The routines described in this page provide the application access to the system network configuration database,
/etc/netconfig, as it is “filtered” by the NETPATH environment variable (see
environ(7)). See
getnetconfig(3) for other routines that also access the network configuration database directly. The NETPATH variable is a list of colon-separated network identifiers.
getnetpath() returns a pointer to the netconfig database entry corresponding to the first valid NETPATH component. The netconfig entry is formatted as a struct netconfig. On each subsequent call,
getnetpath() returns a pointer to the netconfig entry that corresponds to the next valid NETPATH component.
getnetpath() can thus be used to search the netconfig database for all networks included in the NETPATH variable. When NETPATH has been exhausted,
getnetpath() returns NULL.
A call to
setnetpath() “binds” to or “rewinds” NETPATH.
setnetpath() must be called before the first call to
getnetpath() and may be called at any other time. It returns a handle that is used by
getnetpath().
getnetpath() silently ignores invalid NETPATH components. A NETPATH component is invalid if there is no corresponding entry in the netconfig database.
If the NETPATH variable is unset,
getnetpath() behaves as if NETPATH were set to the sequence of “default” or “visible” networks in the netconfig database, in the order in which they are listed.
endnetpath() may be called to “unbind” from NETPATH when processing is complete, releasing resources for reuse. Programmers should be aware, however, that
endnetpath() frees all memory allocated by
getnetpath() for the struct netconfig data structure.