Distribution installers, cloud instantiation, image builds for particular devices, or any other way to deploy an operating system put its desired network configuration into YAML configuration file(s). During early boot, the netplan “network renderer” runs which reads /{lib,etc,run}/netplan/*.yaml
and writes configuration to /run
to hand off control of devices to the specified networking daemon.
virbr0
, lxdbr0
), or to change the global default policy to use NetworkManager for everything.netplan’s configuration files use the YAML format. All /{lib,etc,run}/netplan/*.yaml
are considered. Lexicographically later files (regardless of in which directory they are) amend (new mapping keys) or override (same mapping keys) previous ones. A file in /run/netplan
completely shadows a file with same name in /etc/netplan
, and a file in either of those directories shadows a file with the same name in /lib/netplan
.
The top-level node in a netplan configuration file is a network:
mapping that contains version: 2
(the YAML currently being used by curtin, MaaS, etc. is version 1), and then device definitions grouped by their type, such as ethernets:
, modems:
, wifis:
, or bridges:
. These are the types that our renderer can understand and are supported by our backends.
Each type block contains device definitions as a map where the keys (called “configuration IDs”) are defined as below.
The key names below the per-device-type definition maps (like ethernets:
) are called “ID”s. They must be unique throughout the entire set of configuration files. Their primary purpose is to serve as anchor names for composite devices, for example to enumerate the members of a bridge that is currently being defined.
(Since 0.97) If an interface is defined with an ID in a configuration file; it will be brought up by the applicable renderer. To not have netplan touch an interface at all, it should be completely omitted from the netplan configuration files.
There are two physically/structurally different classes of device definitions, and the ID field has a different interpretation for each:
(Examples: ethernet, modem, wifi) These can dynamically come and go between reboots and even during runtime (hotplugging). In the generic case, they can be selected by match:
rules on desired properties, such as name/name pattern, MAC address, driver, or device paths. In general these will match any number of devices (unless they refer to properties which are unique such as the full path or MAC address), so without further knowledge about the hardware these will always be considered as a group.
It is valid to specify no match rules at all, in which case the ID field is simply the interface name to be matched. This is mostly useful if you want to keep simple cases simple, and it’s how network device configuration has been done for a long time.
If there are match
: rules, then the ID field is a purely opaque name which is only being used for references from definitions of compound devices in the config.
(Examples: veth, bridge, bond) These are fully under the control of the config file(s) and the network stack. I. e. these devices are being created instead of matched. Thus match:
and set-name:
are not applicable for these, and the ID field is the name of the created virtual device.
Note: Some options will not work reliably for devices matched by name only and rendered by networkd, due to interactions with device renaming in udev. Match devices by MAC when setting options like: wakeonlan
or *-offload
.
match
(mapping)This selects a subset of available physical devices by various hardware properties. The following configuration will then apply to all matching devices, as soon as they appear. All specified properties must match.
name
(scalar)match:
at all and just using the ID (see above). (NetworkManager
: as of v1.14.0)
macaddress
(scalar)driver
(scalar or sequence of scalars) – sequence since 0.104DRIVER
udev property. A sequence of globs is supported, any of which must match. Matching on driver is only supported with networkd.
Examples:
all cards on second PCI bus:
match:
name: enp2*
fixed MAC address:
match:
macaddress: 11:22:33:AA:BB:FF
first card of driver ixgbe
:
match:
driver: ixgbe
name: en*s0
first card with a driver matching bcmgenet
or smsc*
:
match:
driver: ["bcmgenet", "smsc*"]
name: en*
set-name
(scalar)When matching on unique properties such as path or MAC, or with additional assumptions such as “there will only ever be one wifi device”, match rules can be written so that they only match one device. Then this property can be used to give that device a more specific/desirable/nicer name than the default from udev’s ifnames. Any additional device that satisfies the match rules will then fail to get renamed and keep the original kernel name (and dmesg will show an error).
wakeonlan
(bool)Enable wake on LAN. Off by default.
emit-lldp
(bool) – since 0.99(networkd backend only) Whether to emit LLDP packets. Off by default.
receive-checksum-offload
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the hardware offload for checksumming of ingress network packets is enabled (disabled). When unset, the kernel’s default will be used.
transmit-checksum-offload
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the hardware offload for checksumming of egress network packets is enabled (disabled). When unset, the kernel’s default will be used.
tcp-segmentation-offload
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the TCP Segmentation Offload (TSO) is enabled (disabled). When unset, the kernel’s default will be used.
tcp6-segmentation-offload
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the TCP6 Segmentation Offload (tx-tcp6-segmentation) is enabled (disabled). When unset, the kernel’s default will be used.
generic-segmentation-offload
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the Generic Segmentation Offload (GSO) is enabled (disabled). When unset, the kernel’s default will be used.
generic-receive-offload
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the Generic Receive Offload (GRO) is enabled (disabled). When unset, the kernel’s default will be used.
large-receive-offload
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the Large Receive Offload (LRO) is enabled (disabled). When unset, the kernel’s default will be used.
openvswitch
(mapping) – since 0.100This provides additional configuration for the network device for openvswitch. If openvswitch is not available on the system, netplan treats the presence of openvswitch configuration as an error.
Any supported network device that is declared with the openvswitch
mapping (or any bond/bridge that includes an interface with an openvswitch configuration) will be created in openvswitch instead of the defined renderer. In the case of a vlan
definition declared the same way, netplan will create a fake VLAN bridge in openvswitch with the requested vlan properties.
external-ids
(mapping) – since 0.100other-config
(mapping) – since 0.100lacp
(scalar) – since 0.100active
, passive
or off
(the default).
fail-mode
(scalar) – since 0.100secure
or standalone
(the default).
mcast-snooping
(bool) – since 0.100protocols
(sequence of scalars) – since 0.100OpenFlow10
, OpenFlow11
, OpenFlow12
, OpenFlow13
, OpenFlow14
, OpenFlow15
and OpenFlow16
.
rstp
(bool) – since 0.100controller
(mapping) – since 0.100Valid for bridge interfaces. Specify an external OpenFlow controller.
addresses
(sequence of scalars)[tcp:127.0.0.1:6653, "ssl:[fe80::1234%eth0]:6653"]
connection-mode
(scalar)in-band
and out-of-band
. The default is in-band
.
ports
(sequence of sequence of scalars) – since 0.100OpenvSwitch patch ports. Each port is declared as a pair of names which can be referenced as interfaces in dependent virtual devices (bonds, bridges).
Example:
openvswitch:
ports:
- [patch0-1, patch1-0]
ssl
(mapping) – since 0.100Valid for global openvswitch
settings. Options for configuring SSL server endpoint for the switch.
ca-cert
(scalar)certificate
(scalar)private-key
(scalar)renderer
(scalar)Use the given networking backend for this definition. Currently supported are networkd
and NetworkManager
. This property can be specified globally in network:
, for a device type (in e. g. ethernets:
) or for a particular device definition. Default is networkd
.
(Since 0.99) The renderer
property has one additional acceptable value for vlan objects (i. e. defined in vlans:
): sriov
. If a vlan is defined with the sriov
renderer for an SR-IOV Virtual Function interface, this causes netplan to set up a hardware VLAN filter for it. There can be only one defined per VF.
dhcp4
(bool)Enable DHCP for IPv4. Off by default.
dhcp6
(bool)Enable DHCP for IPv6. Off by default. This covers both stateless DHCP - where the DHCP server supplies information like DNS nameservers but not the IP address - and stateful DHCP, where the server provides both the address and the other information.
If you are in an IPv6-only environment with completely stateless autoconfiguration (SLAAC with RDNSS), this option can be set to cause the interface to be brought up. (Setting accept-ra alone is not sufficient.) Autoconfiguration will still honour the contents of the router advertisement and only use DHCP if requested in the RA.
Note that rdnssd
(8) is required to use RDNSS with networkd. No extra software is required for NetworkManager.
ipv6-mtu
(scalar) – since 0.98Set the IPv6 MTU (only supported with networkd
backend). Note that needing to set this is an unusual requirement.
Requires feature: ipv6-mtu
ipv6-privacy
(bool)Enable IPv6 Privacy Extensions (RFC 4941) for the specified interface, and prefer temporary addresses. Defaults to false - no privacy extensions. There is currently no way to have a private address but prefer the public address.
link-local
(sequence of scalars)Configure the link-local addresses to bring up. Valid options are ‘ipv4’ and ‘ipv6’, which respectively allow enabling IPv4 and IPv6 link local addressing. If this field is not defined, the default is to enable only IPv6 link-local addresses. If the field is defined but configured as an empty set, IPv6 link-local addresses are disabled as well as IPv4 link- local addresses.
This feature enables or disables link-local addresses for a protocol, but the actual implementation differs per backend. On networkd, this directly changes the behavior and may add an extra address on an interface. When using the NetworkManager backend, enabling link-local has no effect if the interface also has DHCP enabled.
Example to enable only IPv4 link-local: link-local: [ ipv4 ]
Example to enable all link-local addresses: link-local: [ ipv4, ipv6 ]
Example to disable all link-local addresses: link-local: [ ]
ignore-carrier
(bool) – since 0.104(networkd backend only) Allow the specified interface to be configured even if it has no carrier.
critical
(bool)Designate the connection as “critical to the system”, meaning that special care will be taken by to not release the assigned IP when the daemon is restarted. (not recognized by NetworkManager)
dhcp-identifier
(scalar)(networkd backend only) Sets the source of DHCPv4 client identifier. If mac
is specified, the MAC address of the link is used. If this option is omitted, or if duid
is specified, networkd will generate an RFC4361-compliant client identifier for the interface by combining the link’s IAID and DUID.
dhcp4-overrides
(mapping)(networkd backend only) Overrides default DHCP behavior; see the DHCP Overrides
section below.
dhcp6-overrides
(mapping)(networkd backend only) Overrides default DHCP behavior; see the DHCP Overrides
section below.
accept-ra
(bool)Accept Router Advertisement that would have the kernel configure IPv6 by itself. When enabled, accept Router Advertisements. When disabled, do not respond to Router Advertisements. If unset use the host kernel default setting.
addresses
(sequence of scalars and mappings)Add static addresses to the interface in addition to the ones received through DHCP or RA. Each sequence entry is in CIDR notation, i. e. of the form addr/prefixlen
. addr
is an IPv4 or IPv6 address as recognized by inet_pton
(3) and prefixlen
the number of bits of the subnet.
For virtual devices (bridges, bonds, vlan) if there is no address configured and DHCP is disabled, the interface may still be brought online, but will not be addressable from the network.
In addition to the addresses themselves one can specify configuration parameters as mappings. Current supported options are:
lifetime
(scalar) – since 0.100forever
. This can be forever
or 0
and corresponds to the PreferredLifetime
option in systemd-networkd
’s Address section. Currently supported on the networkd
backend only.
label
(scalar) – since 0.100ip address label
command. Currently supported on the networkd
backend only.
Example: addresses: [192.168.14.2/24, "2001:1::1/64"]
Example:
ethernets:
eth0:
addresses:
- 10.0.0.15/24:
lifetime: 0
label: "maas"
- "2001:1::1/64"
ipv6-address-generation
(scalar) – since 0.99Configure method for creating the address for use with RFC4862 IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (only supported with NetworkManager
backend). Possible values are eui64
or stable-privacy
.
ipv6-address-token
(scalar) – since 0.100Define an IPv6 address token for creating a static interface identifier for IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration. This is mutually exclusive with ipv6-address-generation
.
gateway4
, gateway6
(scalar)Deprecated, see Default routes
. Set default gateway for IPv4/6, for manual address configuration. This requires setting addresses
too. Gateway IPs must be in a form recognized by inet_pton
(3). There should only be a single gateway per IP address family set in your global config, to make it unambiguous. If you need multiple default routes, please define them via routing-policy
.
Example for IPv4: gateway4: 172.16.0.1
Example for IPv6: gateway6: "2001:4::1"
nameservers
(mapping)Set DNS servers and search domains, for manual address configuration. There are two supported fields: addresses:
is a list of IPv4 or IPv6 addresses similar to gateway*
, and search:
is a list of search domains.
Example:
ethernets:
id0:
[...]
nameservers:
search: [lab, home]
addresses: [8.8.8.8, "FEDC::1"]
macaddress
(scalar)Set the device’s MAC address. The MAC address must be in the form “XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX”.
Note: This will not work reliably for devices matched by name only and rendered by networkd, due to interactions with device renaming in udev. Match devices by MAC when setting MAC addresses.
Example:
ethernets:
id0:
match:
macaddress: 52:54:00:6b:3c:58
[...]
macaddress: 52:54:00:6b:3c:59
mtu
(scalar)Set the Maximum Transmission Unit for the interface. The default is 1500. Valid values depend on your network interface.
Note: This will not work reliably for devices matched by name only and rendered by networkd, due to interactions with device renaming in udev. Match devices by MAC when setting MTU.
optional
(bool)An optional device is not required for booting. Normally, networkd will wait some time for device to become configured before proceeding with booting. However, if a device is marked as optional, networkd will not wait for it. This is only supported by networkd, and the default is false.
Example:
ethernets:
eth7:
# this is plugged into a test network that is often
# down - don't wait for it to come up during boot.
dhcp4: true
optional: true
optional-addresses
(sequence of scalars)Specify types of addresses that are not required for a device to be considered online. This changes the behavior of backends at boot time to avoid waiting for addresses that are marked optional, and thus consider the interface as “usable” sooner. This does not disable these addresses, which will be brought up anyway.
Example:
ethernets:
eth7:
dhcp4: true
dhcp6: true
optional-addresses: [ ipv4-ll, dhcp6 ]
activation-mode
(scalar) – since 0.103Allows specifying the management policy of the selected interface. By default, netplan brings up any configured interface if possible. Using the activation-mode
setting users can override that behavior by either specifying manual
, to hand over control over the interface state to the administrator or (for networkd backend only) off
to force the link in a down state at all times. Any interface with activation-mode
defined is implicitly considered optional
. Supported officially as of networkd
v248+.
Example:
ethernets:
eth1:
# this interface will not be put into an UP state automatically
dhcp4: true
activation-mode: manual
routes
(sequence of mappings)Configure static routing for the device; see the Routing
section below.
routing-policy
(sequence of mappings)Configure policy routing for the device; see the Routing
section below.
Several DHCP behavior overrides are available. Most currently only have any effect when using the networkd
backend, with the exception of use-routes
and route-metric
.
Overrides only have an effect if the corresponding dhcp4
or dhcp6
is set to true
.
If both dhcp4
and dhcp6
are true
, the networkd
backend requires that dhcp4-overrides
and dhcp6-overrides
contain the same keys and values. If the values do not match, an error will be shown and the network configuration will not be applied.
When using the NetworkManager backend, different values may be specified for dhcp4-overrides
and dhcp6-overrides
, and will be applied to the DHCP client processes as specified in the netplan YAML.
dhcp4-overrides
, dhcp6-overrides
(mapping)The dhcp4-overrides
and dhcp6-overrides
mappings override the default DHCP behavior.
use-dns
(bool)true
. When true
, the DNS servers received from the DHCP server will be used and take precedence over any statically configured ones. Currently only has an effect on the networkd
backend.
use-ntp
(bool)true
. When true
, the NTP servers received from the DHCP server will be used by systemd-timesyncd and take precedence over any statically configured ones. Currently only has an effect on the networkd
backend.
send-hostname
(bool)true
. When true
, the machine’s hostname will be sent to the DHCP server. Currently only has an effect on the networkd
backend.
use-hostname
(bool)true
. When true
, the hostname received from the DHCP server will be set as the transient hostname of the system. Currently only has an effect on the networkd
backend.
use-mtu
(bool)true
. When true
, the MTU received from the DHCP server will be set as the MTU of the network interface. When false
, the MTU advertised by the DHCP server will be ignored. Currently only has an effect on the networkd
backend.
hostname
(scalar)networkd
backend.
use-routes
(bool)true
. When true
, the routes received from the DHCP server will be installed in the routing table normally. When set to false
, routes from the DHCP server will be ignored: in this case, the user is responsible for adding static routes if necessary for correct network operation. This allows users to avoid installing a default gateway for interfaces configured via DHCP. Available for both the networkd
and NetworkManager
backends.
route-metric
(scalar)networkd
and NetworkManager
backends.
use-domains
(scalar) – since 0.98Takes a boolean, 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 Domains= 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 Domains= setting when the argument is prefixed with “~”.
Requires feature: dhcp-use-domains
Complex routing is possible with netplan. Standard static routes as well as policy routing using routing tables are supported via the networkd
backend.
These options are available for all types of interfaces.
The most common need for routing concerns the definition of default routes to reach the wider Internet. Those default routes can only defined once per IP family and routing table. A typical example would look like the following:
eth0:
[...]
routes:
- to: default # could be 0/0 or 0.0.0.0/0 optionally
via: 10.0.0.1
metric: 100
on-link: true
- to: default # could be ::/0 optionally
via: cf02:de:ad:be:ef::2
eth1:
[...]
routes:
- to: default
via: 172.134.67.1
metric: 100
on-link: true
table: 76 # Not on the main routing table, does not conflict with the eth0 default route
routes
(mapping)The routes
block defines standard static routes for an interface. At least to
must be specified. If type is local
or nat
a default scope of host
is assumed. If type is unicast
and no gateway (via
) is given or type is broadcast
, multicast
or anycast
a default scope of link
is assumend. Otherwise, a global
scope is the default setting.
For from
, to
, and via
, both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are recognized, and must be in the form addr/prefixlen
or addr
.
from
(scalar)NetworkManager
: as of v1.8.0)
to
(scalar)via
(scalar)on-link
(bool)NetworkManager
: as of v1.12.0 for IPv4 and v1.18.0 for IPv6)
metric
(scalar)type
(scalar)scope
(scalar)table
(scalar)table
parameter. Allowed values are positive integers starting from 1. Some values are already in use to refer to specific routing tables: see /etc/iproute2/rt_tables
. (NetworkManager
: as of v1.10.0)
mtu
(scalar) – since 0.101congestion-window
(scalar) – since 0.102advertised-receive-window
(scalar) – since 0.102routing-policy
(mapping)The routing-policy
block defines extra routing policy for a network, where traffic may be handled specially based on the source IP, firewall marking, etc.
For from
, to
, both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are recognized, and must be in the form addr/prefixlen
or addr
.
from
(scalar)to
(scalar)table
(scalar)table
parameter. Allowed values are positive integers starting from 1. Some values are already in use to refer to specific routing tables: see /etc/iproute2/rt_tables
.
priority
(scalar)mark
(scalar)type-of-service
(scalar)Netplan supports advanced authentication settings for ethernet and wifi interfaces, as well as individual wifi networks, by means of the auth
block.
auth
(mapping)Specifies authentication settings for a device of type ethernets:
, or an access-points:
entry on a wifis:
device.
The auth
block supports the following properties:
key-management
(scalar)none
(no key management); psk
(WPA with pre-shared key, common for home wifi); eap
(WPA with EAP, common for enterprise wifi); and 802.1x
(used primarily for wired Ethernet connections).
password
(scalar)The following properties can be used if key-management
is eap
or 802.1x
:
method
(scalar)tls
(TLS), peap
(Protected EAP), and ttls
(Tunneled TLS).
identity
(scalar)anonymous-identity
(scalar)ca-certificate
(scalar)client-certificate
(scalar)client-key
(scalar)client-certificate
.
client-key-password
(scalar)client-key
if it is encrypted.
phase2-auth
(scalar) – since 0.99ethernets:
Ethernet device definitions, beyond common ones described above, also support some additional properties that can be used for SR-IOV devices.
link
(scalar) – since 0.99(SR-IOV devices only) The link
property declares the device as a Virtual Function of the selected Physical Function device, as identified by the given netplan id.
Example:
ethernets:
enp1: {...}
enp1s16f1:
link: enp1
virtual-function-count
(scalar) – since 0.99(SR-IOV devices only) In certain special cases VFs might need to be configured outside of netplan. For such configurations virtual-function-count
can be optionally used to set an explicit number of Virtual Functions for the given Physical Function. If unset, the default is to create only as many VFs as are defined in the netplan configuration. This should be used for special cases only.
Requires feature: sriov
embedded-switch-mode
(scalar) – since 0.104(SR-IOV devices only) Change the operational mode of the embedded switch of a supported SmartNIC PCI device (e.g. Mellanox ConnectX-5). Possible values are switchdev
or legacy
, if unspecified the vendor’s default configuration is used.
Requires feature: eswitch-mode
delay-virtual-functions-rebind
(bool) – since 0.104(SR-IOV devices only) Delay rebinding of SR-IOV virtual functions to its driver after changing the embedded-switch-mode setting to a later stage. Can be enabled when bonding/VF LAG is in use. Defaults to false
.
Requires feature: eswitch-mode
modems:
GSM/CDMA modem configuration is only supported for the NetworkManager
backend. systemd-networkd
does not support modems.
Requires feature: modems
apn
(scalar) – since 0.99Set the carrier APN (Access Point Name). This can be omitted if auto-config
is enabled.
auto-config
(bool) – since 0.99Specify whether to try and autoconfigure the modem by doing a lookup of the carrier against the Mobile Broadband Provider database. This may not work for all carriers.
device-id
(scalar) – since 0.99Specify the device ID (as given by the WWAN management service) of the modem to match. This can be found using mmcli
.
network-id
(scalar) – since 0.99Specify the Network ID (GSM LAI format). If this is specified, the device will not roam networks.
number
(scalar) – since 0.99The number to dial to establish the connection to the mobile broadband network. (Deprecated for GSM)
password
(scalar) – since 0.99Specify the password used to authenticate with the carrier network. This can be omitted if auto-config
is enabled.
pin
(scalar) – since 0.99Specify the SIM PIN to allow it to operate if a PIN is set.
sim-id
(scalar) – since 0.99Specify the SIM unique identifier (as given by the WWAN management service) which this connection applies to. If given, the connection will apply to any device also allowed by device-id
which contains a SIM card matching the given identifier.
sim-operator-id
(scalar) – since 0.99Specify the MCC/MNC string (such as “310260” or “21601”) which identifies the carrier that this connection should apply to. If given, the connection will apply to any device also allowed by device-id
and sim-id
which contains a SIM card provisioned by the given operator.
username
(scalar) – since 0.99Specify the username used to authentiate with the carrier network. This can be omitted if auto-config
is enabled.
wifis:
Note that systemd-networkd
does not natively support wifi, so you need wpasupplicant installed if you let the networkd
renderer handle wifi.
access-points
(mapping)This provides pre-configured connections to NetworkManager. Note that users can of course select other access points/SSIDs. The keys of the mapping are the SSIDs, and the values are mappings with the following supported properties:
password
(scalar)Enable WPA2 authentication and set the passphrase for it. If neither this nor an auth
block are given, the network is assumed to be open. The setting
password: "S3kr1t"
is equivalent to
auth:
key-management: psk
password: "S3kr1t"
mode
(scalar)infrastructure
(the default), ap
(create an access point to which other devices can connect), and adhoc
(peer to peer networks without a central access point). ap
is only supported with NetworkManager.
bssid
(scalar) – since 0.99band
(scalar) – since 0.995GHz
(for 5GHz 802.11a) and 2.4GHz
(for 2.4GHz 802.11), do not restrict the 802.11 frequency band of the network if unset (the default).
channel
(scalar) – since 0.99band
property is also set.
hidden
(bool) – since 0.100true
to change the SSID scan technique for connecting to hidden WiFi networks. Note this may have slower performance compared to false
(the default) when connecting to publicly broadcast SSIDs.
wakeonwlan
(sequence of scalars) – since 0.99This enables WakeOnWLan on supported devices. Not all drivers support all options. May be any combination of any
, disconnect
, magic_pkt
, gtk_rekey_failure
, eap_identity_req
, four_way_handshake
, rfkill_release
or tcp
(NetworkManager only). Or the exclusive default
flag (the default).
bridges:
interfaces
(sequence of scalars)All devices matching this ID list will be added to the bridge. This may be an empty list, in which case the bridge will be brought online with no member interfaces.
Example:
ethernets:
switchports:
match: {name: "enp2*"}
[...]
bridges:
br0:
interfaces: [switchports]
parameters
(mapping)Customization parameters for special bridging options. Time intervals may need to be expressed as a number of seconds or milliseconds: the default value type is specified below. If necessary, time intervals can be qualified using a time suffix (such as “s” for seconds, “ms” for milliseconds) to allow for more control over its behavior.
ageing-time
(scalar)priority
(scalar)0
and 65535
. Lower values mean higher priority. The bridge with the higher priority will be elected as the root bridge.
port-priority
(scalar)0
and 63
. This metric is used in the designated port and root port selection algorithms.
forward-delay
(scalar)hello-time
(scalar)max-age
(scalar)path-cost
(scalar)stp
(bool)bonds:
interfaces
(sequence of scalars)All devices matching this ID list will be added to the bond.
Example:
ethernets:
switchports:
match: {name: "enp2*"}
[...]
bonds:
bond0:
interfaces: [switchports]
parameters
(mapping)Customization parameters for special bonding options. Time intervals may need to be expressed as a number of seconds or milliseconds: the default value type is specified below. If necessary, time intervals can be qualified using a time suffix (such as “s” for seconds, “ms” for milliseconds) to allow for more control over its behavior.
mode
(scalar)balance-rr
(round robin). Possible values are balance-rr
, active-backup
, balance-xor
, broadcast
, 802.3ad
, balance-tlb
, and balance-alb
. For OpenVSwitch active-backup
and the additional modes balance-tcp
and balance-slb
are supported.
lacp-rate
(scalar)slow
(30 seconds, default), and fast
(every second).
mii-monitor-interval
(scalar)0
; which disables MII monitoring. This is equivalent to the MIIMonitorSec= field for the networkd backend. If no time suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.
min-links
(scalar)transmit-hash-policy
(scalar)layer2
, layer3+4
, layer2+3
, encap2+3
, and encap3+4
.
ad-select
(scalar)stable
, bandwidth
, and count
. This option is only used in 802.3ad mode.
all-slaves-active
(bool)false
. If they should be delivered, set this option to true
. The default value is false, and is the desirable behavior in most situations.
arp-interval
(scalar)0
, which disables ARP monitoring. For the networkd backend, this maps to the ARPIntervalSec= property. If no time suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.
arp-ip-targets
(sequence of scalars)arp-interval
is set to a value other than 0
. At least one IP address must be given for ARP link monitoring to function. Only IPv4 addresses are supported. You can specify up to 16 IP addresses. The default value is an empty list.
arp-validate
(scalar)none
, active
, backup
, and all
.
arp-all-targets
(scalar)active-backup
mode when arp-validate
is enabled. Possible values are any
and all
.
up-delay
(scalar)0
. This maps to the UpDelaySec= property for the networkd renderer. This option is only valid for the miimon link monitor. If no time suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.
down-delay
(scalar)0
. This maps to the DownDelaySec= property for the networkd renderer. This option is only valid for the miimon link monitor. If no time suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.
fail-over-mac-policy
(scalar)none
, active
, and follow
.
gratuitous-arp
(scalar)Specify how many ARP packets to send after failover. Once a link is up on a new slave, a notification is sent and possibly repeated if this value is set to a number greater than 1
. The default value is 1
and valid values are between 1
and 255
. This only affects active-backup
mode.
For historical reasons, the misspelling gratuitious-arp
is also accepted and has the same function.
packets-per-slave
(scalar)balance-rr
mode, specifies the number of packets to transmit on a slave before switching to the next. When this value is set to 0
, slaves are chosen at random. Allowable values are between 0
and 65535
. The default value is 1
. This setting is only used in balance-rr
mode.
primary-reselect-policy
(scalar)always
, better
, and failure
.
resend-igmp
(scalar)In modes balance-rr
, active-backup
, balance-tlb
and balance-alb
, a failover can switch IGMP traffic from one slave to another.
This parameter specifies how many IGMP membership reports are issued on a failover event. Values range from 0 to 255. 0 disables sending membership reports. Otherwise, the first membership report is sent on failover and subsequent reports are sent at 200ms intervals.
learn-packet-interval
(scalar)1
and 0x7fffffff
. The default value is 1
. This option only affects balance-tlb
and balance-alb
modes. Using the networkd renderer, this field maps to the LearnPacketIntervalSec= property. If no time suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as seconds.
primary
(scalar)active-backup
, balance-alb
, and balance-tlb
modes.
tunnels:
Tunnels allow traffic to pass as if it was between systems on the same local network, although systems may be far from each other but reachable via the Internet. They may be used to support IPv6 traffic on a network where the ISP does not provide the service, or to extend and “connect” separate local networks. Please see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunneling_protocol for more general information about tunnels.
mode
(scalar)Defines the tunnel mode. Valid options are sit
, gre
, ip6gre
, ipip
, ipip6
, ip6ip6
, vti
, vti6
and wireguard
. Additionally, the networkd
backend also supports gretap
and ip6gretap
modes. In addition, the NetworkManager
backend supports isatap
tunnels.
local
(scalar)Defines the address of the local endpoint of the tunnel.
remote
(scalar)Defines the address of the remote endpoint of the tunnel.
ttl
(scalar) – since 0.103Defines the TTL of the tunnel.
key
(scalar or mapping)Define keys to use for the tunnel. The key can be a number or a dotted quad (an IPv4 address). For wireguard
it can be a base64-encoded private key or (as of networkd
v242+) an absolute path to a file, containing the private key (since 0.100). It is used for identification of IP transforms. This is only required for vti
and vti6
when using the networkd backend, and for gre
or ip6gre
tunnels when using the NetworkManager backend.
This field may be used as a scalar (meaning that a single key is specified and to be used for input, output and private key), or as a mapping, where you can further specify input
/output
/private
.
input
(scalar)output
(scalar)private
(scalar) – since 0.100systemd-networkd
backend (v242+) is used, this can also be an absolute path to a file containing the private key.
keys
(scalar or mapping)Alternate name for the key
field. See above.
Examples:
tunnels:
tun0:
mode: gre
local: ...
remote: ...
keys:
input: 1234
output: 5678
tunnels:
tun0:
mode: vti6
local: ...
remote: ...
key: 59568549
tunnels:
wg0:
mode: wireguard
addresses: [...]
peers:
- keys:
public: rlbInAj0qV69CysWPQY7KEBnKxpYCpaWqOs/dLevdWc=
shared: /path/to/shared.key
...
key: mNb7OIIXTdgW4khM7OFlzJ+UPs7lmcWHV7xjPgakMkQ=
tunnels:
wg0:
mode: wireguard
addresses: [...]
peers:
- keys:
public: rlbInAj0qV69CysWPQY7KEBnKxpYCpaWqOs/dLevdWc=
...
keys:
private: /path/to/priv.key
WireGuard specific keys:
mark
(scalar) – since 0.100Firewall mark for outgoing WireGuard packets from this interface, optional.
port
(scalar) – since 0.100UDP port to listen at or auto
. Optional, defaults to auto
.
peers
(sequence of mappings) – since 0.100A list of peers, each having keys documented below.
Example:
tunnels:
wg0:
mode: wireguard
key: /path/to/private.key
mark: 42
port: 5182
peers:
- keys:
public: rlbInAj0qV69CysWPQY7KEBnKxpYCpaWqOs/dLevdWc=
allowed-ips: [0.0.0.0/0, "2001:fe:ad:de:ad:be:ef:1/24"]
keepalive: 23
endpoint: 1.2.3.4:5
- keys:
public: M9nt4YujIOmNrRmpIRTmYSfMdrpvE7u6WkG8FY8WjG4=
shared: /some/shared.key
allowed-ips: [10.10.10.20/24]
keepalive: 22
endpoint: 5.4.3.2:1
endpoint
(scalar) – since 0.100Remote endpoint IPv4/IPv6 address or a hostname, followed by a colon and a port number.
allowed-ips
(sequence of scalars) – since 0.100A list of IP (v4 or v6) addresses with CIDR masks from which this peer is allowed to send incoming traffic and to which outgoing traffic for this peer is directed. The catch-all 0.0.0.0/0 may be specified for matching all IPv4 addresses, and ::/0 may be specified for matching all IPv6 addresses.
keepalive
(scalar) – since 0.100An interval in seconds, between 1 and 65535 inclusive, of how often to send an authenticated empty packet to the peer for the purpose of keeping a stateful firewall or NAT mapping valid persistently. Optional.
keys
(mapping) – since 0.100Define keys to use for the WireGuard peers.
This field can be used as a mapping, where you can further specify the public
and shared
keys.
public
(scalar) – since 0.100shared
(scalar) – since 0.100systemd-networkd
backend (v242+) is used, this can also be an absolute path to a file containing the preshared key.
vlans:
id
(scalar)VLAN ID, a number between 0 and 4094.
link
(scalar)netplan ID of the underlying device definition on which this VLAN gets created.
Example:
ethernets:
eno1: {...}
vlans:
en-intra:
id: 1
link: eno1
dhcp4: yes
en-vpn:
id: 2
link: eno1
addresses: ...
nm-devices:
The nm-devices
device type is for internal use only and should not be used in normal configuration files. It enables a fallback mode for unsupported settings, using the passthrough
mapping.
In addition to the other fields available to configure interfaces, some backends may require to record some of their own parameters in netplan, especially if the netplan definitions are generated automatically by the consumer of that backend. Currently, this is only used with NetworkManager
.
networkmanager
(mapping) – since 0.99Keeps the NetworkManager-specific configuration parameters used by the daemon to recognize connections.
name
(scalar) – since 0.99uuid
(scalar) – since 0.99stable-id
(scalar) – since 0.99device
(scalar) – since 0.99passthrough
(mapping) – since 0.102Configure an ethernet device with networkd, identified by its name, and enable DHCP:
network:
version: 2
ethernets:
eno1:
dhcp4: true
This is an example of a static-configured interface with multiple IPv4 addresses and multiple gateways with networkd, with equal route metric levels, and static DNS nameservers (Google DNS for this example):
network:
version: 2
renderer: networkd
ethernets:
eno1:
addresses:
- 10.0.0.10/24
- 11.0.0.11/24
nameservers:
addresses:
- 8.8.8.8
- 8.8.4.4
routes:
- to: 0.0.0.0/0
via: 10.0.0.1
metric: 100
- to: 0.0.0.0/0
via: 11.0.0.1
metric: 100
This is a complex example which shows most available features:
network:
version: 2
# if specified, can only realistically have that value, as networkd cannot
# render wifi/3G.
renderer: NetworkManager
ethernets:
# opaque ID for physical interfaces, only referred to by other stanzas
id0:
match:
macaddress: 00:11:22:33:44:55
wakeonlan: true
dhcp4: true
addresses:
- 192.168.14.2/24
- 192.168.14.3/24
- "2001:1::1/64"
nameservers:
search: [foo.local, bar.local]
addresses: [8.8.8.8]
routes:
- to: default
via: 192.168.14.1
- to: default
via: "2001:1::2"
- to: 0.0.0.0/0
via: 11.0.0.1
table: 70
on-link: true
metric: 3
routing-policy:
- to: 10.0.0.0/8
from: 192.168.14.2/24
table: 70
priority: 100
- to: 20.0.0.0/8
from: 192.168.14.3/24
table: 70
priority: 50
# only networkd can render on-link routes and routing policies
renderer: networkd
lom:
match:
driver: ixgbe
# you are responsible for setting tight enough match rules
# that only match one device if you use set-name
set-name: lom1
dhcp6: true
switchports:
# all cards on second PCI bus unconfigured by
# themselves, will be added to br0 below
match:
name: enp2*
mtu: 1280
wifis:
all-wlans:
# useful on a system where you know there is
# only ever going to be one device
match: {}
access-points:
"Joe's home":
# mode defaults to "infrastructure" (client)
password: "s3kr1t"
# this creates an AP on wlp1s0 using hostapd
# no match rules, thus the ID is the interface name
wlp1s0:
access-points:
"guest":
mode: ap
# no WPA config implies default of open
bridges:
# the key name is the name for virtual (created) interfaces
# no match: and set-name: allowed
br0:
# IDs of the components; switchports expands into multiple interfaces
interfaces: [wlp1s0, switchports]
dhcp4: true