x25(7) - man - phpman

Look up a command

 

Markdown Format | JSON API | MCP Server Tool


x25(7)
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION VERSIONS BUGS SEE ALSO COLOPHON
X25(7)                                Linux Programmer's Manual                               X25(7)



NAME
       x25 - ITU-T X.25 / ISO-8208 protocol interface

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/socket.h>
       #include <linux/x25.h>

       x25_socket = socket(AF_X25, SOCK_SEQPACKET, 0);

DESCRIPTION
       X25 sockets provide an interface to the X.25 packet layer protocol.  This allows applications
       to communicate over a public X.25 data network as standardized by International  Telecommuni‐
       cation  Union's  recommendation  X.25  (X.25 DTE-DCE mode).  X25 sockets can also be used for
       communication without an intermediate X.25  network  (X.25  DTE-DTE  mode)  as  described  in
       ISO-8208.

       Message  boundaries  are  preserved — a read(2) from a socket will retrieve the same chunk of
       data as output with the corresponding write(2) to the peer socket.  When necessary, the  ker‐
       nel  takes  care  of  segmenting  and  reassembling long messages by means of the X.25 M-bit.
       There is no hard-coded upper limit for the message size.  However,  reassembling  of  a  long
       message might fail if there is a temporary lack of system resources or when other constraints
       (such as socket memory or buffer size limits) become effective.  If  that  occurs,  the  X.25
       connection will be reset.

   Socket addresses
       The  AF_X25  socket  address family uses the struct sockaddr_x25 for representing network ad‐
       dresses as defined in ITU-T recommendation X.121.

           struct sockaddr_x25 {
               sa_family_t sx25_family;    /* must be AF_X25 */
               x25_address sx25_addr;      /* X.121 Address */
           };

       sx25_addr contains a char array x25_addr[] to be interpreted  as  a  null-terminated  string.
       sx25_addr.x25_addr[]  consists  of  up  to  15 (not counting the terminating null byte) ASCII
       characters forming the X.121 address.  Only the decimal digit characters from '0' to '9'  are
       allowed.

   Socket options
       The  following  X.25-specific  socket options can be set by using setsockopt(2) and read with
       getsockopt(2) with the level argument set to SOL_X25.

       X25_QBITINCL
              Controls whether the X.25 Q-bit (Qualified Data Bit) is accessible by  the  user.   It
              expects an integer argument.  If set to 0 (default), the Q-bit is never set for outgo‐
              ing packets and the Q-bit of incoming packets is ignored.  If set to 1, an  additional
              first  byte is prepended to each message read from or written to the socket.  For data
              read from the socket, a 0 first byte indicates that the Q-bits  of  the  corresponding
              incoming  data  packets were not set.  A first byte with value 1 indicates that the Q-
              bit of the corresponding incoming data packets was set.  If the first byte of the data
              written  to the socket is 1, the Q-bit of the corresponding outgoing data packets will
              be set.  If the first byte is 0, the Q-bit will not be set.

VERSIONS
       The AF_X25 protocol family is a new feature of Linux 2.2.

BUGS
       Plenty, as the X.25 PLP implementation is CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL.

       This man page is incomplete.

       There is no dedicated application programmer's header file yet; you need to include the  ker‐
       nel  header file <linux/x25.h>.  CONFIG_EXPERIMENTAL might also imply that future versions of
       the interface are not binary compatible.

       X.25 N-Reset events are not propagated to the user process yet.  Thus, if a  reset  occurred,
       data might be lost without notice.

SEE ALSO
       socket(2), socket(7)

       Jonathan  Simon  Naylor:  “The  Re-Analysis  and  Re-Implementation  of  X.25.”   The  URL is
       ⟨ftp://ftp.pspt.fi/pub/ham/linux/ax25/x25doc.tgz⟩.

COLOPHON
       This page is part of release 5.10 of the Linux  man-pages  project.   A  description  of  the
       project,  information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found
       at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.



Linux                                        2017-09-15                                       X25(7)

Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong Under GNU General Public License
2026-06-02 16:32 @216.73.216.151 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top