systemd.link
systemd
Developer
Tom
Gundersen
systemd.link
5
systemd.link
Network device configuration
link.link
Description
Network link configuration is performed by the net_setup_link
udev builtin.
The link 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.
Link files must have the extension .link; other extensions are ignored.
All link 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 link file with a local file if needed;
a symlink in /etc with the same name as a link file in
/usr/lib, pointing to /dev/null,
disables the link file entirely.
The link file contains a [Match] section, which
determines if a given link file may be applied to a given device; and a
[Link] section specifying how the device should be
configured. The first (in lexical order) of the link files that matches
a given device is applied.
[Match] Section Options
A link 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. May
contain shell style globs.
Driver=
The driver currently bound to the device,
as exposed by the udev property DRIVER
of its parent device, or if that is not set, the
driver as exposed by ethtool -i
of the device itself.
Type=
The device type, as exposed by the udev
property DEVTYPE.
Host=
Matches against the hostname or machine
ID of the host. See ConditionHost= in
systemd.unit5
for details.
Virtualization=
Checks whether the system is executed in
a virtualized environment and optionally test
whether it is a specific implementation. See
ConditionVirtualization= in
systemd.unit5
for details.
KernelCommandLine=
Checks whether a specific kernel command
line option is set (or if prefixed with the
exclamation mark unset). See
ConditionKernelCommandLine= in
systemd.unit5
for details.
Architecture=
Checks whether the system is running on a
specific architecture. See
ConditionArchitecture= in
systemd.unit5
for details.
[Link] Section Options
The [Link] section accepts the following
keys:
Description=
A description of the device.
Alias=
The ifalias is set to
this value.
MACAddressPolicy=
The policy by which the MAC address
should be set. The available policies are:
persistent
If the hardware has a persistent
MAC address, as most hardware should,
and if it is used by the kernel, nothing
is done. Otherwise, a new MAC address
is generated which is guaranteed to be
the same on every boot for the given
machine and the given device, but which
is otherwise random.
random
If the kernel is using a random MAC
address, nothing is done. Otherwise, a new
address is randomly generated each time the
device appears, typically at boot.
MACAddress=
The MAC address to use, if no
MACAddressPolicy=
is specified.
NamePolicy=
An ordered, space-separated list of
policies by which the interface name should
be set. NamePolicy may be
disabled by specifying
net.ifnames=0 on the kernel
commandline. Each of the policies may fail, and
the first successful one is used. The name is
not set directly, but is exported to udev as
the property ID_NET_NAME,
which is, by default, used by a udev rule to set
NAME. If the name has already
been set by userspace, no renaming is performed.
The available policies are:
kernel
If the kernel claims that the name it
has set for a device is predictable, then
no renaming is performed.
database
The name is set based on entries in
the udev's Hardware Database with the key
ID_NET_NAME_FROM_DATABASE.
onboard
The name is set based on information given by
the firmware for on-board devices, as exported by
the udev property ID_NET_NAME_ONBOARD.
slot
The name is set based on information given by
the firmware for hot-plug devices, as exported by
the udev property ID_NET_NAME_SLOT.
path
The name is set based on the device's physical
location, as exported by the udev property
ID_NET_NAME_PATH.
mac
The name is set based on the device's
persistent MAC address, as exported by the udev
property ID_NET_NAME_MAC.
Name=
The interface name to use in case all the
policies specified in
NamePolicy= fail, or in case
NamePolicy= is missing or
disabled.
MTUBytes=
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.
BitsPerSecond=
The speed to set for the device, the
value is rounded down to the nearest Mbps.
The usual suffixes K, M, G, are supported and
are understood to the base of 1000.
Duplex=
The duplex mode to set for the device.
The accepted values are half
and full.
WakeOnLan=
The Wake-on-LAN policy to set for the
device. The supported values are:
phy
Wake on PHY activity.
magic
Wake on receipt of a magic packet.
off
Never wake.
Example
/etc/systemd/network/wireless.link
[Match]
MACAddress=12:34:56:78:9a:bc
Driver=brcmsmac
Path=pci-0000:02:00.0-*
Type=wlan
Virtualization=no
Host=my-laptop
Architecture=x86-64
[Link]
Name=wireless0
MTUBytes=1450
BitsPerSecond=10M
WakeOnLan=magic
MACAddress=cb:a9:87:65:43:21
See Also
systemd-udevd.service8
,
udevadm8