt to reestablish communication.
 Manual mode is used by applications such as
 .Xr wpa_supplicant 8
 that want to control the selection of an access point.
 .It Cm rtsthreshold Ar length
 Set the threshold for which
 transmitted frames are preceded by transmission of an
 RTS
 control frame.
 The
 .Ar length
 argument
 is the frame size in bytes and must be in the range 1 to 2346.
 Setting
 .Ar length
 to
 .Li 2346 ,
 .Cm any ,
 or
 .Cm -
 disables transmission of RTS frames.
 Not all adapters support setting the RTS threshold.
 .It Cm scan
 Initiate a scan of neighboring stations, wait for it to complete, and
 display all stations found.
 Only the super-user can initiate a scan.
 See
 .Cm list scan
 for information on the display.
 By default a background scan is done; otherwise a foreground
 scan is done and the station may roam to a different access point.
 The
 .Cm list scan
 request can be used to show recent scan results without
 initiating a new scan.
 .It Cm scanvalid Ar threshold
 Set the maximum time the scan cache contents are considered valid;
 i.e., will be used without first triggering a scan operation to
 refresh the data.
 The
 .Ar threshold
 parameter is specified in seconds and defaults to 60 seconds.
 The minimum setting for
 .Ar threshold
 is 10 seconds.
 One should take care setting this threshold; if it is set too low
 then attempts to roam to another access point may trigger unnecessary
 background scan operations.
 .It Cm shortgi
 Enable use of Short Guard Interval when operating in 802.11n
 on an HT channel.
 NB: this currently enables Short GI on both HT40 and HT20 channels.
 To disable Short GI use
 .Fl shortgi .
 .It Cm smps
 Enable use of Static Spatial Multiplexing Power Save (SMPS)
 when operating in 802.11n.
 A station operating with Static SMPS maintains only a single
 receive chain active (this can significantly reduce power consumption).
 To disable SMPS use
 .Fl smps .
 .It Cm smpsdyn
 Enable use of Dynamic Spatial Multiplexing Power Save (SMPS)
 when operating in 802.11n.
 A station operating with Dynamic SMPS maintains only a single
 receive chain active but switches to multiple receive chains when it
 receives an RTS frame (this can significantly reduce power consumption).
 Note that stations cannot distinguish between RTS/CTS intended to
 enable multiple receive chains and those used for other purposes.
 To disable SMPS use
 .Fl smps .
 .It Cm ssid Ar ssid
 Set the desired Service Set Identifier (aka network name).
 The SSID is a string up to 32 characters
 in length and may be specified as either a normal string or in
 hexadecimal when preceded by
 .Ql 0x .
 Additionally, the SSID may be cleared by setting it to
 .Ql - .
 .It Cm tdmaslot Ar slot
 When operating with TDMA, use the specified
 .Ar slot
 configuration.
 The
 .Ar slot
 is a number between 0 and the maximum number of slots in the BSS.
 Note that a station configured as slot 0 is a master and
 will broadcast beacon frames advertising the BSS;
 stations configured to use other slots will always
 scan to locate a master before they ever transmit.
 By default
 .Cm tdmaslot
 is set to 1.
 .It Cm tdmaslotcnt Ar cnt
 When operating with TDMA, setup a BSS with
 .Ar cnt
 slots.
 The slot count may be at most 8.
 The current implementation is only tested with two stations
 (i.e., point to point applications).
 This setting is only meaningful when a station is configured as slot 0;
 other stations adopt this setting from the BSS they join.
 By default
 .Cm tdmaslotcnt
 is set to 2.
 .It Cm tdmaslotlen Ar len
 When operating with TDMA, setup a BSS such that each station has a slot
 .Ar len
 microseconds long.
 The slot length must be at least 150 microseconds (1/8 TU)
 and no more than 65 milliseconds.
 Note that setting too small a slot length may result in poor channel
 bandwidth utilization due to factors such as timer granularity and
 guard time.
 This setting is only meaningful when a station is configured as slot 0;
 other stations adopt this setting from the BSS they join.
 By default
 .Cm tdmaslotlen
 is set to 10 milliseconds.
 .It Cm tdmabintval Ar intval
 When operating with TDMA, setup a BSS such that beacons are transmitted every
 .Ar intval
 superframes to synchronize the TDMA slot timing.
 A superframe is defined as the number of slots times the slot length; e.g.,
 a BSS with two slots of 10 milliseconds has a 20 millisecond superframe.
 The beacon interval may not be zero.
 A lower setting of
 .Cm tdmabintval
 causes the timers to be resynchronized more often; this can be help if
 significant timer drift is observed.
 By default
 .Cm tdmabintval
 is set to 5.
 .It Cm tsn
 When operating as an access point with WPA/802.11i allow legacy
 stations to associate using static key WEP and open authentication.
 To disallow legacy station use of WEP, use
 .Fl tsn .
 .It Cm txpower Ar power
 Set the power used to transmit frames.
 The
 .Ar power
 argument is specified in .5 dBm units.
 Out of range values are truncated.
-Typically only a few discreet power settings are available and
+Typically only a few discrete power settings are available and
 the driver will use the setting closest to the specified value.
 Not all adapters support changing the transmit power.
 .It Cm ucastrate Ar rate
 Set a fixed rate for transmitting unicast frames.
 Rates are specified as megabits/second in decimal; e.g.,\& 5.5 for 5.5 Mb/s.
 This rate should be valid for the current operating conditions;
 if an invalid rate is specified drivers are free to chose an
 appropriate rate.
 .It Cm wepmode Ar mode
 Set the desired WEP mode.
 Not all adapters support all modes.
 The set of valid modes is
 .Cm off , on ,
 and
 .Cm mixed .
 The
 .Cm mixed
 mode explicitly tells the adaptor to allow association with access
 points which allow both encrypted and unencrypted traffic.
 On these adapters,
 .Cm on
 means that the access point must only allow encrypted connections.
 On other adapters,
 .Cm on
 is generally another name for
 .Cm mixed .
 Modes are case insensitive.
 .It Cm weptxkey Ar index
 Set the WEP key to be used for transmission.
 This is the same as setting the default transmission key with
 .Cm deftxkey .
 .It Cm wepkey Ar key Ns | Ns Ar index : Ns Ar key
 Set the selected WEP key.
 If an
 .Ar index
 is not given, key 1 is set.
 A WEP key will be either 5 or 13
 characters (40 or 104 bits) depending on the local network and the
 capabilities of the adaptor.
 It may be specified either as a plain
 string or as a string of hexadecimal digits preceded by
 .Ql 0x .
 For maximum portability, hex keys are recommended;
 the mapping of text keys to WEP encryption is usually driver-specific.
 In particular, the Windows drivers do this mapping differently to
 .Fx .
 A key may be cleared by setting it to
 .Ql - .
 If WEP is supported then there are at least four keys.
 Some adapters support more than four keys.
 If that is the case, then the first four keys
 (1-4) will be the standard temporary keys and any others will be adaptor
 specific keys such as permanent keys stored in NVRAM.
 .Pp
 Note that you must set a default transmit key with
 .Cm deftxkey
 for the system to know which key to use in encrypting outbound traffic.
 .It Cm wme
 Enable Wireless Multimedia Extensions (WME) support, if available,
 for the specified interface.
 WME is a subset of the IEEE 802.11e standard to support the
 efficient communication of realtime and multimedia data.
 To disable WME support, use
 .Fl wme .
 Another name for this parameter is
 .Cm wmm .
 .Pp
 The following parameters are meaningful only when WME support is in use.
 Parameters are specified per-AC (Access Category) and
 split into those that are used by a station when acting
 as an access point and those for client stations in the BSS.
 The latter are received from the access point and may not be changed
 (at the station).
 The following Access Categories are recognized:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width ".Cm AC_BK" -compact
 .It Cm AC_BE
 (or
 .Cm BE )
 best effort delivery,
 .It Cm AC_BK
 (or
 .Cm BK )
 background traffic,
 .It Cm AC_VI
 (or
 .Cm VI )
 video traffic,
 .It Cm AC_VO
 (or
 .Cm VO )
 voice traffic.
 .El
 .Pp
 AC parameters are case-insensitive.
 Traffic classification is done in the operating system using the
 vlan priority associated with data frames or the
 ToS (Type of Service) indication in IP-encapsulated frames.
 If neither information is present, traffic is assigned to the
 Best Effort (BE) category.
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm ack Ar ac
 Set the ACK policy for QoS transmissions by the local station;
 this controls whether or not data frames transmitted by a station
 require an ACK response from the receiving station.
 To disable waiting for an ACK use
 .Fl ack .
 This parameter is applied only to the local station.
 .It Cm acm Ar ac
 Enable the Admission Control Mandatory (ACM) mechanism
 for transmissions by the local station.
 To disable the ACM use
 .Fl acm .
 On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates
 the setting received from the access point.
 NB: ACM is not supported right now.
 .It Cm aifs Ar ac Ar count
 Set the Arbitration Inter Frame Spacing (AIFS)
 channel access parameter to use for transmissions
 by the local station.
 On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates
 the setting received from the access point.
 .It Cm cwmin Ar ac Ar count
 Set the CWmin channel access parameter to use for transmissions
 by the local station.
 On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates
 the setting received from the access point.
 .It Cm cwmax Ar ac Ar count
 Set the CWmax channel access parameter to use for transmissions
 by the local station.
 On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates
 the setting received from the access point.
 .It Cm txoplimit Ar ac Ar limit
 Set the Transmission Opportunity Limit channel access parameter
 to use for transmissions by the local station.
 This parameter defines an interval of time when a WME station
 has the right to initiate transmissions onto the wireless medium.
 On stations in a BSS this parameter is read-only and indicates
 the setting received from the access point.
 .It Cm bss:aifs Ar ac Ar count
 Set the AIFS channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS.
 This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode.
 .It Cm bss:cwmin Ar ac Ar count
 Set the CWmin channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS.
 This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode.
 .It Cm bss:cwmax Ar ac Ar count
 Set the CWmax channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS.
 This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode.
 .It Cm bss:txoplimit Ar ac Ar limit
 Set the TxOpLimit channel access parameter to send to stations in a BSS.
 This parameter is meaningful only when operating in ap mode.
 .El
 .It Cm wps
 Enable Wireless Privacy Subscriber support.
 Note that WPS support requires a WPS-capable supplicant.
 To disable this function use
 .Fl wps .
 .El
 .Ss MAC-Based Access Control List Parameters
 The following parameters support an optional access control list
 feature available with some adapters when operating in ap mode; see
 .Xr wlan_acl 4 .
 This facility allows an access point to accept/deny association
 requests based on the MAC address of the station.
 Note that this feature does not significantly enhance security
 as MAC address spoofing is easy to do.
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm mac:add Ar address
 Add the specified MAC address to the database.
 Depending on the policy setting association requests from the
 specified station will be allowed or denied.
 .It Cm mac:allow
 Set the ACL policy to permit association only by
 stations registered in the database.
 .It Cm mac:del Ar address
 Delete the specified MAC address from the database.
 .It Cm mac:deny
 Set the ACL policy to deny association only by
 stations registered in the database.
 .It Cm mac:kick Ar address
 Force the specified station to be deauthenticated.
 This typically is done to block a station after updating the
 address database.
 .It Cm mac:open
 Set the ACL policy to allow all stations to associate.
 .It Cm mac:flush
 Delete all entries in the database.
 .It Cm mac:radius
 Set the ACL policy to permit association only by
 stations approved by a RADIUS server.
 Note that this feature requires the
 .Xr hostapd 8
 program be configured to do the right thing
 as it handles the RADIUS processing
 (and marks stations as authorized).
 .El
 .Ss Mesh Mode Wireless Interface Parameters
 The following parameters are related to a wireless interface operating in mesh
 mode:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm meshid Ar meshid
 Set the desired Mesh Identifier.
 The Mesh ID is a string up to 32 characters in length.
 A mesh interface must have a Mesh Identifier specified
 to reach an operational state.
 .It Cm meshttl Ar ttl
 Set the desired
 .Dq time to live
 for mesh forwarded packets;
 this is the number of hops a packet may be forwarded before
 it is discarded.
 The default setting for
 .Cm meshttl
 is 31.
 .It Cm meshpeering
 Enable or disable peering with neighbor mesh stations.
 Stations must peer before any data packets can be exchanged.
 By default
 .Cm meshpeering
 is enabled.
 .It Cm meshforward
 Enable or disable forwarding packets by a mesh interface.
 By default
 .Cm meshforward
 is enabled.
 .It Cm meshgate
 This attribute specifies whether or not the mesh STA activates mesh gate
 announcements.
 By default
 .Cm meshgate
 is disabled.
 .It Cm meshmetric Ar protocol
 Set the specified
 .Ar protocol
 as the link metric protocol used on a mesh network.
 The default protocol is called
 .Ar AIRTIME .
 The mesh interface will restart after changing this setting.
 .It Cm meshpath Ar protocol
 Set the specified
 .Ar protocol
 as the path selection protocol used on a mesh network.
 The only available protocol at the moment is called
 .Ar HWMP
 (Hybrid Wireless Mesh Protocol).
 The mesh interface will restart after changing this setting.
 .It Cm hwmprootmode Ar mode
 Stations on a mesh network can operate as
 .Dq root nodes .
 Root nodes try to find paths to all mesh nodes and advertise themselves
 regularly.
 When there is a root mesh node on a network, other mesh nodes can setup
 paths between themselves faster because they can use the root node
 to find the destination.
 This path may not be the best, but on-demand
 routing will eventually find the best path.
 The following modes are recognized:
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width ".Cm PROACTIVE" -compact
 .It Cm DISABLED
 Disable root mode.
 .It Cm NORMAL
 Send broadcast path requests every two seconds.
 Nodes on the mesh without a path to this root mesh station with try to
 discover a path to us.
 .It Cm PROACTIVE
 Send broadcast path requests every two seconds and every node must reply
 with a path reply even if it already has a path to this root mesh station.
 .It Cm RANN
 Send broadcast root announcement (RANN) frames.
 Nodes on the mesh without a path to this root mesh station with try to
 discover a path to us.
 .El
 By default
 .Cm hwmprootmode
 is set to
 .Ar DISABLED .
 .It Cm hwmpmaxhops Ar cnt
 Set the maximum number of hops allowed in an HMWP path to
 .Ar cnt .
 The default setting for
 .Cm hwmpmaxhops
 is 31.
 .El
 .Ss Compatibility Parameters
 The following parameters are for compatibility with other systems:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm nwid Ar ssid
 Another name for the
 .Cm ssid
 parameter.
 Included for
 .Nx
 compatibility.
 .It Cm stationname Ar name
 Set the name of this station.
 The station name is not part of the IEEE 802.11
 protocol though some interfaces support it.
 As such it only
 seems to be meaningful to identical or virtually identical equipment.
 Setting the station name is identical in syntax to setting the SSID.
 One can also use
 .Cm station
 for
 .Bsx
 compatibility.
 .It Cm wep
 Another way of saying
 .Cm wepmode on .
 Included for
 .Bsx
 compatibility.
 .It Fl wep
 Another way of saying
 .Cm wepmode off .
 Included for
 .Bsx
 compatibility.
 .It Cm nwkey key
 Another way of saying:
 .Dq Li "wepmode on weptxkey 1 wepkey 1:key wepkey 2:- wepkey 3:- wepkey 4:-" .
 Included for
 .Nx
 compatibility.
 .It Cm nwkey Xo
 .Sm off
 .Ar n : k1 , k2 , k3 , k4
 .Sm on
 .Xc
 Another way of saying
 .Dq Li "wepmode on weptxkey n wepkey 1:k1 wepkey 2:k2 wepkey 3:k3 wepkey 4:k4" .
 Included for
 .Nx
 compatibility.
 .It Fl nwkey
 Another way of saying
 .Cm wepmode off .
 Included for
 .Nx
 compatibility.
 .El
 .Ss Bridge Interface Parameters
 The following parameters are specific to bridge interfaces:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm addm Ar interface
 Add the interface named by
 .Ar interface
 as a member of the bridge.
 The interface is put into promiscuous mode
 so that it can receive every packet sent on the network.
 .It Cm deletem Ar interface
 Remove the interface named by
 .Ar interface
 from the bridge.
 Promiscuous mode is disabled on the interface when
 it is removed from the bridge.
 .It Cm maxaddr Ar size
 Set the size of the bridge address cache to
 .Ar size .
 The default is 2000 entries.
 .It Cm timeout Ar seconds
 Set the timeout of address cache entries to
 .Ar seconds
 seconds.
 If
 .Ar seconds
 is zero, then address cache entries will not be expired.
 The default is 1200 seconds.
 .It Cm addr
 Display the addresses that have been learned by the bridge.
 .It Cm static Ar interface-name Ar address
 Add a static entry into the address cache pointing to
 .Ar interface-name .
 Static entries are never aged out of the cache or re-placed, even if the
 address is seen on a different interface.
 .It Cm deladdr Ar address
 Delete
 .Ar address
 from the address cache.
 .It Cm flush
 Delete all dynamically-learned addresses from the address cache.
 .It Cm flushall
 Delete all addresses, including static addresses, from the address cache.
 .It Cm discover Ar interface
 Mark an interface as a
 .Dq discovering
 interface.
 When the bridge has no address cache entry
 (either dynamic or static)
 for the destination address of a packet,
 the bridge will forward the packet to all
 member interfaces marked as
 .Dq discovering .
 This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge.
 .It Cm -discover Ar interface
 Clear the
 .Dq discovering
 attribute on a member interface.
 For packets without the
 .Dq discovering
 attribute, the only packets forwarded on the interface are broadcast
 or multicast packets and packets for which the destination address
 is known to be on the interface's segment.
 .It Cm learn Ar interface
 Mark an interface as a
 .Dq learning
 interface.
 When a packet arrives on such an interface, the source
 address of the packet is entered into the address cache as being a
 destination address on the interface's segment.
 This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge.
 .It Cm -learn Ar interface
 Clear the
 .Dq learning
 attribute on a member interface.
 .It Cm sticky Ar interface
 Mark an interface as a
 .Dq sticky
 interface.
 Dynamically learned address entries are treated at static once entered into
 the cache.
 Sticky entries are never aged out of the cache or replaced, even if the
 address is seen on a different interface.
 .It Cm -sticky Ar interface
 Clear the
 .Dq sticky
 attribute on a member interface.
 .It Cm private Ar interface
 Mark an interface as a
 .Dq private
 interface.
 A private interface does not forward any traffic to any other port that is also
 a private interface.
 .It Cm -private Ar interface
 Clear the
 .Dq private
 attribute on a member interface.
 .It Cm span Ar interface
 Add the interface named by
 .Ar interface
 as a span port on the bridge.
 Span ports transmit a copy of every frame received by the bridge.
 This is most useful for snooping a bridged network passively on
 another host connected to one of the span ports of the bridge.
 .It Cm -span Ar interface
 Delete the interface named by
 .Ar interface
 from the list of span ports of the bridge.
 .It Cm stp Ar interface
 Enable Spanning Tree protocol on
 .Ar interface .
 The
 .Xr if_bridge 4
 driver has support for the IEEE 802.1D Spanning Tree protocol (STP).
 Spanning Tree is used to detect and remove loops in a network topology.
 .It Cm -stp Ar interface
 Disable Spanning Tree protocol on
 .Ar interface .
 This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge.
 .It Cm edge Ar interface
 Set
 .Ar interface
 as an edge port.
 An edge port connects directly to end stations cannot create bridging
 loops in the network, this allows it to transition straight to forwarding.
 .It Cm -edge Ar interface
 Disable edge status on
 .Ar interface .
 .It Cm autoedge Ar interface
 Allow
 .Ar interface
 to automatically detect edge status.
 This is the default for all interfaces added to a bridge.
 .It Cm -autoedge Ar interface
 Disable automatic edge status on
 .Ar interface .
 .It Cm ptp Ar interface
 Set the
 .Ar interface
 as a point to point link.
 This is required for straight transitions to forwarding and
 should be enabled on a direct link to another RSTP capable switch.
 .It Cm -ptp Ar interface
 Disable point to point link status on
 .Ar interface .
 This should be disabled for a half duplex link and for an interface
 connected to a shared network segment,
 like a hub or a wireless network.
 .It Cm autoptp Ar interface
 Automatically detect the point to point status on
 .Ar interface
 by checking the full duplex link status.
 This is the default for interfaces added to the bridge.
 .It Cm -autoptp Ar interface
 Disable automatic point to point link detection on
 .Ar interface .
 .It Cm maxage Ar seconds
 Set the time that a Spanning Tree protocol configuration is valid.
 The default is 20 seconds.
 The minimum is 6 seconds and the maximum is 40 seconds.
 .It Cm fwddelay Ar seconds
 Set the time that must pass before an interface begins forwarding
 packets when Spanning Tree is enabled.
 The default is 15 seconds.
 The minimum is 4 seconds and the maximum is 30 seconds.
 .It Cm hellotime Ar seconds
 Set the time between broadcasting of Spanning Tree protocol
 configuration messages.
 The hello time may only be changed when operating in legacy stp mode.
 The default is 2 seconds.
 The minimum is 1 second and the maximum is 2 seconds.
 .It Cm priority Ar value
 Set the bridge priority for Spanning Tree.
 The default is 32768.
 The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 61440.
 .It Cm proto Ar value
 Set the Spanning Tree protocol.
 The default is rstp.
 The available options are stp and rstp.
 .It Cm holdcnt Ar value
 Set the transmit hold count for Spanning Tree.
 This is the number of packets transmitted before being rate limited.
 The default is 6.
 The minimum is 1 and the maximum is 10.
 .It Cm ifpriority Ar interface Ar value
 Set the Spanning Tree priority of
 .Ar interface
 to
 .Ar value .
 The default is 128.
 The minimum is 0 and the maximum is 240.
 .It Cm ifpathcost Ar interface Ar value
 Set the Spanning Tree path cost of
 .Ar interface
 to
 .Ar value .
 The default is calculated from the link speed.
 To change a previously selected path cost back to automatic, set the
 cost to 0.
 The minimum is 1 and the maximum is 200000000.
 .It Cm ifmaxaddr Ar interface Ar size
 Set the maximum number of hosts allowed from an interface, packets with unknown
 source addresses are dropped until an existing host cache entry expires or is
 removed.
 Set to 0 to disable.
 .El
 .Ss Link Aggregation and Link Failover Parameters
 The following parameters are specific to lagg interfaces:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm laggtype Ar type
 When creating a lagg interface the type can be specified as either
 .Cm ethernet
 or
 .Cm infiniband .
 If not specified ethernet is the default lagg type.
 .It Cm laggport Ar interface
 Add the interface named by
 .Ar interface
 as a port of the aggregation interface.
 .It Cm -laggport Ar interface
 Remove the interface named by
 .Ar interface
 from the aggregation interface.
 .It Cm laggproto Ar proto
 Set the aggregation protocol.
 The default is
 .Li failover .
 The available options are
 .Li failover ,
 .Li lacp ,
 .Li loadbalance ,
 .Li roundrobin ,
 .Li broadcast
 and
 .Li none .
 .It Cm lagghash Ar option Ns Oo , Ns Ar option Oc
 Set the packet layers to hash for aggregation protocols which load balance.
 The default is
 .Dq l2,l3,l4 .
 The options can be combined using commas.
 .Pp
 .Bl -tag -width ".Cm l2" -compact
 .It Cm l2
 src/dst mac address and optional vlan number.
 .It Cm l3
 src/dst address for IPv4 or IPv6.
 .It Cm l4
 src/dst port for TCP/UDP/SCTP.
 .El
 .It Cm -use_flowid
 Enable local hash computation for RSS hash on the interface.
 The
 .Li loadbalance
 and
 .Li lacp
 modes will use the RSS hash from the network card if available
 to avoid computing one, this may give poor traffic distribution
 if the hash is invalid or uses less of the protocol header information.
 .Cm -use_flowid
 disables use of RSS hash from the network card.
 The default value can be set via the
 .Va net.link.lagg.default_use_flowid
 .Xr sysctl 8
 variable.
 .Li 0
 means
 .Dq disabled
 and
 .Li 1
 means
 .Dq enabled .
 .It Cm use_flowid
 Use the RSS hash from the network card if available.
 .It Cm flowid_shift Ar number
 Set a shift parameter for RSS local hash computation.
 Hash is calculated by using flowid bits in a packet header mbuf
 which are shifted by the number of this parameter.
 .It Cm use_numa
 Enable selection of egress ports based on the native
 .Xr NUMA 4
 domain for the packets being transmitted.
 This is currently only implemented for lacp mode.
 This works only on
 .Xr NUMA 4
 hardware, running a kernel compiled with the
 .Xr NUMA 4
 option, and when interfaces from multiple
 .Xr NUMA 4
 domains are ports of the aggregation interface.
 .It Cm -use_numa
 Disable selection of egress ports based on the native
 .Xr NUMA 4
 domain for the packets being transmitted.
 .It Cm lacp_fast_timeout
 Enable lacp fast-timeout on the interface.
 .It Cm -lacp_fast_timeout
 Disable lacp fast-timeout on the interface.
 .It Cm lacp_strict
 Enable lacp strict compliance on the interface.
 The default value can be set via the
 .Va net.link.lagg.lacp.default_strict_mode
 .Xr sysctl 8
 variable.
 .Li 0
 means
 .Dq disabled
 and
 .Li 1
 means
 .Dq enabled .
 .It Cm -lacp_strict
 Disable lacp strict compliance on the interface.
 .It Cm rr_limit Ar number
 Configure a stride for an interface in round-robin mode.
 The default stride is 1.
 .El
 .Ss Generic IP Tunnel Parameters
 The following parameters apply to IP tunnel interfaces,
 .Xr gif 4 :
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm tunnel Ar src_addr dest_addr
 Configure the physical source and destination address for IP tunnel
 interfaces.
 The arguments
 .Ar src_addr
 and
 .Ar dest_addr
 are interpreted as the outer source/destination for the encapsulating
 IPv4/IPv6 header.
 .It Fl tunnel
 Unconfigure the physical source and destination address for IP tunnel
 interfaces previously configured with
 .Cm tunnel .
 .It Cm deletetunnel
 Another name for the
 .Fl tunnel
 parameter.
 .It Cm accept_rev_ethip_ver
 Set a flag to accept both correct EtherIP packets and ones
 with reversed version field.
 Enabled by default.
 This is for backward compatibility with
 .Fx 6.1 ,
 6.2, 6.3, 7.0, and 7.1.
 .It Cm -accept_rev_ethip_ver
 Clear a flag
 .Cm accept_rev_ethip_ver .
 .It Cm ignore_source
 Set a flag to accept encapsulated packets destined to this host
 independently from source address.
 This may be useful for hosts, that receive encapsulated packets
 from the load balancers.
 .It Cm -ignore_source
 Clear a flag
 .Cm ignore_source .
 .It Cm send_rev_ethip_ver
 Set a flag to send EtherIP packets with reversed version
 field intentionally.
 Disabled by default.
 This is for backward compatibility with
 .Fx 6.1 ,
 6.2, 6.3, 7.0, and 7.1.
 .It Cm -send_rev_ethip_ver
 Clear a flag
 .Cm send_rev_ethip_ver .
 .El
 .Ss GRE Tunnel Parameters
 The following parameters apply to GRE tunnel interfaces,
 .Xr gre 4 :
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm tunnel Ar src_addr dest_addr
 Configure the physical source and destination address for GRE tunnel
 interfaces.
 The arguments
 .Ar src_addr
 and
 .Ar dest_addr
 are interpreted as the outer source/destination for the encapsulating
 IPv4/IPv6 header.
 .It Fl tunnel
 Unconfigure the physical source and destination address for GRE tunnel
 interfaces previously configured with
 .Cm tunnel .
 .It Cm deletetunnel
 Another name for the
 .Fl tunnel
 parameter.
 .It Cm grekey Ar key
 Configure the GRE key to be used for outgoing packets.
 Note that
 .Xr gre 4 will always accept GRE packets with invalid or absent keys.
 This command will result in a four byte MTU reduction on the interface.
 .El
 .Ss Packet Filter State Table Sychronisation Parameters
 The following parameters are specific to
 .Xr pfsync 4
 interfaces:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm syncdev Ar iface
 Use the specified interface
 to send and receive pfsync state synchronisation messages.
 .It Fl syncdev
 Stop sending pfsync state synchronisation messages over the network.
 .It Cm syncpeer Ar peer_address
 Make the pfsync link point-to-point rather than using
 multicast to broadcast the state synchronisation messages.
 The peer_address is the IP address of the other host taking part in
 the pfsync cluster.
 .It Fl syncpeer
 Broadcast the packets using multicast.
 .It Cm maxupd Ar n
 Set the maximum number of updates for a single state which
 can be collapsed into one.
 This is an 8-bit number; the default value is 128.
 .It Cm defer
 Defer transmission of the first packet in a state until a peer has
 acknowledged that the associated state has been inserted.
 .It Fl defer
 Do not defer the first packet in a state.
 This is the default.
 .El
 .Ss VLAN Parameters
 The following parameters are specific to
 .Xr vlan 4
 interfaces:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm vlan Ar vlan_tag
 Set the VLAN tag value to
 .Ar vlan_tag .
 This value is a 12-bit VLAN Identifier (VID) which is used to create an 802.1Q
 or 802.1ad VLAN header for packets sent from the
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface.
 Note that
 .Cm vlan
 and
 .Cm vlandev
 must both be set at the same time.
 .It Cm vlanproto Ar vlan_proto
 Set the VLAN encapsulation protocol to
 .Ar vlan_proto .
 Supported encapsulation protocols are currently
 .Dq 802.1Q
 and
 .Dq 802.1ad .
 The default encapsulation protocol is
 .Dq 802.1Q .
 The
 .Dq 802.1ad
 protocol is also commonly known as
 .Dq QinQ ;
 either name can be used.
 .It Cm vlanpcp Ar priority_code_point
 Priority code point
 .Pq Dv PCP
 is an 3-bit field which refers to the IEEE 802.1p
 class of service and maps to the frame priority level.
 .Pp
 Values in order of priority are:
 .Cm 1
 .Pq Dv Background (lowest) ,
 .Cm 0
 .Pq Dv Best effort (default) ,
 .Cm 2
 .Pq Dv Excellent effort ,
 .Cm 3
 .Pq Dv Critical applications ,
 .Cm 4
 .Pq Dv Video, < 100ms latency and jitter ,
 .Cm 5
 .Pq Dv Voice, < 10ms latency and jitter ,
 .Cm 6
 .Pq Dv Internetwork control ,
 .Cm 7
 .Pq Dv Network control (highest) .
 .It Cm vlandev Ar iface
 Associate the physical interface
 .Ar iface
 with a
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface.
 Packets transmitted through the
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface will be
 diverted to the specified physical interface
 .Ar iface
 with 802.1Q VLAN encapsulation.
 Packets with 802.1Q encapsulation received
 by the parent interface with the correct VLAN Identifier will be diverted to
 the associated
 .Xr vlan 4
 pseudo-interface.
 The
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface is assigned a
 copy of the parent interface's flags and the parent's Ethernet address.
 The
 .Cm vlandev
 and
 .Cm vlan
 must both be set at the same time.
 If the
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface already has
 a physical interface associated with it, this command will fail.
 To
 change the association to another physical interface, the existing
 association must be cleared first.
 .Pp
 Note: if the hardware tagging capability
 is set on the parent interface, the
 .Xr vlan 4
 pseudo
 interface's behavior changes:
 the
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface recognizes that the
 parent interface supports insertion and extraction of VLAN tags on its
 own (usually in firmware) and that it should pass packets to and from
 the parent unaltered.
 .It Fl vlandev Op Ar iface
 If the driver is a
 .Xr vlan 4
 pseudo device, disassociate the parent interface from it.
 This breaks the link between the
 .Xr vlan 4
 interface and its parent,
 clears its VLAN Identifier, flags and its link address and shuts the interface
 down.
 The
 .Ar iface
 argument is useless and hence deprecated.
 .El
 .Ss Virtual eXtensible LAN Parameters
 The following parameters are used to configure
 .Xr vxlan 4
 interfaces.
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm vxlanid Ar identifier
 This value is a 24-bit VXLAN Network Identifier (VNI) that identifies the
 virtual network segment membership of the interface.
 .It Cm vxlanlocal Ar address
 The source address used in the encapsulating IPv4/IPv6 header.
 The address should already be assigned to an existing interface.
 When the interface is configured in unicast mode, the listening socket
 is bound to this address.
 .It Cm vxlanremote Ar address
 The interface can be configured in a unicast, or point-to-point, mode
 to create a tunnel between two hosts.
 This is the IP address of the remote end of the tunnel.
 .It Cm vxlangroup Ar address
 The interface can be configured in a multicast mode
 to create a virtual network of hosts.
 This is the IP multicast group address the interface will join.
 .It Cm vxlanlocalport Ar port
 The port number the interface will listen on.
 The default port number is 4789.
 .It Cm vxlanremoteport Ar port
 The destination port number used in the encapsulating IPv4/IPv6 header.
 The remote host should be listening on this port.
 The default port number is 4789.
 Note some other implementations, such as Linux,
 do not default to the IANA assigned port,
 but instead listen on port 8472.
 .It Cm vxlanportrange Ar low high
 The range of source ports used in the encapsulating IPv4/IPv6 header.
 The port selected within the range is based on a hash of the inner frame.
 A range is useful to provide entropy within the outer IP header
 for more effective load balancing.
 The default range is between the
 .Xr sysctl 8
 variables
 .Va net.inet.ip.portrange.first
 and
 .Va net.inet.ip.portrange.last
 .It Cm vxlantimeout Ar timeout
 The maximum time, in seconds, before an entry in the forwarding table
 is pruned.
 The default is 1200 seconds (20 minutes).
 .It Cm vxlanmaxaddr Ar max
 The maximum number of entries in the forwarding table.
 The default is 2000.
 .It Cm vxlandev Ar dev
 When the interface is configured in multicast mode, the
 .Cm dev
 interface is used to transmit IP multicast packets.
 .It Cm vxlanttl Ar ttl
 The TTL used in the encapsulating IPv4/IPv6 header.
 The default is 64.
 .It Cm vxlanlearn
 The source IP address and inner source Ethernet MAC address of
 received packets are used to dynamically populate the forwarding table.
 When in multicast mode, an entry in the forwarding table allows the
 interface to send the frame directly to the remote host instead of
 broadcasting the frame to the multicast group.
 This is the default.
 .It Fl vxlanlearn
 The forwarding table is not populated by received packets.
 .It Cm vxlanflush
 Delete all dynamically-learned addresses from the forwarding table.
 .It Cm vxlanflushall
 Delete all addresses, including static addresses, from the forwarding table.
 .El
 .Ss CARP Parameters
 The following parameters are used to configure
 .Xr carp 4
 protocol on an interface:
 .Bl -tag -width indent
 .It Cm vhid Ar n
 Set the virtual host ID.
 This is a required setting to initiate
 .Xr carp 4 .
 If the virtual host ID does not exist yet, it is created and attached to the
 interface, otherwise configuration of an existing vhid is adjusted.
 If the
 .Cm vhid
 keyword is supplied along with an
 .Dq inet6
 or
 .Dq inet
 address, then this address is configured to be run under control of the
 specified vhid.
 Whenever a last address that refers to a particular vhid is removed from an
 interface, the vhid is automatically removed from interface and destroyed.
 Any other configuration parameters for the
 .Xr carp 4
 protocol should be supplied along with the
 .Cm vhid
 keyword.
 Acceptable values for vhid are 1 to 255.
 .It Cm advbase Ar seconds
 Specifies the base of the advertisement interval in seconds.
 The acceptable values are 1 to 255.
 The default value is 1.
 .It Cm advskew Ar interval
 Specifies the skew to add to the base advertisement interval to
 make one host advertise slower than another host.
 It is specified in 1/256 of seconds.
 The acceptable values are 1 to 254.
 The default value is 0.
 .It Cm pass Ar phrase
 Set the authentication key to
 .Ar phrase .
 .It Cm state Ar state
 Forcibly change state of a given vhid.
 The following states are recognized:
 .Cm MASTER
 and
 .Cm BACKUP .
 .El
 .Sh ENVIRONMENT
 The following environment variables affect the execution of
 .Nm :
 .Bl -tag -width IFCONFIG_FORMAT
 .It Ev IFCONFIG_FORMAT
 This variable can contain a specification of the output format.
 See the description of the
 .Fl f
 flag for more details.
 .El
 .Sh EXAMPLES
 Assign the IPv4 address
 .Li 192.0.2.10 ,
 with a network mask of
 .Li 255.255.255.0 ,
 to the interface
 .Li em0 :
 .Dl # ifconfig em0 inet 192.0.2.10 netmask 255.255.255.0
 .Pp
 Add the IPv4 address
 .Li 192.0.2.45 ,
 with the CIDR network prefix
 .Li /28 ,
 to the interface
 .Li em0 :
 .Dl # ifconfig em0 inet 192.0.2.45/28 alias
 .Pp
 Remove the IPv4 address
 .Li 192.0.2.45
 from the interface
 .Li em0 :
 .Dl # ifconfig em0 inet 192.0.2.45 -alias
 .Pp
 Enable IPv6 functionality of the interface:
 .Dl # ifconfig em0 inet6 -ifdisabled
 .Pp
 Add the IPv6 address
 .Li 2001:DB8:DBDB::123/48
 to the interface
 .Li em0 :
 .Dl # ifconfig em0 inet6 2001:db8:bdbd::123 prefixlen 48 alias
 Note that lower case hexadecimal IPv6 addresses are acceptable.
 .Pp
 Remove the IPv6 address added in the above example,
 using the
 .Li /
 character as shorthand for the network prefix:
 .Dl # ifconfig em0 inet6 2001:db8:bdbd::123/48 -alias
 .Pp
 Configure a single CARP redundant address on igb0, and then switch it
 to be master:
 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
 # ifconfig igb0 vhid 1 10.0.0.1/24 pass foobar up
 # ifconfig igb0 vhid 1 state master
 .Ed
 .Pp
 Configure the interface
 .Li xl0 ,
 to use 100baseTX, full duplex Ethernet media options:
 .Dl # ifconfig xl0 media 100baseTX mediaopt full-duplex
 .Pp
 Label the em0 interface as an uplink:
 .Dl # ifconfig em0 description \&"Uplink to Gigabit Switch 2\&"
 .Pp
 Create the software network interface
 .Li gif1 :
 .Dl # ifconfig gif1 create
 .Pp
 Destroy the software network interface
 .Li gif1 :
 .Dl # ifconfig gif1 destroy
 .Pp
 Display available wireless networks using
 .Li wlan0 :
 .Dl # ifconfig wlan0 list scan
 .Pp
 Display inet and inet6 address subnet masks in CIDR notation
 .Dl # ifconfig -f inet:cidr,inet6:cidr
 .Pp
 Display interfaces that are up with the exception of loopback
 .Dl # ifconfig -a -u -G lo
 .Pp
 Display a list of interface names beloning to the wlan group:
 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
 # ifconfig -g wlan
 wlan0
 wlan1
 .Ed
 .Pp
 Display details about the interfaces belonging to the wlan group:
 .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
 # ifconfig -a -g wlan
 wlan0: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> metric 0 mtu 1500
         ether 75:4c:61:6b:7a:73
         inet6 fe80::4c75:636a:616e:ffd8%wlan0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x3
         inet6 2001:5761:6e64:6152:6f6d:616e:fea4:ffe2 prefixlen 64 autoconf
         inet 192.168.10.5 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 192.168.10.255
         groups: wlan
         ssid "Hotspot" channel 11 (2462 MHz 11g) bssid 12:34:ff:ff:43:21
         regdomain ETSI country DE authmode WPA2/802.11i privacy ON
         deftxkey UNDEF AES-CCM 2:128-bit AES-CCM 3:128-bit txpower 30 bmiss 10
         scanvalid 60 protmode CTS wme roaming MANUAL
         parent interface: iwm0
         media: IEEE 802.11 Wireless Ethernet DS/2Mbps mode 11g
         status: associated
         nd6 options=23<PERFORMNUD,ACCEPT_RTADV,AUTO_LINKLOCAL>
 wlan1: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> metric 0 mtu 1500
         ether 00:50:69:6f:74:72
         groups: wlan
         ssid "" channel 2 (2417 MHz 11g)
         regdomain FCC country US authmode OPEN privacy OFF txpower 30 bmiss 7
         scanvalid 60 bgscan bgscanintvl 300 bgscanidle 250 roam:rssi 7
         roam:rate 5 protmode CTS wme bintval 0
         parent interface: rum0
         media: IEEE 802.11 Wireless Ethernet autoselect (autoselect)
         status: no carrier
         nd6 options=29<PERFORMNUD,IFDISABLED,AUTO_LINKLOCAL>
 .Ed
 .Pp
 Set a randomly-generated MAC address on tap0:
 .Dl # ifconfig tap0 ether random
 .Sh DIAGNOSTICS
 Messages indicating the specified interface does not exist, the
 requested address is unknown, or the user is not privileged and
 tried to alter an interface's configuration.
 .Sh SEE ALSO
 .Xr netstat 1 ,
 .Xr carp 4 ,
 .Xr gif 4 ,
 .Xr netintro 4 ,
 .Xr pfsync 4 ,
 .Xr polling 4 ,
 .Xr vlan 4 ,
 .Xr vxlan 4 ,
 .Xr devd.conf 5 ,
 .Xr devd 8 ,
 .Xr jail 8 ,
 .Xr rc 8 ,
 .Xr routed 8 ,
 .Xr sysctl 8
 .Sh HISTORY
 The
 .Nm
 utility appeared in
 .Bx 4.2 .
 .Sh BUGS
 Basic IPv6 node operation requires a link-local address on each
 interface configured for IPv6.
 Normally, such an address is automatically configured by the
 kernel on each interface added to the system or enabled; this behavior may
 be disabled by setting per-interface flag
 .Cm -auto_linklocal .
 The default value of this flag is 1 and can be disabled by using the sysctl
 MIB variable
 .Va net.inet6.ip6.auto_linklocal .
 .Pp
 Do not configure IPv6 addresses with no link-local address by using
 .Nm .
 It can result in unexpected behaviors of the kernel.