NETWORKMANAGER(8) Network management daemons NETWORKMANAGER(8)NAMENetworkManager - network management daemon
SYNOPSISNetworkManager [OPTIONS...]
DESCRIPTION
The NetworkManager daemon attempts to make networking configuration and
operation as painless and automatic as possible by managing the primary
network connection and other network interfaces, like Ethernet, WiFi,
and Mobile Broadband devices. NetworkManager will connect any network
device when a connection for that device becomes available, unless that
behavior is disabled. Information about networking is exported via a
D-Bus interface to any interested application, providing a rich API
with which to inspect and control network settings and operation.
DISPATCHER SCRIPTSNetworkManager will execute scripts in the
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d directory or subdirectories in
alphabetical order in response to network events. Each script should be
a regular executable file owned by root. Furthermore, it must not be
writable by group or other, and not setuid.
Each script receives two arguments, the first being the interface name
of the device an operation just happened on, and second the action. For
device actions, the interface is the name of the kernel interface
suitable for IP configuration. Thus it is either VPN_IP_IFACE,
DEVICE_IP_IFACE, or DEVICE_IFACE, as applicable. For the hostname and
connectivity-change actions it is always "none".
The actions are:
pre-up
The interface is connected to the network but is not yet fully
activated. Scripts acting on this event must be placed or symlinked
into the /etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/pre-up.d directory, and
NetworkManager will wait for script execution to complete before
indicating to applications that the interface is fully activated.
up
The interface has been activated.
pre-down
The interface will be deactivated but has not yet been disconnected
from the network. Scripts acting on this event must be placed or
symlinked into the /etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/pre-down.d
directory, and NetworkManager will wait for script execution to
complete before disconnecting the interface from its network. Note
that this event is not emitted for forced disconnections, like when
carrier is lost or a wireless signal fades. It is only emitted when
there is an opportunity to cleanly handle a network disconnection
event.
down
The interface has been deactivated.
vpn-pre-up
The VPN is connected to the network but is not yet fully activated.
Scripts acting on this event must be placed or symlinked into the
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/pre-up.d directory, and
NetworkManager will wait for script execution to complete before
indicating to applications that the VPN is fully activated.
vpn-up
A VPN connection has been activated.
vpn-pre-down
The VPN will be deactivated but has not yet been disconnected from
the network. Scripts acting on this event must be placed or
symlinked into the /etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/pre-down.d
directory, and NetworkManager will wait for script execution to
complete before disconnecting the VPN from its network. Note that
this event is not emitted for forced disconnections, like when the
VPN terminates unexpectedly or general connectivity is lost. It is
only emitted when there is an opportunity to cleanly handle a VPN
disconnection event.
vpn-down
A VPN connection has been deactivated.
hostname
The system hostname has been updated. Use gethostname(2) to
retrieve it. The interface name (first argument) is empty and no
environment variable is set for this action.
dhcp4-change
The DHCPv4 lease has changed (renewed, rebound, etc).
dhcp6-change
The DHCPv6 lease has changed (renewed, rebound, etc).
connectivity-change
The network connectivity state has changed (no connectivity, went
online, etc).
The environment contains more information about the interface and the
connection. The following variables are available for the use in the
dispatcher scripts:
CONNECTION_UUID
The UUID of the connection profile.
CONNECTION_ID
The name (ID) of the connection profile.
CONNECTION_DBUS_PATH
The NetworkManager D-Bus path of the connection.
CONNECTION_FILENAME
The backing file name of the connection profile (if any).
CONNECTION_EXTERNAL
If "1", this indicates that the connection describes a network
configuration created outside of NetworkManager.
DEVICE_IFACE
The interface name of the control interface of the device.
Depending on the device type, this differs from DEVICE_IP_IFACE.
For example for ADSL devices, this could be 'atm0' or for WWAN
devices it might be 'ttyUSB0'.
DEVICE_IP_IFACE
The IP interface name of the device. This is the network interface
on which IP addresses and routes will be configured.
IP4_ADDRESS_N
The IPv4 address in the format "address/prefix gateway", where N is
a number from 0 to (# IPv4 addresses - 1). gateway item in this
variable is deprecated, use IP4_GATEWAY instead.
IP4_NUM_ADDRESSES
The variable contains the number of IPv4 addresses the script may
expect.
IP4_GATEWAY
The gateway IPv4 address in traditional numbers-and-dots notation.
IP4_ROUTE_N
The IPv4 route in the format "address/prefix next-hop metric",
where N is a number from 0 to (# IPv4 routes - 1).
IP4_NUM_ROUTES
The variable contains the number of IPv4 routes the script may
expect.
IP4_NAMESERVERS
The variable contains a space-separated list of the DNS servers.
IP4_DOMAINS
The variable contains a space-separated list of the search domains.
DHCP4_<dhcp-option-name>
If the connection used DHCP for address configuration, the received
DHCP configuration is passed in the environment using standard DHCP
option names, prefixed with "DHCP4_", like
"DHCP4_HOST_NAME=foobar".
IP6_<name> and DHCP6_<name>
The same variables as for IPv4 are available for IPv6, but the
prefixes are IP6_ and DHCP6_ instead.
CONNECTIVITY_STATE
The network connectivity state, which can take the values defined
by the NMConnectivityState type, from the
org.freedesktop.NetworkManager D-Bus API: unknown, none, portal,
limited or full. Note: this variable will only be set for
connectivity-change actions.
In case of VPN, VPN_IP_IFACE is set, and IP4_*, IP6_* variables with
VPN prefix are exported too, like VPN_IP4_ADDRESS_0,
VPN_IP4_NUM_ADDRESSES.
Dispatcher scripts are run one at a time, but asynchronously from the
main NetworkManager process, and will be killed if they run for too
long. If your script might take arbitrarily long to complete, you
should spawn a child process and have the parent return immediately.
Scripts that are symbolic links pointing inside the
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/no-wait.d/ directory are run
immediately, without waiting for the termination of previous scripts,
and in parallel. Also beware that once a script is queued, it will
always be run, even if a later event renders it obsolete. (Eg, if an
interface goes up, and then back down again quickly, it is possible
that one or more "up" scripts will be run after the interface has gone
down.)
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
--version | -V
Print the NetworkManager software version and exit.
--help | -h
Print NetworkManager's available options and exit.
--no-daemon | -n
Do not daemonize.
--debug | -d
Do not daemonize, and direct log output to the controlling terminal
in addition to syslog.
--pid-file | -p
Specify location of a PID file. The PID file is used for storing
PID of the running process and prevents running multiple instances.
--state-file
Specify file for storing state of the NetworkManager persistently.
If not specified, the default value of
/var/lib/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.state is used.
--config
Specify configuration file to set up various settings for
NetworkManager. If not specified, the default value of
/etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf is used with a fallback to
the older 'nm-system-settings.conf' if located in the same
directory. See NetworkManager.conf(5) for more information on
configuration file.
--plugins
List plugins used to manage system-wide connection settings. This
list has preference over plugins specified in the configuration
file. Currently supported plugins are: keyfile, ifcfg-rh,
ifcfg-suse, ifupdown.
--log-level
Sets how much information NetworkManager sends to the log
destination (usually syslog's "daemon" facility). By default, only
informational, warning, and error messages are logged. See the
section on logging in NetworkManager.conf(5) for more information.
--log-domains
A comma-separated list specifying which operations are logged to
the log destination (usually syslog). By default, most domains are
logging-enabled. See the section on logging in
NetworkManager.conf(5) for more information.
--print-config
Print the NetworkManager configuration to stdout and exit.
UDEV PROPERTIESudev(7) device manager is used for the network device discovery. The
following property influences how NetworkManager manages the devices:
NM_UNMANAGED
No default connection will be created and automatic activation will
not be attempted when this property of a device is set to a true
value ("1" or "true"). You will still be able to attach a
connection to the device manually or observe externally added
configuration such as addresses or routes.
Create an udev rule that sets this property to prevent
NetworkManager from interfering with virtual Ethernet device
interfaces that are managed by virtualization tools.
SIGNALSNetworkManager process handles the following signals:
SIGHUP
The signal causes a reload of NetworkManager's configuration. Note
that not all configuration parameters can be changed at runtime and
therefore some changes may be applied only after the next restart
of the daemon. A SIGHUP also involves further reloading actions,
like doing a DNS update and restarting the DNS plugin. The latter
can be useful for example when using the dnsmasq plugin and
changing its configuration in /etc/NetworkManager/dnsmasq.d.
However, it also means this will shortly interrupt name resolution.
In the future, there may be further actions added. A SIGHUP means
to update NetworkManager configuration and reload everything that
is supported. Note that this does not reload connections from disk.
For that there is a D-Bus API and nmcli's reload action
SIGUSR1
The signal forces a rewrite of DNS configuration. Contrary to
SIGHUP, this does not restart the DNS plugin and will not interrupt
name resolution. In the future, further actions may be added. A
SIGUSR1 means to write out data like resolv.conf, or refresh a
cache. It is a subset of what is done for SIGHUP without reloading
configuration from disk.
SIGUSR2
The signal has no effect at the moment but is reserved for future
use.
An alternative to a signal to reload configuration is the Reload D-Bus
call. It allows for more fine-grained selection of what to reload, it
only returns after the reload is complete, and it is guarded by
PolicyKit.
DEBUGGING
The following environment variables are supported to help debugging.
When used in conjunction with the --no-daemon option (thus echoing PPP
and DHCP helper output to stdout) these can quickly help pinpoint the
source of connection issues. Also see the --log-level and --log-domains
to enable debug logging inside NetworkManager itself.
NM_PPP_DEBUG: When set to anything, causes NetworkManager to turn on
PPP debugging in pppd, which logs all PPP and PPTP frames and
client/server exchanges.
BUGS
Please report any bugs you find in NetworkManager at the NetworkManager
bug tracker[1].
SEE ALSONetworkManager home page[2], NetworkManager.conf(5), nmcli(1), nmcli-
examples(7), nm-online(1), nm-settings(5), nm-applet(1), nm-connection-
editor(1), udev(7)NOTES
1. NetworkManager bug tracker
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=NetworkManager
2. NetworkManager home page
https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/NetworkManager
NetworkManager 1.10.2NETWORKMANAGER(8)