systemd-networkd.service
systemd
Developer
Tom
Gundersen
teg@jklm.no
systemd-networkd.service
8
systemd-networkd.service
systemd-networkd
Network manager
systemd-networkd.service
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-networkd
Description
systemd-networkd is a system
service that manages networks. It detects and configures
network devices as they appear, as well as creating virtual
network devices.
Network configurations applied before networkd is started
are not removed, and configuration applied by networkd are not
removed when networkd exits. This ensures restarting networkd
does not cut the network connection, and, in particular, that
it is safe to transition between the initrd and the real root,
and back.
Configuration Files
The configuration files are read from the files located in the
system network directory /usr/lib/systemd/network,
the volatile runtime network directory
/run/systemd/network and the local administration
network directory /etc/systemd/network.
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
/etc have the highest priority, files in
/run take precedence over files with the same
name in /usr/lib. This can be used to override a
system-supplied configuration file with a local file if needed; a symlink in
/etc with the same name as a configuration file in
/usr/lib, pointing to /dev/null,
disables the configuration file entirely.
Virtual Network Devices
Netdev files must have the extension .netdev;
other extensions are ignored. Virtual network devices are created as soon
as networkd is started.
The [Bridge] section accepts the following
keys:
Name
The interface name used when creating the
bridge. This option is compulsory.
Networks
Network files must have the extension .network;
other extensions are ignored. Networks are applied to links whenever the links
appear.
The network file contains a [Match] section,
which determines if a given network file may be applied to a given device;
and a [Network] section specifying how the device should
be configured. The first (in lexical order) of the network files that
matches a given device is applied.
A network file is said to match a device if each of the entries in the
[Match] section matches, or if the section is empty.
The following keys are accepted:
MACAddress
The hardware address.
Path
The persistent path, as exposed by the udev
property ID_PATH.
Driver
The driver currently bound to the device, as
exposed by the udev property DRIVER.
Type
The device type, as exposed by the udev property
DEVTYPE.
Name
The device name, as exposed by the udev property
INTERFACE.
The [Network] section accepts the following keys:
Description
A description of the device. This is only used for
presentation purposes.
DHCP
A boolean. When true enables basic DHCPv4 support.
Address
A static IPv4 or IPv6 address and its prefix length,
separated by a '/' character. The format of the address must
be as described in
inet_pton3
. This is a short-hand for an [Address] section only containing an Address key (see below).
Gateway
The gateway address, which must be in the format described in
inet_pton3
. This is a short-hand for a [Route] section only containing a Gateway key.
Bridge
The name of the bridge to add the configured link to.
The [Address] section accepts the following keys:
Address
As in the [Network] section.
Label
An address label.
The [Route] section accepts the following keys:
Gateway
As in the [Network] section.
Destination
The destination prefix of the route. Possibly followed by a slash and the
prefixlength, if ommitted a full-length host route is assumed.
See Also
systemd1,
udev7,