-climit
Do not handle more than limit simultaneous connections. If there are limit simultaneous copies of
program running, defer acceptance of a new connection until one copy finishes. limit must be a
positive integer. Default: 40.
-xrules.cdb
Follow the rules compiled into rules.cdb by tcprules. These rules may specify setting environment
variables or rejecting connections from bad sources.
tcpserver does not read rules.cdb into memory; you can rerun tcprules to change tcpserver's
behavior on the fly.
-Bbanner
Write banner to the network immediately after each connection is made. tcpserver writes banner
before looking up TCPREMOTEHOST, before looking up TCPREMOTEINFO, and before checking rules.cdb.
This feature can be used to reduce latency in protocols where the client waits for a greeting from
the server.
-ggid Switch group ID to gid after preparing to receive connections. gid must be a positive integer.
-uuid Switch user ID to uid after preparing to receive connections. uid must be a positive integer.
-1 After preparing to receive connections, print the local port number to standard output.
-4 Fall back to IPv4 sockets. This is necessary for terminally broken systems like OpenBSD which
will not let IPv6 sockets connect to V4-mapped IPv6 addresses. Please note that this also applies
to DNS lookups, so you will have to use an DNS resolver with an IPv6 address to accept IPv6
connections. Use DNSCACHEIP to set the DNS resolver IP dynamically.
-6 Force IPv6 mode in UCSPI environment variables, even for IPv4 connections. This will set $PROTO
to TCP6 and put IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses in TCPLOCALIP and TCPREMOTEIP.
-Iinterface
Bind to the network interface interface ("eth0" on Linux, for example). This is only defined and
needed for IPv6 link-local addresses.
-bbacklog
Allow up to backlog simultaneous SYN_RECEIVEDs. Default: 20. On some systems, backlog is
silently limited to 5. See listen(2) for more details.
-o Leave IP options alone. If the client is sending packets along an IP source route, send packets
back along the same route.
-O (Default.) Kill IP options. A client can still use source routing to connect and to send data,
but packets will be sent back along the default route.
-d (Default.) Delay sending data for a fraction of a second whenever the remote host is responding
slowly, to make better use of the network.
-D Never delay sending data; enable TCP_NODELAY. This is appropriate for interactive connections.
-q Quiet. Do not print any messages.
-Q (Default.) Print error messages.
-v Verbose. Print all available messages.