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| <!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN" |
| "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> |
| <!-- SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1+ --> |
| |
| <refentry id="systemd.network" conditional='ENABLE_NETWORKD'> |
| |
| <refentryinfo> |
| <title>systemd.network</title> |
| <productname>systemd</productname> |
| </refentryinfo> |
| |
| <refmeta> |
| <refentrytitle>systemd.network</refentrytitle> |
| <manvolnum>5</manvolnum> |
| </refmeta> |
| |
| <refnamediv> |
| <refname>systemd.network</refname> |
| <refpurpose>Network configuration</refpurpose> |
| </refnamediv> |
| |
| <refsynopsisdiv> |
| <para><filename><replaceable>network</replaceable>.network</filename></para> |
| </refsynopsisdiv> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>Description</title> |
| |
| <para>Network setup is performed by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-networkd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| </para> |
| |
| <para>The main network file must have the extension <filename>.network</filename>; other |
| extensions are ignored. Networks are applied to links whenever the links appear.</para> |
| |
| <para>The <filename>.network</filename> files are read from the files located in the system network |
| directories <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/network</filename> and |
| <filename>/usr/local/lib/systemd/network</filename>, the volatile runtime network directory |
| <filename>/run/systemd/network</filename> and the local administration network directory |
| <filename>/etc/systemd/network</filename>. All configuration files are collectively sorted and processed |
| in lexical order, regardless of the directories in which they live. However, files with identical |
| filenames replace each other. Files in <filename>/etc</filename> have the highest priority, files in |
| <filename>/run</filename> take precedence over files with the same name under |
| <filename>/usr</filename>. This can be used to override a system-supplied configuration file with a local |
| file if needed. As a special case, an empty file (file size 0) or symlink with the same name pointing to |
| <filename>/dev/null</filename> disables the configuration file entirely (it is "masked").</para> |
| |
| <para>Along with the network file <filename>foo.network</filename>, a "drop-in" directory |
| <filename>foo.network.d/</filename> may exist. All files with the suffix |
| <literal>.conf</literal> from this directory will be parsed after the file itself is |
| parsed. This is useful to alter or add configuration settings, without having to modify the main |
| configuration file. Each drop-in file must have appropriate section headers.</para> |
| |
| <para>In addition to <filename>/etc/systemd/network</filename>, drop-in <literal>.d</literal> |
| directories can be placed in <filename>/usr/lib/systemd/network</filename> or |
| <filename>/run/systemd/network</filename> directories. Drop-in files in |
| <filename>/etc</filename> take precedence over those in <filename>/run</filename> which in turn |
| take precedence over those in <filename>/usr/lib</filename>. Drop-in files under any of these |
| directories take precedence over the main netdev file wherever located.</para> |
| |
| <para>Note that an interface without any static IPv6 addresses configured, and neither DHCPv6 |
| nor IPv6LL enabled, shall be considered to have no IPv6 support. IPv6 will be automatically |
| disabled for that interface by writing "1" to |
| <filename>/proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/<replaceable>ifname</replaceable>/disable_ipv6</filename>. |
| </para> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[Match] Section Options</title> |
| |
| <para>The network file contains a <literal>[Match]</literal> |
| section, which determines if a given network file may be applied |
| to a given device; and a <literal>[Network]</literal> section |
| specifying how the device should be configured. The first (in |
| lexical order) of the network files that matches a given device |
| is applied, all later files are ignored, even if they match as |
| well.</para> |
| |
| <para>A network file is said to match a network interface if all matches specified by the |
| <literal>[Match]</literal> section are satisfied. When a network file does not contain valid |
| settings in <literal>[Match]</literal> section, then the file will match all interfaces and |
| <command>systemd-networkd</command> warns about that. Hint: to avoid the warning and to make it |
| clear that all interfaces shall be matched, add the following: |
| <programlisting>Name=*</programlisting> |
| The following keys are accepted:</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MACAddress=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of hardware addresses. Use full colon-, hyphen- or dot-delimited hexadecimal. See the example below. |
| This option may appear more than one, in which case the lists are merged. If the empty string is assigned to this option, the list |
| of hardware addresses defined prior to this is reset.</para> |
| |
| <para>Example: |
| <programlisting>MACAddress=01:23:45:67:89:ab 00-11-22-33-44-55 AABB.CCDD.EEFF</programlisting></para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Path=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs |
| matching the persistent path, as exposed by the udev |
| property <literal>ID_PATH</literal>. If the list is |
| prefixed with a "!", the test is inverted; i.e. it is |
| true when <literal>ID_PATH</literal> does not match any |
| item in the list.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Driver=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs |
| matching the driver currently bound to the device, as |
| exposed by the udev property <literal>ID_NET_DRIVER</literal> |
| of its parent device, or if that is not set the driver |
| as exposed by <literal>ethtool -i</literal> of the |
| device itself. If the list is prefixed with a "!", the |
| test is inverted.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Type=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs |
| matching the device type, as exposed by the udev property |
| <literal>DEVTYPE</literal>. If the list is prefixed with |
| a "!", the test is inverted.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Name=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs |
| matching the device name, as exposed by the udev property |
| <literal>INTERFACE</literal>. If the list is prefixed |
| with a "!", the test is inverted.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Property=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of udev property name with its value after a equal |
| (<literal>=</literal>). If multiple properties are specified, the test results are ANDed. |
| If the list is prefixed with a "!", the test is inverted. If a value contains white |
| spaces, then please quote whole key and value pair. If a value contains quotation, then |
| please escape the quotation with <literal>\</literal>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Example: if a .network file has the following: |
| <programlisting>Property=ID_MODEL_ID=9999 "ID_VENDOR_FROM_DATABASE=vendor name" "KEY=with \"quotation\""</programlisting> |
| then, the .network file matches only when an interface has all the above three properties. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Host=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Matches against the hostname or machine ID of the host. See |
| <literal>ConditionHost=</literal> in |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for details. When prefixed with an exclamation mark (<literal>!</literal>), the result is negated. |
| If an empty string is assigned, then previously assigned value is cleared. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Virtualization=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Checks whether the system is executed in a virtualized environment and optionally test |
| whether it is a specific implementation. See <literal>ConditionVirtualization=</literal> in |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for details. When prefixed with an exclamation mark (<literal>!</literal>), the result is negated. |
| If an empty string is assigned, then previously assigned value is cleared. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>KernelCommandLine=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Checks whether a specific kernel command line option is set. See |
| <literal>ConditionKernelCommandLine=</literal> in |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for details. When prefixed with an exclamation mark (<literal>!</literal>), the result is negated. |
| If an empty string is assigned, then previously assigned value is cleared. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>KernelVersion=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Checks whether the kernel version (as reported by <command>uname -r</command>) matches a |
| certain expression. See <literal>ConditionKernelVersion=</literal> in |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for details. When prefixed with an exclamation mark (<literal>!</literal>), the result is negated. |
| If an empty string is assigned, then previously assigned value is cleared. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Architecture=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Checks whether the system is running on a specific architecture. See |
| <literal>ConditionArchitecture=</literal> in |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.unit</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for details. When prefixed with an exclamation mark (<literal>!</literal>), the result is negated. |
| If an empty string is assigned, then previously assigned value is cleared. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[Link] Section Options</title> |
| |
| <para> The <literal>[Link]</literal> section accepts the following keys:</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MACAddress=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The hardware address to set for the device.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MTUBytes=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The maximum transmission unit in bytes to set for the |
| device. The usual suffixes K, M, G, are supported and are |
| understood to the base of 1024.</para> |
| <para>Note that if IPv6 is enabled on the interface, and the MTU is chosen |
| below 1280 (the minimum MTU for IPv6) it will automatically be increased to this value.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ARP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If set to true, the ARP (low-level Address Resolution Protocol) |
| for this interface is enabled. When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| <para> For example, disabling ARP is useful when creating multiple MACVLAN or VLAN virtual |
| interfaces atop a single lower-level physical interface, which will then only serve as a |
| link/"bridge" device aggregating traffic to the same physical link and not participate in |
| the network otherwise.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Multicast=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If set to true, the multicast flag on the device is enabled.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>AllMulticast=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If set to true, the driver retrieves all multicast packets from the network. |
| This happens when multicast routing is enabled.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Unmanaged=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. When <literal>yes</literal>, no attempts are |
| made to bring up or configure matching links, equivalent to |
| when there are no matching network files. Defaults to |
| <literal>no</literal>.</para> |
| <para>This is useful for preventing later matching network |
| files from interfering with certain interfaces that are fully |
| controlled by other applications.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RequiredForOnline=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean or operational state. Please see |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>networkctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for possible operational states. When <literal>yes</literal>, the network is deemed required when |
| determining whether the system is online when running |
| <command>systemd-networkd-wait-online</command>. When <literal>no</literal>, the network is ignored |
| when checking for online state. When an operational state is set, <literal>yes</literal> is implied, |
| and this controls the operational state required for the network interface to be considered online. |
| Defaults to <literal>yes</literal>.</para> |
| |
| <para>The network will be brought up normally in all cases, but in |
| the event that there is no address being assigned by DHCP or the |
| cable is not plugged in, the link will simply remain offline and be |
| skipped automatically by <command>systemd-networkd-wait-online</command> |
| if <literal>RequiredForOnline=no</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[Network] Section Options</title> |
| |
| <para>The <literal>[Network]</literal> section accepts the following keys:</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Description=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A description of the device. This is only used for |
| presentation purposes.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DHCP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Enables DHCPv4 and/or DHCPv6 client support. Accepts |
| <literal>yes</literal>, <literal>no</literal>, |
| <literal>ipv4</literal>, or <literal>ipv6</literal>. Defaults |
| to <literal>no</literal>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Note that DHCPv6 will by default be triggered by Router |
| Advertisement, if that is enabled, regardless of this parameter. |
| By enabling DHCPv6 support explicitly, the DHCPv6 client will |
| be started regardless of the presence of routers on the link, |
| or what flags the routers pass. See |
| <literal>IPv6AcceptRA=</literal>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Furthermore, note that by default the domain name |
| specified through DHCP is not used for name resolution. |
| See option <option>UseDomains=</option> below.</para> |
| |
| <para>See the <literal>[DHCPv4]</literal> or <literal>[DHCPv6]</literal> section below for |
| further configuration options for the DHCP client support.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DHCPServer=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If set to <literal>yes</literal>, DHCPv4 server will be started. Defaults |
| to <literal>no</literal>. Further settings for the DHCP |
| server may be set in the <literal>[DHCPServer]</literal> |
| section described below.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>LinkLocalAddressing=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Enables link-local address autoconfiguration. Accepts <literal>yes</literal>, |
| <literal>no</literal>, <literal>ipv4</literal>, <literal>ipv6</literal>, |
| <literal>fallback</literal>, or <literal>ipv4-fallback</literal>. If |
| <literal>fallback</literal> or <literal>ipv4-fallback</literal> is specified, then an IPv4 |
| link-local address is configured only when DHCPv4 fails. If <literal>fallback</literal>, |
| an IPv6 link-local address is always configured, and if <literal>ipv4-fallback</literal>, |
| the address is not configured. Note that, the fallback mechanism works only when DHCPv4 |
| client is enabled, that is, it requires <literal>DHCP=yes</literal> or |
| <literal>DHCP=ipv4</literal>. If <varname>Bridge=</varname> is set, defaults to |
| <literal>no</literal>, and if not, defaults to <literal>ipv6</literal>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv4LLRoute=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If set to true, sets up the route needed for |
| non-IPv4LL hosts to communicate with IPv4LL-only hosts. Defaults |
| to false. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DefaultRouteOnDevice=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If set to true, sets up the default route bound to the interface. |
| Defaults to false. This is useful when creating routes on point-to-point interfaces. |
| This is equivalent to e.g. the following. |
| <programlisting>ip route add default dev veth99</programlisting></para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6Token=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>An IPv6 address with the top 64 bits unset. When set, indicates the |
| 64-bit interface part of SLAAC IPv6 addresses for this link. Note that |
| the token is only ever used for SLAAC, and not for DHCPv6 addresses, even |
| in the case DHCP is requested by router advertisement. By default, the |
| token is autogenerated.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>LLMNR=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean or <literal>resolve</literal>. When true, |
| enables <ulink |
| url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4795">Link-Local |
| Multicast Name Resolution</ulink> on the link. When set to |
| <literal>resolve</literal>, only resolution is enabled, |
| but not host registration and announcement. Defaults to |
| true. This setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MulticastDNS=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean or <literal>resolve</literal>. When true, |
| enables <ulink |
| url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6762">Multicast |
| DNS</ulink> support on the link. When set to |
| <literal>resolve</literal>, only resolution is enabled, |
| but not host or service registration and |
| announcement. Defaults to false. This setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DNSOverTLS=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean or <literal>opportunistic</literal>. |
| When true, enables |
| <ulink |
| url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7858">DNS-over-TLS</ulink> |
| support on the link. |
| When set to <literal>opportunistic</literal>, compatibility with |
| non-DNS-over-TLS servers is increased, by automatically |
| turning off DNS-over-TLS servers in this case. |
| This option defines a per-interface setting for |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>resolved.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>'s |
| global <varname>DNSOverTLS=</varname> option. Defaults to |
| false. This setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DNSSEC=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. or |
| <literal>allow-downgrade</literal>. When true, enables |
| <ulink |
| url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4033">DNSSEC</ulink> |
| DNS validation support on the link. When set to |
| <literal>allow-downgrade</literal>, compatibility with |
| non-DNSSEC capable networks is increased, by automatically |
| turning off DNSSEC in this case. This option defines a |
| per-interface setting for |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>resolved.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>'s |
| global <varname>DNSSEC=</varname> option. Defaults to |
| false. This setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>A space-separated list of DNSSEC negative |
| trust anchor domains. If specified and DNSSEC is enabled, |
| look-ups done via the interface's DNS server will be subject |
| to the list of negative trust anchors, and not require |
| authentication for the specified domains, or anything below |
| it. Use this to disable DNSSEC authentication for specific |
| private domains, that cannot be proven valid using the |
| Internet DNS hierarchy. Defaults to the empty list. This |
| setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>LLDP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Controls support for Ethernet LLDP packet reception. LLDP is a link-layer protocol commonly |
| implemented on professional routers and bridges which announces which physical port a system is connected |
| to, as well as other related data. Accepts a boolean or the special value |
| <literal>routers-only</literal>. When true, incoming LLDP packets are accepted and a database of all LLDP |
| neighbors maintained. If <literal>routers-only</literal> is set only LLDP data of various types of routers |
| is collected and LLDP data about other types of devices ignored (such as stations, telephones and |
| others). If false, LLDP reception is disabled. Defaults to <literal>routers-only</literal>. Use |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>networkctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> to query the |
| collected neighbor data. LLDP is only available on Ethernet links. See <varname>EmitLLDP=</varname> below |
| for enabling LLDP packet emission from the local system. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EmitLLDP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Controls support for Ethernet LLDP packet emission. Accepts a boolean parameter or the special values |
| <literal>nearest-bridge</literal>, <literal>non-tpmr-bridge</literal> and |
| <literal>customer-bridge</literal>. Defaults to false, which turns off LLDP packet emission. If not false, |
| a short LLDP packet with information about the local system is sent out in regular intervals on the |
| link. The LLDP packet will contain information about the local host name, the local machine ID (as stored |
| in <citerefentry><refentrytitle>machine-id</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>) and the |
| local interface name, as well as the pretty hostname of the system (as set in |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>machine-info</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>). LLDP |
| emission is only available on Ethernet links. Note that this setting passes data suitable for |
| identification of host to the network and should thus not be enabled on untrusted networks, where such |
| identification data should not be made available. Use this option to permit other systems to identify on |
| which interfaces they are connected to this system. The three special values control propagation of the |
| LLDP packets. The <literal>nearest-bridge</literal> setting permits propagation only to the nearest |
| connected bridge, <literal>non-tpmr-bridge</literal> permits propagation across Two-Port MAC Relays, but |
| not any other bridges, and <literal>customer-bridge</literal> permits propagation until a customer bridge |
| is reached. For details about these concepts, see <ulink |
| url="https://standards.ieee.org/findstds/standard/802.1AB-2016.html">IEEE 802.1AB-2016</ulink>. Note that |
| configuring this setting to true is equivalent to <literal>nearest-bridge</literal>, the recommended and |
| most restricted level of propagation. See <varname>LLDP=</varname> above for an option to enable LLDP |
| reception.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>BindCarrier=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A link name or a list of link names. When set, controls the behavior of the current |
| link. When all links in the list are in an operational down state, the current link is brought |
| down. When at least one link has carrier, the current interface is brought up. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Address=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A static IPv4 or IPv6 address and its prefix length, |
| separated by a <literal>/</literal> character. Specify |
| this key more than once to configure several addresses. |
| The format of the address must be as described in |
| <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>inet_pton</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This is a short-hand for an [Address] section only |
| containing an Address key (see below). This option may be |
| specified more than once. |
| </para> |
| |
| <para>If the specified address is <literal>0.0.0.0</literal> (for IPv4) or <literal>::</literal> |
| (for IPv6), a new address range of the requested size is automatically allocated from a |
| system-wide pool of unused ranges. Note that the prefix length must be equal or larger than 8 for |
| IPv4, and 64 for IPv6. The allocated range is checked against all current network interfaces and |
| all known network configuration files to avoid address range conflicts. The default system-wide |
| pool consists of 192.168.0.0/16, 172.16.0.0/12 and 10.0.0.0/8 for IPv4, and fd00::/8 for IPv6. |
| This functionality is useful to manage a large number of dynamically created network interfaces |
| with the same network configuration and automatic address range assignment.</para> |
| |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Gateway=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The gateway address, which must be in the format |
| described in |
| <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>inet_pton</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This is a short-hand for a [Route] section only containing |
| a Gateway key. This option may be specified more than |
| once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DNS=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A DNS server address, which must be in the format |
| described in |
| <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>inet_pton</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once. This setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Domains=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A list of domains which should be resolved using the DNS servers on this link. Each item in the list |
| should be a domain name, optionally prefixed with a tilde (<literal>~</literal>). The domains with the |
| prefix are called "routing-only domains". The domains without the prefix are called "search domains" and |
| are first used as search suffixes for extending single-label host names (host names containing no dots) to |
| become fully qualified domain names (FQDNs). If a single-label host name is resolved on this interface, |
| each of the specified search domains are appended to it in turn, converting it into a fully qualified |
| domain name, until one of them may be successfully resolved.</para> |
| |
| <para>Both "search" and "routing-only" domains are used for routing of DNS queries: look-ups for host names |
| ending in those domains (hence also single label names, if any "search domains" are listed), are routed to |
| the DNS servers configured for this interface. The domain routing logic is particularly useful on |
| multi-homed hosts with DNS servers serving particular private DNS zones on each interface.</para> |
| |
| <para>The "routing-only" domain <literal>~.</literal> (the tilde indicating definition of a routing domain, |
| the dot referring to the DNS root domain which is the implied suffix of all valid DNS names) has special |
| effect. It causes all DNS traffic which does not match another configured domain routing entry to be routed |
| to DNS servers specified for this interface. This setting is useful to prefer a certain set of DNS servers |
| if a link on which they are connected is available.</para> |
| |
| <para>This setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| "Search domains" correspond to the <varname>domain</varname> and <varname>search</varname> entries in |
| <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>resolv.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| Domain name routing has no equivalent in the traditional glibc API, which has no concept of domain |
| name servers limited to a specific link.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DNSDefaultRoute=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean argument. If true, this link's configured DNS servers are used for resolving domain |
| names that do not match any link's configured <varname>Domains=</varname> setting. If false, this link's |
| configured DNS servers are never used for such domains, and are exclusively used for resolving names that |
| match at least one of the domains configured on this link. If not specified defaults to an automatic mode: |
| queries not matching any link's configured domains will be routed to this link if it has no routing-only |
| domains configured.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>NTP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>An NTP server address. This option may be specified more than once. This setting is read by |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-timesyncd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPForward=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Configures IP packet forwarding for the |
| system. If enabled, incoming packets on any network |
| interface will be forwarded to any other interfaces |
| according to the routing table. Takes a boolean, |
| or the values <literal>ipv4</literal> or |
| <literal>ipv6</literal>, which only enable IP packet |
| forwarding for the specified address family. This controls |
| the <filename>net.ipv4.ip_forward</filename> and |
| <filename>net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding</filename> sysctl |
| options of the network interface (see <ulink |
| url="https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt">ip-sysctl.txt</ulink> |
| for details about sysctl options). Defaults to |
| <literal>no</literal>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Note: this setting controls a global kernel option, |
| and does so one way only: if a network that has this setting |
| enabled is set up the global setting is turned on. However, |
| it is never turned off again, even after all networks with |
| this setting enabled are shut down again.</para> |
| |
| <para>To allow IP packet forwarding only between specific |
| network interfaces use a firewall.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPMasquerade=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Configures IP masquerading for the network |
| interface. If enabled, packets forwarded from the network |
| interface will be appear as coming from the local host. |
| Takes a boolean argument. Implies |
| <varname>IPForward=ipv4</varname>. Defaults to |
| <literal>no</literal>.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6PrivacyExtensions=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Configures use of stateless temporary |
| addresses that change over time (see <ulink |
| url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4941">RFC 4941</ulink>, |
| Privacy Extensions for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration |
| in IPv6). Takes a boolean or the special values |
| <literal>prefer-public</literal> and |
| <literal>kernel</literal>. When true, enables the privacy |
| extensions and prefers temporary addresses over public |
| addresses. When <literal>prefer-public</literal>, enables the |
| privacy extensions, but prefers public addresses over |
| temporary addresses. When false, the privacy extensions |
| remain disabled. When <literal>kernel</literal>, the kernel's |
| default setting will be left in place. Defaults to |
| <literal>no</literal>.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6AcceptRA=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Takes a boolean. Controls IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) reception support |
| for the interface. If true, RAs are accepted; if false, RAs are ignored, independently of the |
| local forwarding state. When RAs are accepted, they may trigger the start of the DHCPv6 |
| client if the relevant flags are set in the RA data, or if no routers are found on the link.</para> |
| |
| <para>Further settings for the IPv6 RA support may be configured in the |
| <literal>[IPv6AcceptRA]</literal> section, see below.</para> |
| |
| <para>Also see <ulink |
| url="https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt">ip-sysctl.txt</ulink> in the kernel |
| documentation regarding <literal>accept_ra</literal>, but note that systemd's setting of |
| <constant>1</constant> (i.e. true) corresponds to kernel's setting of <constant>2</constant>.</para> |
| |
| <para>Note that kernel's implementation of the IPv6 RA protocol is always disabled, |
| regardless of this setting. If this option is enabled, a userspace implementation of the IPv6 |
| RA protocol is used, and the kernel's own implementation remains disabled, since |
| <command>systemd-networkd</command> needs to know all details supplied in the advertisements, |
| and these are not available from the kernel if the kernel's own implementation is used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6DuplicateAddressDetection=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Configures the amount of IPv6 Duplicate |
| Address Detection (DAD) probes to send. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6HopLimit=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Configures IPv6 Hop Limit. For each router that |
| forwards the packet, the hop limit is decremented by 1. When the |
| hop limit field reaches zero, the packet is discarded. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv4ProxyARP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Takes a boolean. Configures proxy ARP for IPv4. Proxy ARP is the technique in which one host, |
| usually a router, answers ARP requests intended for another machine. By "faking" its identity, |
| the router accepts responsibility for routing packets to the "real" destination. (see <ulink |
| url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1027">RFC 1027</ulink>. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6ProxyNDP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Takes a boolean. Configures proxy NDP for IPv6. Proxy NDP (Neighbor Discovery |
| Protocol) is a technique for IPv6 to allow routing of addresses to a different |
| destination when peers expect them to be present on a certain physical link. |
| In this case a router answers Neighbour Advertisement messages intended for |
| another machine by offering its own MAC address as destination. |
| Unlike proxy ARP for IPv4, it is not enabled globally, but will only send Neighbour |
| Advertisement messages for addresses in the IPv6 neighbor proxy table, |
| which can also be shown by <command>ip -6 neighbour show proxy</command>. |
| systemd-networkd will control the per-interface `proxy_ndp` switch for each configured |
| interface depending on this option. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6ProxyNDPAddress=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>An IPv6 address, for which Neighbour Advertisement messages will be |
| proxied. This option may be specified more than once. systemd-networkd will add the |
| <option>IPv6ProxyNDPAddress=</option> entries to the kernel's IPv6 neighbor proxy table. |
| This option implies <option>IPv6ProxyNDP=yes</option> but has no effect if |
| <option>IPv6ProxyNDP</option> has been set to false. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6PrefixDelegation=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Whether to enable or disable Router Advertisement sending on a link. |
| Allowed values are <literal>static</literal> which distributes prefixes as defined in |
| the <literal>[IPv6PrefixDelegation]</literal> and any <literal>[IPv6Prefix]</literal> |
| sections, <literal>dhcpv6</literal> which requests prefixes using a DHCPv6 client |
| configured for another link and any values configured in the |
| <literal>[IPv6PrefixDelegation]</literal> section while ignoring all static prefix |
| configuration sections, <literal>yes</literal> which uses both static configuration |
| and DHCPv6, and <literal>false</literal> which turns off IPv6 prefix delegation |
| altogether. Defaults to <literal>false</literal>. See the |
| <literal>[IPv6PrefixDelegation]</literal> and the <literal>[IPv6Prefix]</literal> |
| sections for more configuration options. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6MTUBytes=</varname></term> |
| <listitem><para>Configures IPv6 maximum transmission unit (MTU). |
| An integer greater than or equal to 1280 bytes. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Bridge=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of the bridge to add the link to. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Bond=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of the bond to add the link to. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>VRF=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of the VRF to add the link to. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>VLAN=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of a VLAN to create on the link. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPVLAN=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of a IPVLAN to create on the link. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MACVLAN=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of a MACVLAN to create on the link. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>VXLAN=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of a VXLAN to create on the link. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Tunnel=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of a Tunnel to create on the link. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MACsec=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of a MACsec device to create on the link. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ActiveSlave=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Specifies the new active slave. The <literal>ActiveSlave=</literal> |
| option is only valid for following modes: |
| <literal>active-backup</literal>, |
| <literal>balance-alb</literal> and |
| <literal>balance-tlb</literal>. Defaults to false. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>PrimarySlave=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Specifies which slave is the primary device. The specified |
| device will always be the active slave while it is available. Only when the |
| primary is off-line will alternate devices be used. This is useful when |
| one slave is preferred over another, e.g. when one slave has higher throughput |
| than another. The <literal>PrimarySlave=</literal> option is only valid for |
| following modes: |
| <literal>active-backup</literal>, |
| <literal>balance-alb</literal> and |
| <literal>balance-tlb</literal>. Defaults to false. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ConfigureWithoutCarrier=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Allows networkd to configure a specific link even if it has no carrier. |
| Defaults to false. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IgnoreCarrierLoss=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A boolean. Allows networkd to retain both the static and dynamic configuration of the |
| interface even if its carrier is lost. Defaults to false. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Xfrm=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The name of the xfrm to create on the link. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This option may be specified more than once.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>KeepConfiguration=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean or one of <literal>static</literal>, <literal>dhcp-on-stop</literal>, |
| <literal>dhcp</literal>. When <literal>static</literal>, <command>systemd-networkd</command> |
| will not drop static addresses and routes on starting up process. When set to |
| <literal>dhcp-on-stop</literal>, <command>systemd-networkd</command> will not drop addresses |
| and routes on stopping the daemon. When <literal>dhcp</literal>, |
| the addresses and routes provided by a DHCP server will never be dropped even if the DHCP |
| lease expires. This is contrary to the DHCP specification, but may be the best choice if, |
| e.g., the root filesystem relies on this connection. The setting <literal>dhcp</literal> |
| implies <literal>dhcp-on-stop</literal>, and <literal>yes</literal> implies |
| <literal>dhcp</literal> and <literal>static</literal>. Defaults to |
| <literal>dhcp-on-stop</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| </variablelist> |
| |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[Address] Section Options</title> |
| |
| <para>An <literal>[Address]</literal> section accepts the |
| following keys. Specify several <literal>[Address]</literal> |
| sections to configure several addresses.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Address=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>As in the <literal>[Network]</literal> section. This key is mandatory. Each |
| <literal>[Address]</literal> section can contain one <varname>Address=</varname> setting.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Peer=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The peer address in a point-to-point connection. |
| Accepts the same format as the <varname>Address=</varname> |
| key.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Broadcast=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The broadcast address, which must be in the format |
| described in |
| <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>inet_pton</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>. |
| This key only applies to IPv4 addresses. If it is not |
| given, it is derived from the <varname>Address=</varname> |
| key.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Label=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>An address label.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>PreferredLifetime=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Allows the default "preferred lifetime" of the address to be overridden. |
| Only three settings are accepted: <literal>forever</literal> or <literal>infinity</literal> |
| which is the default and means that the address never expires, and <literal>0</literal> which means |
| that the address is considered immediately "expired" and will not be used, |
| unless explicitly requested. A setting of PreferredLifetime=0 is useful for |
| addresses which are added to be used only by a specific application, |
| which is then configured to use them explicitly.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Scope=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The scope of the address, which can be <literal>global</literal>, |
| <literal>link</literal> or <literal>host</literal> or an unsigned integer ranges 0 to 255. |
| Defaults to <literal>global</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>HomeAddress=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Designates this address the "home address" as defined in |
| <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6275">RFC 6275</ulink>. |
| Supported only on IPv6. Defaults to false.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DuplicateAddressDetection=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Do not perform Duplicate Address Detection |
| <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4862">RFC 4862</ulink> when adding this address. |
| Supported only on IPv6. Defaults to false.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ManageTemporaryAddress=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If true the kernel manage temporary addresses created |
| from this one as template on behalf of Privacy Extensions |
| <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3041">RFC 3041</ulink>. For this to become |
| active, the use_tempaddr sysctl setting has to be set to a value greater than zero. |
| The given address needs to have a prefix length of 64. This flag allows to use privacy |
| extensions in a manually configured network, just like if stateless auto-configuration |
| was active. Defaults to false. </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>PrefixRoute=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. When adding or modifying an IPv6 address, the userspace |
| application needs a way to suppress adding a prefix route. This is for example relevant |
| together with IFA_F_MANAGERTEMPADDR, where userspace creates autoconf generated addresses, |
| but depending on on-link, no route for the prefix should be added. Defaults to false.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>AutoJoin=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Joining multicast group on ethernet level via |
| <command>ip maddr</command> command would not work if we have an Ethernet switch that does |
| IGMP snooping since the switch would not replicate multicast packets on ports that did not |
| have IGMP reports for the multicast addresses. Linux vxlan interfaces created via |
| <command>ip link add vxlan</command> or networkd's netdev kind vxlan have the group option |
| that enables then to do the required join. By extending ip address command with option |
| <literal>autojoin</literal> we can get similar functionality for openvswitch (OVS) vxlan |
| interfaces as well as other tunneling mechanisms that need to receive multicast traffic. |
| Defaults to <literal>no</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[Neighbor] Section Options</title> |
| <para>A <literal>[Neighbor]</literal> section accepts the |
| following keys. The neighbor section adds a permanent, static |
| entry to the neighbor table (IPv6) or ARP table (IPv4) for |
| the given hardware address on the links matched for the network. |
| Specify several <literal>[Neighbor]</literal> sections to configure |
| several static neighbors.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Address=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The IP address of the neighbor.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>LinkLayerAddress=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The link layer address (MAC address or IP address) of the neighbor.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[IPv6AddressLabel] Section Options</title> |
| |
| <para>An <literal>[IPv6AddressLabel]</literal> section accepts the |
| following keys. Specify several <literal>[IPv6AddressLabel]</literal> |
| sections to configure several address labels. IPv6 address labels are |
| used for address selection. See <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3484">RFC 3484</ulink>. |
| Precedence is managed by userspace, and only the label itself is stored in the kernel</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Label=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para> The label for the prefix (an unsigned integer) ranges 0 to 4294967294. |
| 0xffffffff is reserved. This key is mandatory.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Prefix=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>IPv6 prefix is an address with a prefix length, separated by a slash <literal>/</literal> character. |
| This key is mandatory. </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[RoutingPolicyRule] Section Options</title> |
| |
| <para>An <literal>[RoutingPolicyRule]</literal> section accepts the |
| following keys. Specify several <literal>[RoutingPolicyRule]</literal> |
| sections to configure several rules.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>TypeOfService=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the type of service to match a number between 0 to 255.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>From=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the source address prefix to match. Possibly followed by a slash and the prefix length.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>To=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the destination address prefix to match. Possibly followed by a slash and the prefix length.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>FirewallMark=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the iptables firewall mark value to match (a number between 1 and 4294967295).</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Table=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the routing table identifier to lookup if the rule selector matches. Takes |
| one of <literal>default</literal>, <literal>main</literal>, and <literal>local</literal>, |
| or a number between 1 and 4294967295. Defaults to <literal>main</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Priority=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the priority of this rule. <varname>Priority=</varname> is an unsigned |
| integer. Higher number means lower priority, and rules get processed in order of increasing number.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IncomingInterface=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies incoming device to match. If the interface is loopback, the rule only matches packets originating from this host.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>OutgoingInterface=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the outgoing device to match. The outgoing interface is only available for packets originating from local sockets that are bound to a device.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>SourcePort=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the source IP port or IP port range match in forwarding information base (FIB) rules. |
| A port range is specified by the lower and upper port separated by a dash. Defaults to unset.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DestinationPort=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the destination IP port or IP port range match in forwarding information base (FIB) rules. |
| A port range is specified by the lower and upper port separated by a dash. Defaults to unset.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPProtocol=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the IP protocol to match in forwarding information base (FIB) rules. Takes IP protocol name such as <literal>tcp</literal>, |
| <literal>udp</literal> or <literal>sctp</literal>, or IP protocol number such as <literal>6</literal> for <literal>tcp</literal> or |
| <literal>17</literal> for <literal>udp</literal>. |
| Defaults to unset.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>InvertRule=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A boolean. Specifies whether the rule to be inverted. Defaults to false.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[Route] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[Route]</literal> section accepts the |
| following keys. Specify several <literal>[Route]</literal> |
| sections to configure several routes.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Gateway=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>As in the <literal>[Network]</literal> section.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>GatewayOnLink=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. If set to true, the kernel does not have |
| to check if the gateway is reachable directly by the current machine (i.e., the kernel does |
| not need to check if the gateway is attached to the local network), so that we can insert the |
| route in the kernel table without it being complained about. Defaults to <literal>no</literal>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Destination=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The destination prefix of the route. Possibly |
| followed by a slash and the prefix length. If omitted, a |
| full-length host route is assumed.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Source=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The source prefix of the route. Possibly followed by |
| a slash and the prefix length. If omitted, a full-length |
| host route is assumed.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Metric=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The metric of the route (an unsigned integer).</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IPv6Preference=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the route preference as defined in <ulink |
| url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4191">RFC4191</ulink> for Router Discovery messages. |
| Which can be one of <literal>low</literal> the route has a lowest priority, |
| <literal>medium</literal> the route has a default priority or |
| <literal>high</literal> the route has a highest priority.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Scope=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The scope of the route, which can be <literal>global</literal>, |
| <literal>link</literal> or <literal>host</literal>. Defaults to |
| <literal>global</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>PreferredSource=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The preferred source address of the route. The address |
| must be in the format described in |
| <citerefentry project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>inet_pton</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Table=<replaceable>num</replaceable></varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The table identifier for the route (a number between 1 and 4294967295, or 0 to unset). |
| The table can be retrieved using <command>ip route show table <replaceable>num</replaceable></command>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Protocol=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The protocol identifier for the route. Takes a number between 0 and 255 or the special values |
| <literal>kernel</literal>, <literal>boot</literal>, <literal>static</literal>, |
| <literal>ra</literal> and <literal>dhcp</literal>. Defaults to <literal>static</literal>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Type=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies the type for the route. Takes one of <literal>unicast</literal>, |
| <literal>local</literal>, <literal>broadcast</literal>, <literal>anycast</literal>, |
| <literal>multicast</literal>, <literal>blackhole</literal>, <literal>unreachable</literal>, |
| <literal>prohibit</literal>, <literal>throw</literal>, <literal>nat</literal>, and |
| <literal>xresolve</literal>. If <literal>unicast</literal>, a regular route is defined, i.e. a |
| route indicating the path to take to a destination network address. If <literal>blackhole</literal>, packets |
| to the defined route are discarded silently. If <literal>unreachable</literal>, packets to the defined route |
| are discarded and the ICMP message "Host Unreachable" is generated. If <literal>prohibit</literal>, packets |
| to the defined route are discarded and the ICMP message "Communication Administratively Prohibited" is |
| generated. If <literal>throw</literal>, route lookup in the current routing table will fail and the route |
| selection process will return to Routing Policy Database (RPDB). Defaults to <literal>unicast</literal>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>InitialCongestionWindow=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The TCP initial congestion window is used during the start of a TCP connection. During the start of a TCP |
| session, when a client requests a resource, the server's initial congestion window determines how many data bytes |
| will be sent during the initial burst of data. Takes a size in bytes between 1 and 4294967295 (2^32 - 1). The usual |
| suffixes K, M, G are supported and are understood to the base of 1024. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>InitialAdvertisedReceiveWindow=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The TCP initial advertised receive window is the amount of receive data (in bytes) that can initially be buffered at one time |
| on a connection. The sending host can send only that amount of data before waiting for an acknowledgment and window update |
| from the receiving host. Takes a size in bytes between 1 and 4294967295 (2^32 - 1). The usual suffixes K, M, G are supported |
| and are understood to the base of 1024. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>QuickAck=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. When true enables TCP quick ack mode for the route. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>FastOpenNoCookie=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. When true enables TCP fastopen without a cookie on a per-route basis. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>TTLPropagate=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. When true enables TTL propagation at Label Switched Path (LSP) egress. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MTUBytes=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The maximum transmission unit in bytes to set for the |
| route. The usual suffixes K, M, G, are supported and are |
| understood to the base of 1024.</para> |
| <para>Note that if IPv6 is enabled on the interface, and the MTU is chosen |
| below 1280 (the minimum MTU for IPv6) it will automatically be increased to this value.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[DHCPv4] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[DHCPv4]</literal> section configures the |
| DHCPv4 client, if it is enabled with the |
| <varname>DHCP=</varname> setting described above:</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseDNS=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the DNS servers received |
| from the DHCP server will be used and take precedence over |
| any statically configured ones.</para> |
| |
| <para>This corresponds to the <option>nameserver</option> |
| option in <citerefentry |
| project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>resolv.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RoutesToDNS=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true, the routes to the DNS servers received from the DHCP server will be |
| configured. When <varname>UseDNS=</varname> is disabled, this setting is ignored. |
| Defaults to false.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseNTP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the NTP servers received |
| from the DHCP server will be used by systemd-timesyncd |
| and take precedence over any statically configured ones.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseMTU=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true, the interface maximum transmission unit |
| from the DHCP server will be used on the current link. |
| If <varname>MTUBytes=</varname> is set, then this setting is ignored. |
| Defaults to false.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Anonymize=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. When true, the options sent to the DHCP server will |
| follow the <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7844">RFC 7844</ulink> |
| (Anonymity Profiles for DHCP Clients) to minimize disclosure of identifying information. |
| Defaults to false.</para> |
| |
| <para>This option should only be set to true when |
| <varname>MACAddressPolicy=</varname> is set to <literal>random</literal> |
| (see <citerefentry |
| project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>systemd.link</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>).</para> |
| |
| <para>Note that this configuration will overwrite others. |
| In concrete, the following variables will be ignored: |
| <varname>SendHostname=</varname>, <varname>ClientIdentifier=</varname>, |
| <varname>UseRoutes=</varname>, <varname>SendHostname=</varname>, |
| <varname>UseMTU=</varname>, <varname>VendorClassIdentifier=</varname>, |
| <varname>UseTimezone=</varname>.</para> |
| |
| <para>With this option enabled DHCP requests will mimic those generated by Microsoft Windows, in |
| order to reduce the ability to fingerprint and recognize installations. This means DHCP request |
| sizes will grow and lease data will be more comprehensive than normally, though most of the |
| requested data is not actually used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>SendHostname=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the machine's hostname will be sent to the DHCP server. |
| Note that the machine's hostname must consist only of 7-bit ASCII lower-case characters and |
| no spaces or dots, and be formatted as a valid DNS domain name. Otherwise, the hostname is not |
| sent even if this is set to true.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseHostname=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the hostname received from |
| the DHCP server will be set as the transient hostname of the system. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Hostname=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Use this value for the hostname which is sent to the DHCP server, instead of machine's hostname. |
| Note that the specified hostname must consist only of 7-bit ASCII lower-case characters and |
| no spaces or dots, and be formatted as a valid DNS domain name.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseDomains=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean, or the special value <literal>route</literal>. When true, the domain name |
| received from the DHCP server will be used as DNS search domain over this link, similar to the effect of |
| the <option>Domains=</option> setting. If set to <literal>route</literal>, the domain name received from |
| the DHCP server will be used for routing DNS queries only, but not for searching, similar to the effect of |
| the <option>Domains=</option> setting when the argument is prefixed with <literal>~</literal>. Defaults to |
| false.</para> |
| |
| <para>It is recommended to enable this option only on trusted networks, as setting this affects resolution |
| of all host names, in particular of single-label names. It is generally safer to use the supplied domain |
| only as routing domain, rather than as search domain, in order to not have it affect local resolution of |
| single-label names.</para> |
| |
| <para>When set to true, this setting corresponds to the <option>domain</option> option in <citerefentry |
| project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>resolv.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseRoutes=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the static routes will be requested from the DHCP server and added to the |
| routing table with a metric of 1024, and a scope of "global", "link" or "host", depending on the route's |
| destination and gateway. If the destination is on the local host, e.g., 127.x.x.x, or the same as the |
| link's own address, the scope will be set to "host". Otherwise if the gateway is null (a direct route), a |
| "link" scope will be used. For anything else, scope defaults to "global".</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseTimezone=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>When true, the timezone received from the |
| DHCP server will be set as timezone of the local |
| system. Defaults to <literal>no</literal>.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ClientIdentifier=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The DHCPv4 client identifier to use. Takes one of <literal>mac</literal>, <literal>duid</literal> or <literal>duid-only</literal>. |
| If set to <literal>mac</literal>, the MAC address of the link is used. |
| If set to <literal>duid</literal>, an RFC4361-compliant Client ID, which is the combination of IAID and DUID (see below), is used. |
| If set to <literal>duid-only</literal>, only DUID is used, this may not be RFC compliant, but some setups may require to use this. |
| Defaults to <literal>duid</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>VendorClassIdentifier=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The vendor class identifier used to identify vendor |
| type and configuration.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UserClass=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A DHCPv4 client can use UserClass option to identify the type or category of user or applications |
| it represents. The information contained in this option is a string that represents the user class of which |
| the client is a member. Each class sets an identifying string of information to be used by the DHCP |
| service to classify clients. Takes a whitespace-separated list of strings.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MaxAttempts=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies how many times the DHCPv4 client configuration should be attempted. Takes a |
| number or <literal>infinity</literal>. Defaults to <literal>infinity</literal>. |
| Note that the time between retries is increased exponentially, so the network will not be |
| overloaded even if this number is high.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DUIDType=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Override the global <varname>DUIDType</varname> setting for this network. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>networkd.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for a description of possible values.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DUIDRawData=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Override the global <varname>DUIDRawData</varname> setting for this network. See |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>networkd.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| for a description of possible values.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>IAID=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The DHCP Identity Association Identifier (IAID) for the interface, a 32-bit unsigned integer.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RequestBroadcast=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Request the server to use broadcast messages before |
| the IP address has been configured. This is necessary for |
| devices that cannot receive RAW packets, or that cannot |
| receive packets at all before an IP address has been |
| configured. On the other hand, this must not be enabled on |
| networks where broadcasts are filtered out.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RouteMetric=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Set the routing metric for routes specified by the |
| DHCP server.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RouteTable=<replaceable>num</replaceable></varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The table identifier for DHCP routes (a number between 1 and 4294967295, or 0 to unset). |
| The table can be retrieved using <command>ip route show table <replaceable>num</replaceable></command>. |
| </para> |
| <para>When used in combination with <varname>VRF=</varname> the |
| VRF's routing table is used unless this parameter is specified. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ListenPort=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Allow setting custom port for the DHCP client to listen on.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>SendRelease=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true, the DHCPv4 client sends a DHCP release packet when it stops. |
| Defaults to false.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>BlackList=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of IPv4 addresses. DHCP offers from servers in the list are rejected.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[DHCPv6] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[DHCPv6]</literal> section configures the DHCPv6 client, if it is enabled with the |
| <varname>DHCP=</varname> setting described above, or invoked by the IPv6 Router Advertisement:</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseDNS=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>UseNTP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>As in the <literal>[DHCPv4]</literal> section.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RapidCommit=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. The DHCPv6 client can obtain configuration parameters from a DHCPv6 server through |
| a rapid two-message exchange (solicit and reply). When the rapid commit option is enabled by both |
| the DHCPv6 client and the DHCPv6 server, the two-message exchange is used, rather than the default |
| four-method exchange (solicit, advertise, request, and reply). The two-message exchange provides |
| faster client configuration and is beneficial in environments in which networks are under a heavy load. |
| See <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3315#section-17.2.1">RFC 3315</ulink> for details. |
| Defaults to true.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ForceDHCPv6PDOtherInformation=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean that enforces DHCPv6 stateful mode when the 'Other information' bit is set in |
| Router Advertisement messages. By default setting only the 'O' bit in Router Advertisements |
| makes DHCPv6 request network information in a stateless manner using a two-message Information |
| Request and Information Reply message exchange. |
| <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7084">RFC 7084</ulink>, requirement WPD-4, updates |
| this behavior for a Customer Edge router so that stateful DHCPv6 Prefix Delegation is also |
| requested when only the 'O' bit is set in Router Advertisements. This option enables such a CE |
| behavior as it is impossible to automatically distinguish the intention of the 'O' bit otherwise. |
| By default this option is set to 'false', enable it if no prefixes are delegated when the device |
| should be acting as a CE router.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[IPv6AcceptRA] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[IPv6AcceptRA]</literal> section configures the IPv6 Router Advertisement |
| (RA) client, if it is enabled with the <varname>IPv6AcceptRA=</varname> setting described |
| above:</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseDNS=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the DNS servers received in the Router Advertisement will be used and take |
| precedence over any statically configured ones.</para> |
| |
| <para>This corresponds to the <option>nameserver</option> option in <citerefentry |
| project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>resolv.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseDomains=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean, or the special value <literal>route</literal>. When true, the domain name |
| received via IPv6 Router Advertisement (RA) will be used as DNS search domain over this link, similar to |
| the effect of the <option>Domains=</option> setting. If set to <literal>route</literal>, the domain name |
| received via IPv6 RA will be used for routing DNS queries only, but not for searching, similar to the |
| effect of the <option>Domains=</option> setting when the argument is prefixed with |
| <literal>~</literal>. Defaults to false.</para> |
| |
| <para>It is recommended to enable this option only on trusted networks, as setting this affects resolution |
| of all host names, in particular of single-label names. It is generally safer to use the supplied domain |
| only as routing domain, rather than as search domain, in order to not have it affect local resolution of |
| single-label names.</para> |
| |
| <para>When set to true, this setting corresponds to the <option>domain</option> option in <citerefentry |
| project='man-pages'><refentrytitle>resolv.conf</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RouteTable=<replaceable>num</replaceable></varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The table identifier for the routes received in the Router Advertisement |
| (a number between 1 and 4294967295, or 0 to unset). |
| The table can be retrieved using <command>ip route show table <replaceable>num</replaceable></command>. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseAutonomousPrefix=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the autonomous prefix received in the Router Advertisement will be used and take |
| precedence over any statically configured ones.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseOnLinkPrefix=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>When true (the default), the onlink prefix received in the Router Advertisement will be used and take |
| precedence over any statically configured ones.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>BlackList=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>A whitespace-separated list of IPv6 prefixes. IPv6 prefixes supplied via router advertisements in the list are ignored.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[DHCPServer] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[DHCPServer]</literal> section contains |
| settings for the DHCP server, if enabled via the |
| <varname>DHCPServer=</varname> option described above:</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>PoolOffset=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>PoolSize=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Configures the pool of addresses to hand out. The pool |
| is a contiguous sequence of IP addresses in the subnet configured for |
| the server address, which does not include the subnet nor the broadcast |
| address. <varname>PoolOffset=</varname> takes the offset of the pool |
| from the start of subnet, or zero to use the default value. |
| <varname>PoolSize=</varname> takes the number of IP addresses in the |
| pool or zero to use the default value. By default, the pool starts at |
| the first address after the subnet address and takes up the rest of |
| the subnet, excluding the broadcast address. If the pool includes |
| the server address (the default), this is reserved and not handed |
| out to clients.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DefaultLeaseTimeSec=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>MaxLeaseTimeSec=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Control the default and maximum DHCP lease |
| time to pass to clients. These settings take time values in seconds or |
| another common time unit, depending on the suffix. The default |
| lease time is used for clients that did not ask for a specific |
| lease time. If a client asks for a lease time longer than the |
| maximum lease time, it is automatically shortened to the |
| specified time. The default lease time defaults to 1h, the |
| maximum lease time to 12h. Shorter lease times are beneficial |
| if the configuration data in DHCP leases changes frequently |
| and clients shall learn the new settings with shorter |
| latencies. Longer lease times reduce the generated DHCP |
| network traffic.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EmitDNS=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>DNS=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether the DHCP leases handed out |
| to clients shall contain DNS server information. Defaults to <literal>yes</literal>. |
| The DNS servers to pass to clients may be configured with the |
| <varname>DNS=</varname> option, which takes a list of IPv4 |
| addresses. If the <varname>EmitDNS=</varname> option is |
| enabled but no servers configured, the servers are |
| automatically propagated from an "uplink" interface that has |
| appropriate servers set. The "uplink" interface is determined |
| by the default route of the system with the highest |
| priority. Note that this information is acquired at the time |
| the lease is handed out, and does not take uplink interfaces |
| into account that acquire DNS or NTP server information at a |
| later point. DNS server propagation does not take |
| <filename>/etc/resolv.conf</filename> into account. Also, note |
| that the leases are not refreshed if the uplink network |
| configuration changes. To ensure clients regularly acquire the |
| most current uplink DNS server information, it is thus |
| advisable to shorten the DHCP lease time via |
| <varname>MaxLeaseTimeSec=</varname> described |
| above.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EmitNTP=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>NTP=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Similar to the <varname>EmitDNS=</varname> and |
| <varname>DNS=</varname> settings described above, these |
| settings configure whether and what NTP server information |
| shall be emitted as part of the DHCP lease. The same syntax, |
| propagation semantics and defaults apply as for |
| <varname>EmitDNS=</varname> and |
| <varname>DNS=</varname>.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EmitRouter=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Similar to the <varname>EmitDNS=</varname> |
| setting described above, this setting configures whether the |
| DHCP lease should contain the router option. The same syntax, |
| propagation semantics and defaults apply as for |
| <varname>EmitDNS=</varname>.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EmitTimezone=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>Timezone=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether the DHCP leases handed out |
| to clients shall contain timezone information. Defaults to <literal>yes</literal>. The |
| <varname>Timezone=</varname> setting takes a timezone string |
| (such as <literal>Europe/Berlin</literal> or |
| <literal>UTC</literal>) to pass to clients. If no explicit |
| timezone is set, the system timezone of the local host is |
| propagated, as determined by the |
| <filename>/etc/localtime</filename> symlink.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[IPv6PrefixDelegation] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[IPv6PrefixDelegation]</literal> section contains |
| settings for sending IPv6 Router Advertisements and whether to act as |
| a router, if enabled via the <varname>IPv6PrefixDelegation=</varname> |
| option described above. IPv6 network prefixes are defined with one or |
| more <literal>[IPv6Prefix]</literal> sections.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Managed=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>OtherInformation=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Takes a boolean. Controls whether a DHCPv6 server is used to acquire IPv6 |
| addresses on the network link when <varname>Managed=</varname> |
| is set to <literal>true</literal> or if only additional network |
| information can be obtained via DHCPv6 for the network link when |
| <varname>OtherInformation=</varname> is set to |
| <literal>true</literal>. Both settings default to |
| <literal>false</literal>, which means that a DHCPv6 server is not being |
| used.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RouterLifetimeSec=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Takes a timespan. Configures the IPv6 router lifetime in seconds. If set, |
| this host also announces itself in Router Advertisements as an IPv6 |
| router for the network link. When unset, the host is not acting as a router.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RouterPreference=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Configures IPv6 router preference if |
| <varname>RouterLifetimeSec=</varname> is non-zero. Valid values are |
| <literal>high</literal>, <literal>medium</literal> and |
| <literal>low</literal>, with <literal>normal</literal> and |
| <literal>default</literal> added as synonyms for |
| <literal>medium</literal> just to make configuration easier. See |
| <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4191">RFC 4191</ulink> |
| for details. Defaults to <literal>medium</literal>.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EmitDNS=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>DNS=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para><varname>DNS=</varname> specifies a list of recursive |
| DNS server IPv6 addresses that distributed via Router Advertisement |
| messages when <varname>EmitDNS=</varname> is true. If <varname>DNS= |
| </varname> is empty, DNS servers are read from the |
| <literal>[Network]</literal> section. If the |
| <literal>[Network]</literal> section does not contain any DNS servers |
| either, DNS servers from the uplink with the highest priority default |
| route are used. When <varname>EmitDNS=</varname> is false, no DNS server |
| information is sent in Router Advertisement messages. |
| <varname>EmitDNS=</varname> defaults to true. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EmitDomains=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>Domains=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>A list of DNS search domains distributed via Router |
| Advertisement messages when <varname>EmitDomains=</varname> is true. If |
| <varname>Domains=</varname> is empty, DNS search domains are read from the |
| <literal>[Network]</literal> section. If the <literal>[Network]</literal> |
| section does not contain any DNS search domains either, DNS search |
| domains from the uplink with the highest priority default route are |
| used. When <varname>EmitDomains=</varname> is false, no DNS search domain |
| information is sent in Router Advertisement messages. |
| <varname>EmitDomains=</varname> defaults to true. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>DNSLifetimeSec=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Lifetime in seconds for the DNS server addresses listed |
| in <varname>DNS=</varname> and search domains listed in |
| <varname>Domains=</varname>.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[IPv6Prefix] Section Options</title> |
| <para>One or more <literal>[IPv6Prefix]</literal> sections contain the IPv6 |
| prefixes that are announced via Router Advertisements. See |
| <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4861">RFC 4861</ulink> |
| for further details.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>AddressAutoconfiguration=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>OnLink=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Takes a boolean to specify whether IPv6 addresses can be |
| autoconfigured with this prefix and whether the prefix can be used for |
| onlink determination. Both settings default to <literal>true</literal> |
| in order to ease configuration. |
| </para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Prefix=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>The IPv6 prefix that is to be distributed to hosts. |
| Similarly to configuring static IPv6 addresses, the setting is |
| configured as an IPv6 prefix and its prefix length, separated by a |
| <literal>/</literal> character. Use multiple |
| <literal>[IPv6Prefix]</literal> sections to configure multiple IPv6 |
| prefixes since prefix lifetimes, address autoconfiguration and onlink |
| status may differ from one prefix to another.</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>PreferredLifetimeSec=</varname></term> |
| <term><varname>ValidLifetimeSec=</varname></term> |
| |
| <listitem><para>Preferred and valid lifetimes for the prefix measured in |
| seconds. <varname>PreferredLifetimeSec=</varname> defaults to 604800 |
| seconds (one week) and <varname>ValidLifetimeSec=</varname> defaults |
| to 2592000 seconds (30 days).</para></listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[Bridge] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[Bridge]</literal> section accepts the |
| following keys.</para> |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UnicastFlood=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Controls whether the bridge should flood |
| traffic for which an FDB entry is missing and the destination |
| is unknown through this port. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MulticastFlood=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Controls whether the bridge should flood |
| traffic for which an MDB entry is missing and the destination |
| is unknown through this port. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MulticastToUnicast=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Multicast to unicast works on top of the multicast snooping feature of |
| the bridge. Which means unicast copies are only delivered to hosts which are interested in it. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>NeighborSuppression=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether ARP and ND neighbor suppression is enabled for |
| this port. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Learning=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether MAC address learning is enabled for |
| this port. When unset, the kernel's default will be used. |
| </para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>HairPin=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether traffic may be sent back |
| out of the port on which it was received. When this flag is false, and the bridge |
| will not forward traffic back out of the receiving port. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>UseBPDU=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether STP Bridge Protocol Data Units will be |
| processed by the bridge port. When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>FastLeave=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. This flag allows the bridge to immediately stop multicast |
| traffic on a port that receives an IGMP Leave message. It is only used with |
| IGMP snooping if enabled on the bridge. When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>AllowPortToBeRoot=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether a given port is allowed to |
| become a root port. Only used when STP is enabled on the bridge. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ProxyARP=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether proxy ARP to be enabled on this port. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>ProxyARPWiFi=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. Configures whether proxy ARP to be enabled on this port |
| which meets extended requirements by IEEE 802.11 and Hotspot 2.0 specifications. |
| When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MulticastRouter=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Configures this port for having multicast routers attached. A port with a multicast |
| router will receive all multicast traffic. Takes one of <literal>no</literal> |
| to disable multicast routers on this port, <literal>query</literal> to let the system detect |
| the presence of routers, <literal>permanent</literal> to permanently enable multicast traffic |
| forwarding on this port, or <literal>temporary</literal> to enable multicast routers temporarily |
| on this port, not depending on incoming queries. When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Cost=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Sets the "cost" of sending packets of this interface. |
| Each port in a bridge may have a different speed and the cost |
| is used to decide which link to use. Faster interfaces |
| should have lower costs. It is an integer value between 1 and |
| 65535.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Priority=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Sets the "priority" of sending packets on this interface. |
| Each port in a bridge may have a different priority which is used |
| to decide which link to use. Lower value means higher priority. |
| It is an integer value between 0 to 63. Networkd does not set any |
| default, meaning the kernel default value of 32 is used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[BridgeFDB] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[BridgeFDB]</literal> section manages the |
| forwarding database table of a port and accepts the following |
| keys. Specify several <literal>[BridgeFDB]</literal> sections to |
| configure several static MAC table entries.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>MACAddress=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>As in the <literal>[Network]</literal> section. This |
| key is mandatory.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>Destination=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes an IP address of the destination VXLAN tunnel endpoint.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>VLANId=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The VLAN ID for the new static MAC table entry. If |
| omitted, no VLAN ID information is appended to the new static MAC |
| table entry.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>VNI=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The VXLAN Network Identifier (or VXLAN Segment ID) to use to connect to |
| the remote VXLAN tunnel endpoint. Takes a number in the range 1-16777215. |
| Defaults to unset.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>AssociatedWith=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Specifies where the address is associated with. Takes one of <literal>use</literal>, |
| <literal>self</literal>, <literal>master</literal> or <literal>router</literal>. |
| <literal>use</literal> means the address is in use. User space can use this option to |
| indicate to the kernel that the fdb entry is in use. <literal>self</literal> means |
| the address is associated with the port drivers fdb. Usually hardware. <literal>master</literal> |
| means the address is associated with master devices fdb. <literal>router</literal> means |
| the destination address is associated with a router. Note that it's valid if the referenced |
| device is a VXLAN type device and has route shortcircuit enabled. Defaults to <literal>self</literal>.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[CAN] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[CAN]</literal> section manages the Controller Area Network (CAN bus) and accepts the |
| following keys.</para> |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>BitRate=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The bitrate of CAN device in bits per second. The usual SI prefixes (K, M) with the base of 1000 can |
| be used here.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>SamplePoint=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Optional sample point in percent with one decimal (e.g. <literal>75%</literal>, |
| <literal>87.5%</literal>) or permille (e.g. <literal>875‰</literal>).</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>RestartSec=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Automatic restart delay time. If set to a non-zero value, a restart of the CAN controller will be |
| triggered automatically in case of a bus-off condition after the specified delay time. Subsecond delays can |
| be specified using decimals (e.g. <literal>0.1s</literal>) or a <literal>ms</literal> or |
| <literal>us</literal> postfix. Using <literal>infinity</literal> or <literal>0</literal> will turn the |
| automatic restart off. By default automatic restart is disabled.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>TripleSampling=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>Takes a boolean. When <literal>yes</literal>, three samples (instead of one) are used to determine |
| the value of a received bit by majority rule. When unset, the kernel's default will be used.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>[BridgeVLAN] Section Options</title> |
| <para>The <literal>[BridgeVLAN]</literal> section manages the VLAN ID configuration of a bridge port and accepts |
| the following keys. Specify several <literal>[BridgeVLAN]</literal> sections to configure several VLAN entries. |
| The <varname>VLANFiltering=</varname> option has to be enabled, see <literal>[Bridge]</literal> section in |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para> |
| |
| <variablelist class='network-directives'> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>VLAN=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The VLAN ID allowed on the port. This can be either a single ID or a range M-N. VLAN IDs are valid |
| from 1 to 4094.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>EgressUntagged=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The VLAN ID specified here will be used to untag frames on egress. Configuring |
| <varname>EgressUntagged=</varname> implicates the use of <varname>VLAN=</varname> above and will enable the |
| VLAN ID for ingress as well. This can be either a single ID or a range M-N.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| <varlistentry> |
| <term><varname>PVID=</varname></term> |
| <listitem> |
| <para>The Port VLAN ID specified here is assigned to all untagged frames at ingress. |
| <varname>PVID=</varname> can be used only once. Configuring <varname>PVID=</varname> implicates the use of |
| <varname>VLAN=</varname> above and will enable the VLAN ID for ingress as well.</para> |
| </listitem> |
| </varlistentry> |
| </variablelist> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>Examples</title> |
| <example> |
| <title>Static network configuration</title> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/50-static.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=enp2s0 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Address=192.168.0.15/24 |
| Gateway=192.168.0.1</programlisting> |
| |
| <para>This brings interface <literal>enp2s0</literal> up with a static address. The |
| specified gateway will be used for a default route.</para> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title>DHCP on ethernet links</title> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/80-dhcp.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=en* |
| |
| [Network] |
| DHCP=yes</programlisting> |
| |
| <para>This will enable DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 on all interfaces with names starting with |
| <literal>en</literal> (i.e. ethernet interfaces).</para> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title>A bridge with two enslaved links</title> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/25-bridge-static.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=bridge0 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Address=192.168.0.15/24 |
| Gateway=192.168.0.1 |
| DNS=192.168.0.1</programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/25-bridge-slave-interface-1.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=enp2s0 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Bridge=bridge0</programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/25-bridge-slave-interface-2.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=wlp3s0 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Bridge=bridge0</programlisting> |
| |
| <para>This creates a bridge and attaches devices <literal>enp2s0</literal> and |
| <literal>wlp3s0</literal> to it. The bridge will have the specified static address |
| and network assigned, and a default route via the specified gateway will be |
| added. The specified DNS server will be added to the global list of DNS resolvers. |
| </para> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title></title> |
| |
| <programlisting> |
| # /etc/systemd/network/20-bridge-slave-interface-vlan.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=enp2s0 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Bridge=bridge0 |
| |
| [BridgeVLAN] |
| VLAN=1-32 |
| PVID=42 |
| EgressUntagged=42 |
| |
| [BridgeVLAN] |
| VLAN=100-200 |
| |
| [BridgeVLAN] |
| EgressUntagged=300-400</programlisting> |
| |
| <para>This overrides the configuration specified in the previous example for the |
| interface <literal>enp2s0</literal>, and enables VLAN on that bridge port. VLAN IDs |
| 1-32, 42, 100-400 will be allowed. Packets tagged with VLAN IDs 42, 300-400 will be |
| untagged when they leave on this interface. Untagged packets which arrive on this |
| interface will be assigned VLAN ID 42.</para> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title>Various tunnels</title> |
| |
| <programlisting>/etc/systemd/network/25-tunnels.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=ens1 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Tunnel=ipip-tun |
| Tunnel=sit-tun |
| Tunnel=gre-tun |
| Tunnel=vti-tun |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting>/etc/systemd/network/25-tunnel-ipip.netdev |
| [NetDev] |
| Name=ipip-tun |
| Kind=ipip |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting>/etc/systemd/network/25-tunnel-sit.netdev |
| [NetDev] |
| Name=sit-tun |
| Kind=sit |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting>/etc/systemd/network/25-tunnel-gre.netdev |
| [NetDev] |
| Name=gre-tun |
| Kind=gre |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting>/etc/systemd/network/25-tunnel-vti.netdev |
| [NetDev] |
| Name=vti-tun |
| Kind=vti |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <para>This will bring interface <literal>ens1</literal> up and create an IPIP tunnel, |
| a SIT tunnel, a GRE tunnel, and a VTI tunnel using it.</para> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title>A bond device</title> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/30-bond1.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=bond1 |
| |
| [Network] |
| DHCP=ipv6 |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/30-bond1.netdev |
| [NetDev] |
| Name=bond1 |
| Kind=bond |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/30-bond1-dev1.network |
| [Match] |
| MACAddress=52:54:00:e9:64:41 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Bond=bond1 |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/30-bond1-dev2.network |
| [Match] |
| MACAddress=52:54:00:e9:64:42 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Bond=bond1 |
| </programlisting> |
| |
| <para>This will create a bond device <literal>bond1</literal> and enslave the two |
| devices with MAC addresses 52:54:00:e9:64:41 and 52:54:00:e9:64:42 to it. IPv6 DHCP |
| will be used to acquire an address.</para> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title>Virtual Routing and Forwarding (VRF)</title> |
| <para>Add the <literal>bond1</literal> interface to the VRF master interface |
| <literal>vrf1</literal>. This will redirect routes generated on this interface to be |
| within the routing table defined during VRF creation. For kernels before 4.8 traffic |
| won't be redirected towards the VRFs routing table unless specific ip-rules are added. |
| </para> |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/25-vrf.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=bond1 |
| |
| [Network] |
| VRF=vrf1 |
| </programlisting> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title>MacVTap</title> |
| <para>This brings up a network interface <literal>macvtap-test</literal> |
| and attaches it to <literal>enp0s25</literal>.</para> |
| <programlisting># /usr/lib/systemd/network/25-macvtap.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=enp0s25 |
| |
| [Network] |
| MACVTAP=macvtap-test |
| </programlisting> |
| </example> |
| |
| <example> |
| <title>A Xfrm interface with physical underlying device.</title> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/27-xfrm.netdev |
| [NetDev] |
| Name=xfrm0 |
| |
| [Xfrm] |
| InterfaceId=7</programlisting> |
| |
| <programlisting># /etc/systemd/network/27-eth0.network |
| [Match] |
| Name=eth0 |
| |
| [Network] |
| Xfrm=xfrm0</programlisting> |
| |
| <para>This creates a <literal>xfrm0</literal> interface and binds it to the <literal>eth0</literal> device. |
| This allows hardware based ipsec offloading to the <literal>eth0</literal> nic. |
| If offloading is not needed, xfrm interfaces can be assigned to the <literal>lo</literal> device. |
| </para> |
| </example> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| <refsect1> |
| <title>See Also</title> |
| <para> |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>, |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-networkd.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>, |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.link</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>, |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd.netdev</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>, |
| <citerefentry><refentrytitle>systemd-resolved.service</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> |
| </para> |
| </refsect1> |
| |
| </refentry> |