NetworkManager-dispatcherNetworkManager-dispatcher — Dispatch user scripts for NetworkManager |
NetworkManager [OPTIONS...]
NetworkManager-dispatcher service is a D-Bus activated service that runs user provided scripts upon certain changes in NetworkManager.
NetworkManager-dispatcher will execute scripts in the
/{etc,usr/lib}/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
action the device name is always
"none"
. For connectivity-change
and
dns-change
it is empty.
The actions are:
|
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 |
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|
The interface has been activated. |
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|
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 |
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|
The interface has been deactivated. |
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|
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 |
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A VPN connection has been activated. |
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|
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 |
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|
A VPN connection has been deactivated. |
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|
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. |
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|
The DHCPv4 lease has changed (renewed, rebound, etc). |
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The DHCPv6 lease has changed (renewed, rebound, etc). |
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The network connectivity state has changed (no connectivity, went online, etc). |
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The connection was reapplied on the device. |
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|
The DNS configuration has changed. This action is raised even if
NetworkManager is configured to not manage resolv.conf (for example,
via dns=none). In such case, the dispatch script can discover the
DNS configuration provided by currently active connections by
looking at file |
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|
This action is called when a connection of type The script needs to perform any action needed to create the device for the generic connection. On successful termination, the script returns zero. Otherwise, it returns a non-zero value to indicate an error. The script can return values to NetworkManager by writing to standard output; each line should contain a key name followed by the equal sign '=' and a key value. The keys understood at the moment are:
Since the dispatcher service captures stdout for parsing those keys, anything written to stdout will not appear in the dispatcher service journal log. Use stderr if you want to print messages to the journal (for example, for debugging). Only the first 8KiB of stdout are considered and among those, only the first 64 lines; the rest is ignored. |
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|
This action is the counterpart of |
The environment contains more information about the interface and the connection. The following variables are available for the use in the dispatcher scripts:
|
The dispatcher action like "up" or "dhcp4-change", identical to the first command line argument. Since NetworkManager 1.12.0. |
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The UUID of the connection profile. |
|
The name (ID) of the connection profile. |
|
The NetworkManager D-Bus path of the connection. |
|
The backing file name of the connection profile (if any). |
|
If "1", this indicates that the connection describes a network configuration created outside of NetworkManager. |
|
The interface name of the control interface of the device.
Depending on the device type, this differs from
|
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The IP interface name of the device. This is the network interface on which IP addresses and routes will be configured. |
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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. |
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The variable contains the number of IPv4 addresses the script may expect. |
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The gateway IPv4 address in traditional numbers-and-dots notation. |
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The IPv4 route in the format "address/prefix next-hop metric", where N is a number from 0 to (# IPv4 routes - 1). |
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The variable contains the number of IPv4 routes the script may expect. |
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The variable contains a space-separated list of the DNS servers. |
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The variable contains a space-separated list of the search domains. |
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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". |
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The same variables as for IPv4 are available for IPv6, but the prefixes are IP6_ and DHCP6_ instead. |
|
The network connectivity state, which can
take the values defined by the NMConnectivityState type,
from the org.freedesktop.NetworkManager D-Bus API: |
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.
The content of the user
setting for the connection
being activated is also passed via environment variables. Each key is
stored in a variable with name CONNECTION_USER_
concatenated with the encoding of the key name. The encoding works as
follows:
lowercase letters become uppercase
uppercase letters are prefixed with an underscore
numbers do not change
a dot is replaced with a double underscore
any other character is encoded with an underscore followed by its 3-digit octal representation
For example, key test.foo-Bar2
is stored in a variable named
CONNECTION_USER_TEST__FOO_055_BAR2
.
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.)