ifconfigis a command in Unix-like operating systems like Linux[1], FreeBSD, OpenBSD, macOS for Ethernet network interface configuration.
In macOS, the ifconfig command functions as a wrapper to the IPConfiguration agent, and can control the BootP and DHCP clients from the command-line. Use of ifconfig to modify network settings in Mac OS X is discouraged, because ifconfig operates below the level of the system frameworks which help manage network configuration. To change network settings in Mac OS X from the command line, use /usr/sbin/ipconfig or /usr/sbin/networksetup.
ifconfig command is included in the net-tools package but not installed by default in RHEL since version 7[2].
macOS alias
Configure 3 alias in en1 interface, https://ss64.com/osx/ifconfig.html:
sudo ifconfig en1 inet 192.168.10.2/24 add sudo ifconfig en1 inet 192.168.20.2/24 add sudo ifconfig en1 inet 192.168.30.2/24 add
or
sudo ifconfig en1 inet 192.168.10.2/24 alias sudo ifconfig en1 inet 192.168.20.2/24 alias sudo ifconfig en1 inet 192.168.30.2/24 alias
Activities
- Show interface configuration in Linux including ip addresses:
ifconfig -aorip a - Show interface Ethernet network capabilities of your interface, such as speed, with:
mii-tool -v YOUR_INTERFACE_NAME,mii-tool -v eth0 - Show all network inferfaces in Linux:[3]
lspci | egrep -i --color 'network|ethernet'lshw -class networkifconfig -aip link showip acat /proc/net/devsystemd/networkctl|networkctl listnmcli|nmcli device show
- Learn about Linux Naming Schemes Hierarchy.
See also
netstatipconfigWindows command- networksetup (command) (macOS)