systemd.network systemd Developer Tom Gundersen teg@jklm.no systemd.network 5 systemd.network Network configuration network.network Description Network setup is performed by systemd-networkd8. Network files must have the extension .network; other extensions are ignored. Networks are applied to links whenever the links appear. The .network 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. As a special case, an empty file (file size 0) or symlink with the same name pointing to /dev/null disables the configuration file entirely (it is "masked"). [Match] Section Options 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, all later files are ignored, even if they match as well. 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= A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs matching the persistent path, as exposed by the udev property ID_PATH. Driver= A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs matching 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= A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs matching the device type, as exposed by the udev property DEVTYPE. Name= A whitespace-separated list of shell-style globs matching the device name, as exposed by the udev property INTERFACE. 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: MACAddress= The hardware address. 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. IAID= Identity Association Identifier for the interface, a 32-bit unsigned integer. [Network] Section Options The [Network] section accepts the following keys: Description= A description of the device. This is only used for presentation purposes. DHCP= Enables DHCPv4 and/or DHCPv6 client support. Accepts yes, no, ipv4, or ipv6. 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 IPv6AcceptRouterAdvertisements=. Furthermore, note that by default the domain name specified through DHCP is not used for name resolution. See option below. DHCPServer= A boolean. Enables DHCPv4 server support. Defaults to no. Further settings for the DHCP server may be set in the [DHCPServer] section described below. LinkLocalAddressing= Enables link-local address autoconfiguration. Accepts yes, no, ipv4, or ipv6. Defaults to ipv6. IPv4LLRoute= A boolean. When true, sets up the route needed for non-IPv4LL hosts to communicate with IPv4LL-only hosts. Defaults to false. IPv6Token= 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. LLMNR= A boolean or resolve. When true, enables Link-Local Multicast Name Resolution on the link. When set to resolve, only resolution is enabled, but not host registration and announcement. Defaults to true. This setting is read by systemd-resolved.service8. MulticastDNS= A boolean or resolve. When true, enables Multicast DNS support on the link. When set to resolve, only resolution is enabled, but not host or service registration and announcement. Defaults to false. This setting is read by systemd-resolved.service8. DNSSEC= A boolean or allow-downgrade. When true, enables DNSSEC DNS validation support on the link. When set to allow-downgrade, compatibility with non-DNSSEC capable networks is increased, by automatically turning off DNSEC in this case. This option defines a per-interface setting for resolved.conf5's global DNSSEC= option. Defaults to false. This setting is read by systemd-resolved.service8. DNSSECNegativeTrustAnchors= 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 systemd-resolved.service8. LLDP= 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 routers-only. When true, incoming LLDP packets are accepted and a database of all LLDP neighbors maintained. If routers-only 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 routers-only. Use networkctl1 to query the collected neighbor data. LLDP is only available on Ethernet links. See EmitLLDP= below for enabling LLDP packet emission from the local system. EmitLLDP= Controls support for Ethernet LLDP packet emission. Accepts a boolean parameter and defaults to false. If enabled 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 machine-id5) and the local interface name, as well as the pretty hostname of the system (as set in machine-info5). LLDP emission is only available on Ethernet links. Note that this setting passed data suitable for identification of host to the network and should thus not be used on untrusted networks, where such identification data should not be made available. Use this option to enable other systems to identify on which interface they are connected to this system. See LLDP= above for an option to enable LLDP reception. BindCarrier= 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. Address= A static IPv4 or IPv6 address and its prefix length, separated by a / character. Specify this key more than once to configure several addresses. 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). This option may be specified more than once. If the specified address is 0.0.0.0 (for IPv4) or [::] (for IPv6), a new address range of the requested size is automatically allocated from a system-wide pool of unused ranges. 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 fc00::/7 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. 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. This option may be specified more than once. DNS= A DNS server address, which must be in the format described in inet_pton3. This option may be specified more than once. This setting is read by systemd-resolved.service8. Domains= The domains used for DNS host name resolution on this link. Takes a list of DNS domain names which are 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. The specified domains are also used for routing of DNS queries: look-ups for host names ending in the domains specified here are preferably routed to the DNS servers configured for this interface. If a domain name is prefixed with ~, the domain name becomes a pure "routing" domain, is used for DNS query routing purposes only and is not used in the described domain search logic. By specifying a routing domain of ~. (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) it is possible to route all DNS traffic preferably to the DNS server specified for this interface. The route domain logic is particularly useful on multi-homed hosts with DNS servers serving particular private DNS zones on each interface. This setting is read by systemd-resolved.service8. NTP= An NTP server address. This option may be specified more than once. This setting is read by systemd-timesyncd.service8. IPForward= 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 either a boolean argument, or the values ipv4 or ipv6, which only enable IP packet forwarding for the specified address family. This controls the net.ipv4.ip_forward and net.ipv6.conf.all.forwarding sysctl options of the network interface (see ip-sysctl.txt for details about sysctl options). Defaults to no. 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. To allow IP packet forwarding only between specific network interfaces use a firewall. IPMasquerade= 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 IPForward=ipv4. Defaults to no. IPv6PrivacyExtensions= Configures use of stateless temporary addresses that change over time (see RFC 4941, Privacy Extensions for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6). Takes a boolean or the special values prefer-public and kernel. When true, enables the privacy extensions and prefers temporary addresses over public addresses. When prefer-public, enables the privacy extensions, but prefers public addresses over temporary addresses. When false, the privacy extensions remain disabled. When kernel, the kernel's default setting will be left in place. Defaults to no. IPv6AcceptRouterAdvertisements= Force the setting of the accept_ra (router advertisements) setting for the interface. When unset, the kernel default is used, and router advertisements are accepted only when local forwarding is disabled for that interface. When router advertisements are accepted, they will trigger the start of the DHCPv6 client if the relevant flags are passed, or if no routers are found on the link. Takes a boolean. If true, router advertisements are accepted, when false, router advertisements are ignored, independently of the local forwarding state. See ip-sysctl.txt in the kernel documentation, but note that systemd's setting of 1 corresponds to kernel's setting of 2. IPv6DuplicateAddressDetection= Configures the amount of IPv6 Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) probes to send. Defaults to unset. IPv6HopLimit= 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. Defaults to unset. Bridge= The name of the bridge to add the link to. Bond= The name of the bond to add the link to. VLAN= The name of a VLAN to create on the link. This option may be specified more than once. MACVLAN= The name of a MACVLAN to create on the link. This option may be specified more than once. VXLAN= The name of a VXLAN to create on the link. This option may be specified more than once. Tunnel= The name of a Tunnel to create on the link. This option may be specified more than once. [Address] Section Options An [Address] section accepts the following keys. Specify several [Address] sections to configure several addresses. Address= As in the [Network] section. This key is mandatory. Peer= The peer address in a point-to-point connection. Accepts the same format as the Address key. Broadcast= The broadcast address, which must be in the format described in inet_pton3. This key only applies to IPv4 addresses. If it is not given, it is derived from the Address key. Label= An address label. [Route] Section Options The [Route] section accepts the following keys. Specify several [Route] sections to configure several routes. Gateway= As in the [Network] section. Destination= The destination prefix of the route. Possibly followed by a slash and the prefix length. If omitted, a full-length host route is assumed. Source= The source prefix of the route. Possibly followed by a slash and the prefix length. If omitted, a full-length host route is assumed. Metric= The metric of the route (an unsigned integer). Scope= The scope of the route, which can be global, link or host. Defaults to global. PreferredSource= The preferred source address of the route. The address must be in the format described in inet_pton3. [DHCP] Section Options The [DHCP] section configures the DHCPv4 and DHCP6 client, if it is enabled with the DHCP= setting described above: UseDNS= When true (the default), the DNS servers received from the DHCP server will be used and take precedence over any statically configured ones. This corresponds to the option in resolv.conf5. UseNTP= 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. UseMTU= When true, the interface maximum transmission unit from the DHCP server will be used on the current link. Defaults to false. SendHostname= When true (the default), the machine's hostname will be sent to the DHCP server. UseHostname= When true (the default), the hostname received from the DHCP server will be set as the transient hostname of the system Hostname= Use this value for the hostname which is sent to the DHCP server, instead of machine's hostname. UseDomains= Takes a boolean argument, or the special value route. 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 setting. If set to route, 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 setting when the argument is prefixed with ~. Defaults to false. It is recommended to enable this option only on trusted networks, as setting this affects resolution of all host names, in particular to 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. When set to true, this setting corresponds to the option in resolv.conf5. UseRoutes= 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. UseTimezone= When true, the timezone received from the DHCP server will be set as timezone of the local system. Defaults to no. CriticalConnection= When true, the connection will never be torn down even if the DHCP lease expires. This is contrary to the DHCP specification, but may be the best choice if, say, the root filesystem relies on this connection. Defaults to false. ClientIdentifier= DHCP client identifier to use. Either mac to use the MAC address of the link or duid (the default) to use a RFC4361-compliant Client ID. VendorClassIdentifier= The vendor class identifier used to identify vendor type and configuration. RequestBroadcast= 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. RouteMetric= Set the routing metric for routes specified by the DHCP server. [DUID] Section Options This section configures the DHCP Unique Idendifier (DUID) value used by DHCP protocol. DHCPv6 client protocol sends the DHCP Unique Identifier and the interface Identity Association Identifier (IAID) to a DHCP server when acquiring a dynamic IPv6 address. DHCPv4 client protocol sends IAID and DUID to the DHCP server when acquiring a dynamic IPv4 address if . IAID and DUID allows a DHCP server to uniquely identify the machine and the interface requesting a DHCP IP. The DUID value specified here overrides the DUID that systemd-networkd generates using the machine-id from the /etc/machine-id file, as well as the global DUID that may be specified in networkd.conf 5. The configured DHCP DUID should conform to the specification in RFC 3315, RFC 6355. The following options are available in [DUID] section: Type= The type of DUID specified in this section. The following values are supported: If Type=raw, then RawData= specifies the entire DUID. For example, RawData=00:02:00:00:ab:11:f9:2a:c2:77:29:f9:5c:00 specifies a 14 byte long DUID-EN ("00:02"), with enterprise number 43793 ("00:00:ab:11"), and identifier value "f9:2a:c2:77:29:f9:5c:00".If Type is not specified and RawData is specified, Type defaults to 'raw'. RawData= Specifies the DUID bytes as a single newline-terminated, hexadecimal string, with each byte separated by a ':'. [DHCPServer] Section Options The [DHCPServer] section contains settings for the DHCP server, if enabled via the DHCPServer= option described above: PoolOffset= PoolSize= 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. PoolOffset= takes the offset of the pool from the start of subnet, or zero to use the default value. PoolSize= 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. DefaultLeaseTimeSec= MaxLeaseTimeSec= 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. EmitDNS= DNS= Configures whether the DHCP leases handed out to clients shall contain DNS server information. The EmitDNS= setting takes a boolean argument and defaults to yes. The DNS servers to pass to clients may be configured with the DNS= option, which takes a list of IPv4 addresses. If the EmitDNS= 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 /etc/resolv.conf 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 MaxLeaseTimeSec= described above. EmitNTP= NTP= Similar to the EmitDNS= and DNS= 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 EmitDNS= and DNS=. EmitTimezone= Timezone= Configures whether the DHCP leases handed out to clients shall contain timezone information. The EmitTimezone= setting takes a boolean argument and defaults to yes. The Timezone= setting takes a timezone string (such as Europe/Berlin or UTC) to pass to clients. If no explicit timezone is set, the system timezone of the local host is propagated, as determined by the /etc/localtime symlink. [Bridge] Section Options The [Bridge] section accepts the following keys. UnicastFlood= A boolean. Controls whether the bridge should flood traffic for which an FDB entry is missing and the destination is unknown through this port. Defaults to on. HairPin= A boolean. Configures whether traffic may be sent back out of the port on which it was received. By default, this flag is false, and the bridge will not forward traffic back out of the receiving port. UseBPDU= A boolean. Configures whether STP Bridge Protocol Data Units will be processed by the bridge port. Defaults to yes. FastLeave= 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. Defaults to off. AllowPortToBeRoot= A boolean. Configures whether a given port is allowed to become a root port. Only used when STP is enabled on the bridge. Defaults to on. Cost= 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. [BridgeFDB] Section Options The [BridgeFDB] section manages the forwarding database table of a port and accepts the following keys. Specify several [BridgeFDB] sections to configure several static MAC table entries. MACAddress= As in the [Network] section. This key is mandatory. VLANId= The VLAN ID for the new static MAC table entry. If omitted, no VLAN ID info is appended to the new static MAC table entry. Example /etc/systemd/network/50-static.network [Match] Name=enp2s0 [Network] Address=192.168.0.15/24 Gateway=192.168.0.1 /etc/systemd/network/80-dhcp.network [Match] Name=en* [Network] DHCP=yes /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 /etc/systemd/network/25-bridge-slave-interface.network [Match] Name=enp2s0 [Network] Bridge=bridge0 /etc/systemd/network/25-ipip.network [Match] Name=em1 [Network] Tunnel=ipip-tun /etc/systemd/network/25-sit.network [Match] Name=em1 [Network] Tunnel=sit-tun /etc/systemd/network/25-gre.network [Match] Name=em1 [Network] Tunnel=gre-tun /etc/systemd/network/25-vti.network [Match] Name=em1 [Network] Tunnel=vti-tun /etc/systemd/network/25-bond.network [Match] Name=bond1 [Network] DHCP=yes See Also systemd1, systemd-networkd.service8, systemd.link5, systemd.netdev5, systemd-resolved.service8