The corresponding commands display neighbour bindings and their properties, add new neighbour entries and delete old ones.
to " ADDRESS " (default) the protocol address of the neighbour. It is either an IPv4 or IPv6 address.
dev " NAME" the interface to which this neighbour is attached.
lladdr " LLADDRESS" the link layer address of the neighbour. LLADDRESS can also be "null" .
nud " NUD_STATE" the state of the neighbour entry. nud is an abbreviation for 'Neighbour Unreachability Detection'. The state can take one of the following values: permanent - the neighbour entry is valid forever and can be only be removed administratively. noarp - the neighbour entry is valid. No attempts to validate this entry will be made but it can be removed when its lifetime expires. reachable - the neighbour entry is valid until the reachability timeout expires. stale - the neighbour entry is valid but suspicious. This option to ip neigh does not change the neighbour state if it was valid and the address is not changed by this command.
The arguments are the same as with "ip neigh add" , except that lladdr and nud are ignored.
Warning: Attempts to delete or manually change a noarp entry created by the kernel may result in unpredictable behaviour. Particularly, the kernel may try to resolve this address even on a NOARP interface or if the address is multicast or broadcast.
to " ADDRESS " (default) the prefix selecting the neighbours to list.
dev " NAME" only list the neighbours attached to this device.
proxy list neighbour proxies.
unused only list neighbours which are not currently in use.
nud " NUD_STATE" only list neighbour entries in this state. NUD_STATE takes values listed below or the special value all which means all states. This option may occur more than once. If this option is absent, ip lists all entries except for none and "noarp" .
This command has the same arguments as show. The differences are that it does not run when no arguments are given, and that the default neighbour states to be flushed do not include permanent and "noarp" .
With the -statistics option, the command becomes verbose. It prints out the number of deleted neighbours and the number of rounds made to flush the neighbour table. If the option is given twice, ip neigh flush also dumps all the deleted neighbours.
ip neighbour Shows the current neighbour table in kernel.
ip neigh flush dev eth0 Removes entries in the neighbour table on device eth0.