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author | David Kaspar [Dee'Kej] <dkaspar@redhat.com> | 2018-05-25 20:01:54 +0200 |
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committer | Dee'Kej <deekej@linuxmail.org> | 2018-05-30 12:32:22 +0200 |
commit | a145ddda284570e57413e37f025c3657205e17d8 (patch) | |
tree | a371338da02e38d8745964f75239c8ee62cc459b /sysconfig.txt | |
parent | db1ca2fadd20d0a4fb5a0fe18adcd8c960db9cf3 (diff) | |
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Repository scheme updated to new layout
NOTE: This commit just moves files around, without actually fixing the
Makefiles and specfile. See follow up commits which resolve this.
Diffstat (limited to 'sysconfig.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | sysconfig.txt | 1083 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 1083 deletions
diff --git a/sysconfig.txt b/sysconfig.txt deleted file mode 100644 index df4f789a..00000000 --- a/sysconfig.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1083 +0,0 @@ - -======================= - -Generic options: - -/etc/sysconfig/* - - CGROUP_DAEMON= - List of control groups that the daemon will be run in. For example, - CGROUP_DAEMON="cpu:daemons cpuacct:/" will run it in the daemons - group for the CPU controller, and the '/' group for the CPU accounting - controller. - -/etc/sysconfig/authconfig - - used by authconfig to store information about the system's user - information and authentication setup; changes made to this file - have no effect until the next time authconfig is run - - USEHESIOD=no - Whether or not the hesiod naming service is in use. If not set, - authconfig examines the passwd setting in /etc/nsswitch.conf. - USELDAP=no - Whether or not LDAP is used as a naming service. If not set, - authconfig examines the passwd setting in /etc/nsswitch.conf. - USENIS=no - Whether or not NIS is in use. If not set, authconfig examines - the passwd setting in /etc/nsswitch.conf. - - USEKERBEROS=no - Whether or not Kerberos is in use. If not set, authconfig examines - the settings in /etc/pam.d/system-auth. - USELDAPAUTH=no - Whether or not LDAP is being used for authentication. If not set, - authconfig examines the settings in /etc/pam.d/system-auth. Note - that this option is separate from USELDAP, and that neither implies - the other. - USEMD5=no - Whether or not MD5-based hashing should be used when setting passwords. - If not set, authconfig examines the settings in /etc/pam.d/system-auth. - This option affects authentication using both local files and LDAP. - USESHADOW=no - Whether or not shadow passwords are in use. If not set, authconfig - checks for the existence of /etc/shadow. - USESMBAUTH=no - Whether or not SMB authentication is in use. If not set, authconfig - examines the settings in /etc/pam.d/system-auth. - -/etc/sysconfig/autofsck - - does not normally exist; if it does, it can influence a choice - whether or not to fsck after a crash - - AUTOFSCK_DEF_CHECK=no - If the user does not respond, choose whether or not to fsck - AUTOFSCK_SINGLEUSER= - If this is set, drop to single user mode before fsck. - -/etc/sysconfig/clock: - - Current releases use the third parameter in the /etc/adjtime - file (either 'UTC' or 'LOCAL') to determine whether the hwclock - is in UTC or localtime. - - ZONE="filename" indicates the zonefile under /usr/share/zoneinfo - that /etc/localtime is a copy of, for example: - ZONE="US/Eastern" - - deprecated values from earlier releases: - - CLOCKMODE=GMT indicates that the clock is set to UTC - CLOCKMODE=ARC on alpha only indicates the ARC console's - 42-year time offset is in effect - UTC=true,yes - Indicates that the hardware clock is set to UTC. - UTC=no,false - Indicates that the hardware clock is set to Local Time. - ARC=true on alpha only indicates the ARC console's - 42-year time offset is in effect; otherwise the normal - Unix epoch is assumed. - - SRM=true on alpha only indicates the SRM 1900 epoch is in - effect; otherwise the normal Unix epoch is assumed. - -/etc/sysconfig/init: - - BOOTUP=<some bootup mode> - BOOTUP=graphical means use X Windows graphical boot up - BOOTUP=color means colorized text mode boot display. - BOOTUP=verbose means old style display - Anything else means simplified display, but without color or ANSI-formatting - LOGLEVEL=<a number> - Sets the initial console logging level for the kernel. - The default is 7. 8 means everything (including debugging); - 1 means nothing except kernel panics. syslogd will override - this once it starts. - RES_COL=<a number> - Column of the screen to start status labels at. Defaults to 60 - MOVE_TO_COL=<a command> - A command to move the cursor to $RES_COL. Defaults to nasty - ANSI sequences output by echo -e. - SETCOLOR_SUCCESS=<a command> - A command to set the color to a color indicating success. - Defaults to nasty ANSI sequences output by echo -e setting - the color to green. - SETCOLOR_FAILURE=<a command> - A command to set the color to a color indicating failure. - Defaults to nasty ANSI sequences output by echo -e setting - the color to red. - SETCOLOR_WARNING=<a command> - A command to set the color to a color indicating warning. - Defaults to nasty ANSI sequences output by echo -e setting - the color to yellow. - SETCOLOR_NORMAL=<a command> - A command to set the color to 'normal'. Defaults to nasty - ANSI sequences output by echo -e. - PROMPT=yes|no - Set to 'yes' to enable the key check for interactive mode as well as - asking if a filesystem check should be done. Default is 'no' and - the kernel command line option "forcefsck" can be used to check the - filesystems and "confirm" can be used to enable interactive startup - questions. - - obsoleted values from earlier releases: - - MAGIC_SYSRQ=yes|no - Setting this to 'no' used to disable the magic sysrq key and - Stop-A (break on serial console) on SPARC. This setting has been - moved into kernel.sysrq and kernel.stop-a settings respectively in - sysctl.d/00-system.conf. Setting either of them there to 0 disables - it, setting it to 1 enables it. - STOP_A=yes|no - Setting this to 'no' used to disable the Stop-A (break on - serial console) key on SPARC. - This setting has been moved into kernel.stop-a setting in - sysctl.d/00-system.conf. Setting it there to 0 disables it, - setting it to 1 enables it. The setting should be present - on SPARC only. - -/etc/sysconfig/keyboard: - - KEYTABLE=<keytable file> - for example: KEYTABLE="/usr/lib/kbd/keytables/us.map" - - If you dump a keymap (using 'dumpkeys') to - /etc/sysconfig/console/default.kmap - it will be loaded on bootup before filesystems are mounted/checked. - This could be useful if you need to emergency type the root password. - This has to be a dumped keymap, as opposed to copying the shipped - keymap files, as the shipped files include other maps from the - /usr/lib/kbd/keytables directory. - - KEYBOARDTYPE=sun|pc - on SPARC only, sun means a sun keyboard is attached on /dev/kbd, - pc means a PS/2 keyboard is on ps/2 port. - -/etc/sysconfig/mouse: - - MOUSETYPE=microsoft|mouseman|mousesystems|ps/2|msbm|logibm|atibm| - logitech|mmseries|mmhittab - XEMU3=yes|no (emulate three buttons with two buttons whenever - necessary, most notably in X) - DEVICE=<a device node> (the device of the mouse) - - In addition, /dev/mouse points to the mouse device. - -/etc/sysconfig/network: - - NETWORKING=yes|no - GATEWAY=<gateway IP> - GATEWAYDEV=<gateway device to use, when multiple devices have GATEWAY=> (e.g. eth0) - NISDOMAIN=<nis domain name> - NOZEROCONF= - Set this to not set a route for dynamic link-local addresses. - - NETWORKDELAY=<delay in seconds> - Delay in seconds after all network interfaces are initialized. Useful if - network has spanning tree running and must wait for STP convergence. - Default: 0 (no delay) - - IFDOWN_ON_SHUTDOWN=yes|no - If yes, do bring interfaces down during system shutdown. If no, leave them - in their current state (this is only supported on hosts using systemd). - Default: yes (bring interfaces down) - - - IPV6FORWARDING=yes|no - Enable or disable global forwarding of incoming IPv6 packets - on all interfaces. - Note: Actual packet forwarding cannot be controlled per-device, use netfilter6 for such issues - Default: no - - IPV6_AUTOCONF=yes|no - Sets the default for device-based autoconfiguration. - Default: yes if IPV6FORWARDING=no, no if IPV6FORWARDING=yes - IPV6_ROUTER=yes|no - Sets the default for device-based Host/Router behaviour. - Default: yes if IPV6FORWARDING=yes, no if IPV6FORWARDING=no - IPV6_AUTOTUNNEL=yes|no - Controls automatic IPv6 tunneling. - Default: no - - IPV6_DEFAULTGW=<IPv6 address[%interface]> (optional) - Add a default route through specified gateway - An interface can be specified: required for link-local addresses - Examples: - IPV6_DEFAULTGW="3ffe:ffff:1234:5678::1" - Add default route through 3ffe:ffff:1234:5678::1 - IPV6_DEFAULTGW="3ffe:ffff:1234:5678::1%eth0" - Add default route through 3ffe:ffff:1234:5678::1 and device eth0 - IPV6_DEFAULTGW="fe80::1%eth0" - Add default route through fe80::1 and device eth0 - - Note: if IPV6_DEFAULTGW is specified with %interface scope and it - doesn't match IPV6_DEFAULTDEV, IPV6_DEFAULTDEV is ignored. - Note: it's preferred to use %interface for all addresses, not - just link-local if you have multiple IPv6-enabled interfaces. - - IPV6_DEFAULTDEV=<interface> (optional) - Add a default route through specified interface without specifying next hop - Type of interface will be tested whether this is allowed - Examples: - IPV6_DEFAULTDEV="eth0" INVALID example! - IPV6_DEFAULTDEV="ppp0" - IPV6_DEFAULTDEV="sit1" - Examples for 6to4 - IPV6_DEFAULTDEV="tun6to4" - Add default route through dedicated 6to4 tunnel device "tun6to4", if configured - - Note: "tun6to4" does not support an additional IPV6_DEFAULTGW. - Other interfaces prefer IPV6_DEFAULTGW, if specified. - - IPV6_RADVD_PIDFILE=<pid-file> (optional) - Location of PID file for controlling radvd, see IPV6_CONTROL_RADVD - Default: "/run/radvd/radvd.pid" - Example: - IPV6_RADVD_PIDFILE="/some/other/location/radvd.pid" - IPV6TO4_RADVD_PIDFILE=<pid-file> (obsolete) - As above, still supported for a while for backward compatibility. - IPV6_RADVD_TRIGGER_ACTION=startstop|reload|restart|SIGHUP (optional) - How to trigger radvd in case of 6to4 or PPP action - startstop: radvd starts if interface goes up and stops - if interface goes down using initscript call of radvd with related parameter - reload|restart: initscript of radvd is called with this parameter - SIGHUP: signal HUP is sent to radvd, pidfile must be specified, if not the default - Default: SIGHUP - - IPv6 options above can be overridden in interface-specific configuration. - - obsoleted values from earlier releases: - - FORWARD_IPV4=yes|no - Create a new file in /etc/sysctl.d/ with the net.ipv4.ip_forward - setting instead. Setting it to 1 there enables IP forwarding, - setting it to 0 disables it (which is the default for RFC compliance). - - NETWORKWAIT=yes|no - This is not used with the move to systemd. - - HOSTNAME=<fqdn by default, but whatever hostname you want> - This is now configured in /etc/hostname. - -/etc/sysconfig/static-routes-ipv6: - Contains lines of the form: - - <device> IPv6-network IPv6-gateway - <tunneldevice> IPv6-network - - <device> must be a device name to have the route brought up and - down with the device - - For example: - - eth0 fec0:0:0:2::/64 fec0:0:0:1:0:0:0:20 - adds a route for IPv6 network fec0:0:0:2::/64 through fec0:0:0:1:0:0:0:20 - - eth0 2000::/3 3ffe:ffff:0:1::1 - so-called "default" routes for clients - - sit1 2000::/3 - adds routes through dedicated tunnel interface sit1 - - tun6to4 3ffe:ffff:1234::/56 - adds routes through hardwired 6to4 tunnel interface tun6to4 - tun6to4 3ffe:ffff:5678::/56 ::5.6.7.8 - adds routes through hardwired 6to4 tunnel interface tun6to4, - specifying next hop - - Notes: - * default routes (such as the "2000::/3" shown above) should be set with - IPV6_DEFAULTGW and IPV6_DEFAULTDEV, see more above. - * tunnel device "sit0" is not supported here, routes will never be applied - -/etc/sysconfig/routed: - - SILENT=yes|no - EXPORT_GATEWAY=yes|no - -/etc/sysconfig/rawdevices: - - This is used for setting up raw device to block device mappings. - It has the format: - <rawdev> <major> <minor> - <rawdev> <blockdev> - For example: - /dev/raw/raw1 /dev/sda1 - /dev/raw/raw2 8 5 - -/etc/sysconfig/pcmcia: - - PCMCIA=yes|no - PCIC=i82365|tcic - PCIC_OPTS=<socket driver (i82365 or tcic) timing parameters> - CORE_OPTS=<pcmcia_core options> - CARDMGR_OPTS=<cardmgr options> - -/etc/sysconfig/amd: - - ADIR=/.automount (normally never changed) - MOUNTPTS='/net /etc/amd.conf' (standard automount stuff) - AMDOPTS= (extra options for AMD) - -/etc/sysconfig/tape: - - DEV=/dev/nst0 - Tape device. Use the non-rewinding one for these scripts. - - For SCSI tapes this is /dev/nst#, where # is the number of the - tape drive you want to use. If you only have one then use - nst0. - - For IDE tapes you use /dev/ht#, where # is the number of the tape - drive you want to use (usually ht0). - - For floppy tape drives use /dev/ftape. - - ADMIN=root - Person to mail to if the backup fails for any reason - - SLEEP=5 - Time to sleep between tape operations. Some drives need a bit - more than others, but 5 seems to work for 8mm, 4mm, and DLT - - BLOCKSIZE=32768 - This worked fine for 8mm, then 4mm, and now DLT. An optimal - setting is probably however much data your drive writes at one - time. - - SHORTDATE=$(date +%y:%m:%d:%H:%M) - A short date string, used in backup log filenames. - - DAY=$(date +log-%y:%m:%d) - This is used for the log file directory. - - DATE=$(date) - Regular date string, used in log files. - - LOGROOT=/var/log/backup - Root of the logging directory - - LIST=$LOGROOT/incremental-list - This is the file name the incremental backup will use to store - the incremental list. It will be $LIST-{some number}. - - DOTCOUNT=$LOGROOT/.count - For counting as you go to know which incremental list to use - - COUNTER=$LOGROOT/counter-file - For rewinding when done...might not use. - - BACKUPTAB=/etc/backuptab - The file in which we keep our list of backup(s) we want to make. - -/etc/sysconfig/saslauthd: - - used by the saslauthd init script (part of the cyrus-sasl package) to - control which arguments are passed to saslauthd at startup time; changes - made to this file have no effect until saslauthd is restarted - - MECH=shadow - controls which data source saslauthd will consult when checking user - passwords; run 'saslauthd -v' to get a full list of available - authentication mechanisms - SOCKETDIR=/run/saslauthd - controls in which directory saslauthd will be directed to create its - listening socket; any change to this value will require a corresponding - change in client configuration files - -/etc/sysconfig/sendmail: - DAEMON=yes|no - yes implies -bd (i.e., listen on port 25 for new mail) - QUEUE=1h - given to sendmail as -q$QUEUE - -q option is not given to sendmail if /etc/sysconfig/sendmail - exists and QUEUE is empty or undefined. - -/etc/locale.conf - - A configutration file for locale settings. See locale.conf(5) for - more details. - - LANG= set locale for all categories, can be any two letter ISO - language code - LC_CTYPE= locale data configuration for classification and conversion - of characters - LC_COLLATE= locale data configuration for collation (sort order) of - strings - LC_MESSAGES= locale data configuration for translation of messages - LC_NUMERIC= locale data configuration for non-monetary numeric data - LC_MONETARY= locale data configuration for monetary data - LC_TIME= locale data configuration for date and time - LC_ALL= locale data configuration overriding all of the above - LANGUAGE= can be a : separated list of ISO language codes - LINGUAS= can be a ' ' separated list of ISO language codes - - The above variables are used in /etc/profile.d/lang.sh. - - If ~/.i18n exists, it is used in addition to /etc/locale.conf and - for per-user customization of the locales. - -/etc/vconsole.conf: - - SYSFONT= Console font. Fonts are found in /lib/kbd/consolefonts. - - UNIMAP= Unicode font map. Most fonts have these built-in. Font maps - can be found in /lib/kbd/unimaps. These are applied via setfont's - -u option. - - SYSFONTACM= Console map. These are applied via setfont's -m option, - and are found in /lib/kbd/consoletrans. - - The above are used to set up the keyboard at boot time. For more - information, see vconsole.conf(5). - -Files in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ -======================================== - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup: -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifdown: - - Symlinks to /sbin/ifup and /sbin/ifdown, respectively. - These are the only two scripts "in" this directory that should - be called directly; these two scripts call all the other - scripts as needed. These symlinks are here for legacy purposes -- - only /sbin/ifup and /sbin/ifdown should currently be used - at the user level. - - These scripts take one argument normally: the name of the device - (e.g. eth0). They are called with a second argument of "boot" - during the boot sequence so that devices that are not meant to - be brought up on boot (ONBOOT=no, see below) can be ignored at - that time. - - Also, interfaces may be brought up via the hotplug scripts; - in this case, HOTPLUG=no needs to be set to no to avoid this. - This is useful e.g. to prevent bonding device activation by merely - loading the bonding kernel module. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/init.ipv6-global: - Not really a public file. Contains different basic settings that - are set from /etc/[rc.d]/init.d/network at different stages of - network initialization. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/network-functions: - - Not really a public file. Contains functions which the scripts use - for bringing interfaces up and down. In particular, it contains - most of the code for handling alternative interface configurations - and interface change notification through netreport. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/network-functions-ipv6: - - Not really a public file. Contains functions which the scripts use - for bringing IPv6 on interfaces up and down, like addresses, routes, - forwarding handling and static or automatic tunneling. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-<interface-name> and -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-<interface-name>:<alias-name>: - - The first defines an interface, and the second contains - only the parts of the definition that are different in a - "alias" (or alternative) interface. For example, the - network numbers might be different, but everything else - might be the same, so only the network numbers would be - in the alias file, but all the device information would - be in the base ifcfg file. - - The items that can be defined in an ifcfg file depend on the - interface type. The really obvious ones I'm not going to - bother to define; you can figure out what "IPADDR" is, I - think... :-) - - Base items: - NAME=<friendly name for users to see> - Most important for PPP. Only used in front ends. - DEVICE=<name of physical device (except dynamically-allocated PPP - devices where it is the "logical name")> - IPADDRn= - PREFIXn= - Network prefix. It is used for all configurations except aliases - and ippp devices. It takes precedence over NETMASK when both - PREFIX and NETMASK are set. - NETMASKn= - Subnet mask; just useful for aliases and ippp devices. For all other - configurations, use PREFIX instead. - - The "n" is expected to be consecutive positive integers starting from 0. - It can be omitted if there is only one address being configured. - - GATEWAY= - METRIC= - Metric for the default route using GATEWAY - ONBOOT=yes|no (not valid for alias devices; use ONPARENT) - HOTPLUG=yes|no - USERCTL=yes|no - BOOTPROTO=none|bootp|dhcp - 'bootp' or 'dhcp' cause a DHCP client to run on the device. Any other - value causes any static configuration in the file to be applied. - VLAN=yes|no - MTU= - Default MTU for this device - WINDOW= - Default window for routes from this device - PEERDNS=yes|no - modify /etc/resolv.conf if peer uses msdns extension (PPP only) or - DNS{1,2} are set, or if using dhclient. default to "yes". - DNS{1,2}=<ip address> - provide DNS addresses that are dropped into the resolv.conf - file if PEERDNS is not set to "no". - SCOPE= - Set to "scope SCOPE-ID" to set a non-default scope for a statically - configured IP address. - SRCADDR= - use the specified source address for outgoing packets - HWADDR= - ethernet hardware address for this device - MACADDR= - Set the hardware address for this device to this. - Use of this in conjunction with HWADDR= may cause - unintended behavior. - NOZEROCONF= - Set this to not set a route for dynamic link-local addresses - over this device. - PERSISTENT_DHCLIENT=yes|no|1|0 - Without this option, or if it is 'no'/'0', and BOOTPROTO=dhcp, - dhclient is run for the interface in "one-shot" mode; if the - dhcp server does not respond for a configurable timeout, then - dhclient exits and the interface is not brought up - - the '-1' option is given to dhclient. - If PERSISTENT_DHCLIENT=yes, then dhclient will keep on trying - to contact the dhcp server when it does not respond - no '-1' - option is given to dhclient. Note: this disables the automatic - checking for the presence of a link before starting dhclient. - DHCPRELEASE=yes|no|1|0 - With this option set to 'yes' (1), when a dhcp configured - interface is brought down with 'ifdown', the lease will be - released. Otherwise, leases are not released. - - NO_DHCP_HOSTNAME=yes|no|1|0 - Tells initscripts to not obtain hostname from DHCP server in the ifup-post - phase. This option might be useful especially with static configuration of - the interface. - DHCP_SEND_HOSTNAME=yes|no|1|0 - Tells initscripts whether the DHCP_HOSTNAME or DHCP_FQDN options (below) - should be sent to DHCP server. - DHCP_HOSTNAME=<hostname> - Sends the specified hostname to the DHCP server. - DHCP_FQDN=<fully.qualified.domain.name> - Sends the specified FQDN to the DHCP server. - - Please note when both DHCP_HOSTNAME and DHCP_FQDN are specified, - only DHCP_FQDN will be used. (Same behaviour as with NetworkManager.) - - DHCLIENT_IGNORE_GATEWAY=yes|no|1|0 - If set to 'yes', it will cause dhclient-script to ignore any $GATEWAY - setting that may be in the ifcfg file for this interface. - Otherwise, the dhclient session which obtains an ip-address - on the same subnet as $GATEWAY will set the default route - to be via $GATEWAY, and no other dhclient session will set - the default route. - DHCLIENTARGS= - Any additional arguments to dhclient. - NM_CONTROLLED=yes|no - If set to 'no', NetworkManager will ignore this connection/device. - Defaults to 'yes'. - ZONE= - Network zone (trust level) of this connection. - If not set, default zone (specified in /etc/firewalld/firewalld.conf) - is used. To see all available zones, run 'firewall-cmd --get-zones'. - ARPCHECKn=yes|no - If set to 'no', ifup will not try to determine, if requested ip address - is used by other machine in network. - Defaults to 'yes'. - ARPUPDATE=yes|no - If set to 'no' the neighbours in current network will not be updated with - ARP information about this NIC. This is especially handy using LVS Load - Balancing with Direct Routing enabled. - Defaults to 'yes'. - IPV4_FAILURE_FATAL=yes|no - If set to yes, ifup-eth will end immediately after ipv4 dhclient fails. - Defaults to 'no'. - - For dynamic addressing (BOOTPROTO=dhcp) only DEVICE needs to - be set; all the rest will be determined by the boot protocol. - - IPV6_SET_SYSCTLS=yes|no - If set, network-scripts will attempt to set sysctls based on the setup - of the interface. For example, will try to set `accept_ra` for interfaces - where $IPV6_AUTOCONF is set to `yes`. Defaults to `yes`, set to `no` if you - want to manage these yourself. - - Base items being deprecated: - NETWORK=<will be calculated automatically with ipcalc> - BROADCAST=<will be calculated automatically with ipcalc> - - Alias specific items: - ONPARENT=yes|no - Whether to bring up the device when the parent device is brought - up. - Default: yes - - IPv6-only items for real interfaces: - IPV6INIT=yes|no - Enable or disable IPv6 static, DHCP, or autoconf configuration for this interface - Default: yes - IPV6FORWARDING=yes|no - Enable or disable global forwarding of incoming IPv6 packets - Note: Obsolete in interface specification! - Default: no - IPV6ADDR=<IPv6 address>[/<prefix length>] - Specify a primary static IPv6 address here - Optional, if normal host and a router advertisement daemon is on local link - Required, if node is a router and interface should route packets - Note: if prefix length is omitted, 64 is assumed - Example: - IPV6ADDR="3ffe:ffff:0:5::1" - IPV6ADDR="3ffe:ffff:0:1::1/128" - IPV6ADDR_SECONDARIES="<IPv6 address>[/<prefix length>] ..." (optional) - A list of secondary IPv6 addresses (e.g. useful for virtual hosting) - Example: - IPV6ADDR_SECONDARIES="3ffe:ffff:0:1::10 3ffe:ffff:0:2::11/128" - IPV6_MTU=<MTU of link> (optional) - Optional, dedicated MTU of this link - Note: Must be greater or equal to 1280. - Example: - IPV6_MTU="1280" - IPV6_PRIVACY=rfc3041 - Enables RFC 3041 IPv6 privacy support if set. - Default: RFC 3041 support disabled - IPV6_FORCE_ACCEPT_RA=yes|no - By default network-scripts will set `accept_ra` only if $IPV6_AUTOCONF is - set to `yes`. If you don't want SLAAC addresses but do want to accept RA, - then set this to `yes`. Defaults to `no`. - - Special configuration options for multi-homed hosts etc. - IPV6_ROUTER=yes|no: Controls IPv6 autoconfiguration - IPV6_AUTOCONF=yes|no: Controls IPv6 autoconfiguration - Defaults: - Global IPV6FORWARDING=yes: IPV6_AUTOCONF=no, IPV6_ROUTER=yes - Global IPV6FORWARDING=no: IPV6_AUTOCONF=yes - - Optional settings for a 6to4 tunnel - IPV6TO4INIT=yes|no - Enable or disable 6to4 tunneling setup - Default: no - IPV6TO4_RELAY=<IPv4 address> (optional) - IPv4 address of the remote 6to4 relay - Note: if this is omitted, ::192.88.99.1 (the anycast relay address) is chosen - IPV6TO4_IPV4ADDR=<IPv6 address>[/<prefix length>] (optional) - Overwrite local IPv4 address which is accessible from the Internet - (optional, in case of static IPv4-NAT behind a router or other special scenarios) - IPV6TO4_MTU=<MTU for IPv6> (optional) - Controls IPv6 MTU for the 6to4 tunnel - Note: Must be greater or equal to 1280 - Example: - IPV6TO4_MTU="1280" - Default: MTU of master device - 20 - IPV6TO4_ROUTING="<device>-<suffix>/<prefix length> ..." (optional) - A list of routing tokens to setup proper IPv6 interfaces on the LAN - Example: - IPV6TO4_ROUTING="eth0-:0004::1/64 eth1-:0005::1/64" - Will create one address per eth0 and eth1, taking given SLA - - Optional settings for a 6to4 tunnel or a ppp link - IPV6_CONTROL_RADVD=yes|no (optional) - Enable signaling radvd that the 6to4 prefix has been changed or a - preconfigured dynamic device is up or down - Default: no - - IPv6-only items for static tunnel interface: - Interface name: sitX (X => 1) - IPV6INIT=yes|no - Enable or disable IPv6 configuration for this interface - Default: no - IPV6TUNNELIPV4=<IPv4 address> - Specify IPv4 address of a foreign IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnel endpoint - Example: - IPV6TUNNELIPV4="1.2.3.4" - IPV6TUNNELIPV4LOCAL=<IPv4 address> - Specify local IPv4 address of tunnel, useful on interfaces with multiple IPv4 addresses - IPV6ADDR=<IPv6 address>[/<prefix length>] (optional) - local IPv6 address of a numbered tunnel - IPV6ADDR_SECONDARIES="<IPv6 address>[/<prefix length>] ..." (optional) - A list of secondary IPv6 addresses (example see above) - IPV6_MTU=<MTU of tunnel> (optional) - Optional, dedicated MTU of this tunnel - Note: Must be greater or equal to 1280 - Example: - IPV6_MTU="1280" - - IPv6-only option to enable DHCPv6 client: - DHCPV6C=yes|no - This will enable the DHCPv6 features of dhclient to be run for the interface. - See man dhclient(8) and dhclient.conf(5). - DHCPV6C_OPTIONS=... - This will pass given arguments to the DHCPv6 client. For example, - "-S" option will request network information (e.g., DNS addresses) - only, not IPv6 addresses. - - Ethernet-only items: - ARP=yes|no (adds 'arp' flag to ip, for use with the - ethertap device) - LINKDELAY=<time in seconds> - Time that the system should pause after the specific interface is - enabled. This may be useful if one interface is connected to a - switch which has spanning tree enabled and must wait for STP to - converge before the interface should be considered usable. - BRIDGE=<br* device> - If set, the ethernet device is not assigned an address. It is added to - the specified bridge device instead. - EXTRA_ROUTE_OPTS=<string of route options> - Extra options to add to the interface route. For example, let's say you - wanted an interface route to have an mtu of 1480, but wanted the - interface to still have a route of 1500, you could set "mtu 1480" here. - Anything here is appended to the `ip route add` or `ip route replace` - command. - - Deprecated, but supported: - ETHTOOL_OPTS=... - Any device-specific options supported by ethtool. For example, - if you wanted to force 100Mb full duplex: - ETHTOOL_OPTS="speed 100 duplex full autoneg off" - Note that changing speed or duplex settings almost always - requires disabling autonegotiation with 'autoneg off'. - - Multiple options can also be set like so : - ETHTOOL_OPTS="-K ${DEVICE} tso on; -G ${DEVICE} rx 256 tx 256" - - Long term, this should be done by sysadmin-written udev rules. - - No longer supported: - PROMISC=yes|no (enable or disable promiscuous mode) - ALLMULTI=yes|no (enable or disable all-multicast mode) - - To properly set these, use the packet socket interface. - - Ethernet 802.1q VLAN items: - DEVICE=eth0.42 - Initscripts use the device name for VLAN devices. - Example: eth0.42 for vlan 42 on device eth0. - Valid VLAN ID range is 0-4095. Most ethernet switches reserve - VLAN ID 1 to be used as management VLAN; starting from VLAN - ID 2 is recommended. - REORDER_HDR=yes|no - When enabled the VLAN device will move the ethernet header - around to make it look exactly like a real ethernet device. - This may help programs such as ISC dhcpd which read the raw - ethernet packet and make assumptions about the location of - bytes. If you don't need it turn it off because there - is a small performance penalty. Default is on. - GVRP=yes|no - When enabled, this will announce new vlan creation to a GVRP - enabled trunk port on a switch. Default is off. - - PPP/SLIP items: - PERSIST=yes|no - MODEMPORT=<device, say /dev/modem> - LINESPEED=<speed, say 115200> - DEFABORT=yes|no (tells netcfg whether or not to put default - abort strings in when creating/editing the chat script and/or - dip script for this interface) - (meaningless with WVDIALSECT) - - PPP-specific items - WVDIALSECT=<list of sections from wvdial.conf to use> - If this variable is set, then the chat script (if it - exists) is ignored, and wvdial is used to open the - PPP connection. - DEFROUTE=yes|no (set this interface as default route? yes is default) - DEBUG=yes|no (defaults to yes) - turns on/off pppd and chat (if used) debugging. - ESCAPECHARS=yes|no (simplified interface here doesn't let people - specify which characters to escape; almost everyone can use - asyncmap 00000000 anyway, and they can set PPPOPTIONS to - asyncmap foobar if they want to set options perfectly) - HARDFLOWCTL=yes|no (yes implies "modem crtscts" options) - PPPOPTIONS=<arbitrary option string; is placed last on the - command line, so it can override other options like asyncmap - that were specified differently> - PPPOE_EXTRA = any extra arguments to pass to pppoe - PPPD_EXTRA = any extra arguments to pass to pppd - PAPNAME=<"name $PAPNAME" on pppd command line> (note that - the "remotename" option is always specified as the logical - ppp device name, like "ppp0" (which might perhaps be the - physical device ppp1 if some other ppp device was brought - up earlier...), which makes it easy to manage pap/chap - files -- name/password pairs are associated with the - logical ppp device name so that they can be managed - together. - REMIP=<remote ip address, normally unspecified> - MTU= - MRU= - DISCONNECTTIMEOUT=<number of seconds, default currently 5> - (time to wait before re-establishing the connection after - a successfully-connected session terminates before attempting - to establish a new connection.) - RETRYTIMEOUT=<number of seconds, default currently 60> - (time to wait before re-attempting to establish a connection - after a previous attempt fails.) - RETRYCONNECT=yes|no (defaults to yes) - If this is yes, then we will re-run pppd if it exits with a - "connect script failed" status. Otherwise, only one attempt - is made to bring up the connection. Note that some connect - scripts (for example, wvdial) might do their own retries (such - as BUSY or NO DIALTONE conditions). - MAXFAIL=<number> - If this is set, this will cause ppp-watch to exit after - the specified number of attempts. - DEMAND=yes|no - Switches on demand-dialing mode using pppd's "demand" option. - IDLETIMEOUT=600 - The amount of time the link needs to be inactive before pppd will - bring it down automatically. - BOOTTIMEOUT=30 - The amount of time to wait at boot before giving up on the - connection. - - IPPP-specific items (ISDN) - PROVIDER=<ProviderName> - USER=<Login> - PASSWORD=<Password> - ENCAP=[syncppp|] - DIALMODE=[manual|auto] - SECURE=off|on - MSN=<> - PHONE_IN=<Callback.Number> - AREACODE=<> - REGIONCODE=<> - PHONE_OUT=<PhoneNumber> - BUNDLING=off|on - HUPTIMEOUT=<number> - DNS1=<PrimaryDNS> - DNS2=<SecondaryDNS> - DOMAIN="" - LAYER=[HDLC|] - CALLBACK=off|on - CHARGEHUP=<number> - CHARGEINT=<number> - CBHUP=<number> - CBDELAY=<number> - DIALMAX=<number> - AUTH=[+pap] [-chap] - IHUP=<> - DELDEFAULTROUTE=[enabled|disabled] - CBCP=off|on - VJ=off|on - VJCCOMP=off|on - AC=off|on - PC=off|on - BSDCOMP=off|on - CCP=off|on - SLAVE_DEVICE=ippp[0-9] - - ippp0 items being deprecated: - BOOT=[on|off] will be converted to ONBOOT=[yes|no] by netconf - LOCAL_IP= will be converted to IPADDR by netconf - REMOTE_IP= will be converted to GATEWAY by netconf - - Wireless-specific items: - See iw(8) for additional information. - MODE=[Managed|Ad-Hoc|Monitor] - ESSID= - Required. - FREQ= - Required if MODE=Ad-Hoc. - KEY=<default WEP key> - - IPSEC specific items - SRC=source address. Not required. - DST=destination address - TYPE=IPSEC - SRCNET=source net (for tunneling) - DSTNET=destination network (for tunneling) - - Manual keying: - - AH_PROTO{,_IN,_OUT}=protocol to use for AH (defaults to hmac-sha1) - ESP_PROTO{,_IN,_OUT}=protocol to use for ESP (defaults to 3des-cbc) - AESP_PROTO{,_IN,_OUT}=protocol to use for ESP authentication (defaults to - hmac-sha1) - KEY_AH{,_IN,_OUT}=AH key - KEY_ESP{,_IN,_OUT}=ESP encryption key - KEY_AESP{,_IN,_OUT}=ESP authentication key (optional) - SPI_{ESP,AH}_{IN,OUT}=SPIs to use - - _IN and _OUT specifiers are for using different keys or protocols for - incoming and outgoing packets. If neither _IN or _OUT variants are set for - protocols or keys, the same will be used for both. Hexadecimal keys need to - be prefixed with "0x". - - Automatic keying: - - IKE_DHGROUP=<number> (defaults to 2) - IKE_METHOD=PSK|X509|GSSAPI - PSK=preshared keys (shared secret) - X509=X.509 certificates - GSSPI=GSSAPI authentication - IKE_AUTH=protocol to use for Phase 1 of SA (defaults to sha1) - IKE_ENC=protocol to use for Phase 1 of SA (defaults to 3des) - IKE_PSK=preshared key for this connection - IKE_CERTFILE=our certificate file name for X509 IKE - IKE_PEER_CERTFILE=peer public cert filename for X509 IKE - IKE_DNSSEC=retrieve peer public certs from DNS - (otherwise uses certificate information sent over IKE) - - To manage the racoon configuration manually (e.g. when there is more than - one IPSEC configuration with the same DST), set KEYING=automatic and leave - all IKE_* parameters unspecified. - - To override the identifier to use with a preshared key: - - MYID_TYPE=address|fqdn|user_fqdn - MYID_VALUE=fqdn or user_fqdn string for this connection - - Usage of AH or ESP may be disabled by setting {AH,ESP}_PROTO to "none". - - Bonding-specific items - - SLAVE=yes - Specifies device as a slave - MASTER=bondXX - Specifies master device to bind to - BONDING_OPTS= - A space-separated list of options to the bonding driver for this - interface, such as: - - "mode=active-backup arp_interval=60 arp_ip_target=192.168.1.1,192.168.1.2" - - Tunnel-specific items: - TYPE=GRE|IPIP|IPIP6|EXTERNAL - External is a mode for ip6_tunnel interfaces (that cannot be set on - the primary ip6tnl0 interface), which permits unwrapping encapsulated - packets regardless of their internal IP (v4 or v6) provided the inner - address is on the interface. Use $MY_INNER_IPADDR for v4 addresses. Use - $IPV6ADDR and $IPV6ADDR_SECONDARIES as usual for v6 addresses. - MY_INNER_IPADDR=local IP address of the tunnel interface - PEER_OUTER_IPADDR=IP address of the remote tunnel endpoint - MY_OUTER_IPADDR=IP address of the local tunnel endpoint - If unspecified, an IP address is selected automatically for outgoing - tunnel packets, and incoming tunnel packets are accepted on all local - IP addresses. - PEER_INNER_IPADDR=IP address of the remote end of the tunnel interface - If this is specified, a route to PEER_INNER_IPADDR through the tunnel - is added automatically. - TTL=TTL value for tunnel packets - Default is to use the TTL of the packet transported through the tunnel - - Bridge-specific items: - TYPE=Bridge - STP=off|on (see 'brctl stp') - DELAY=forward delay time in seconds (see 'brctl setfd') - BRIDGING_OPTS= - A space-separated list of bridging options for either the bridge - device, or the port device, such as: - - BRIDGING_OPTS="hello_time=200 priority=65535" - for bridge devices, or - BRIDGING_OPTS="hairpin_mode=1" - for port devices. - - TUN/TAP-specific items: - OWNER=<owner of the device> - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/chat-<interface-name>: - - chat script for PPP or SLIP connection intended to establish - the connection. For SLIP devices, a DIP script is written - from the chat script; for PPP devices, the chat script is used - directly. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/dip-<interface-name> - - A write-only script created from the chat script by netcfg. - Do not modify this. In the future, this file may disappear - by default and created on-the-fly from the chat script if - it does not exist. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-post - - Called when any network device EXCEPT a SLIP device comes - up. Calls /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-routes to - bring up static routes that depend on that device. Calls - /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-aliases to bring up - aliases for that device. Sets the hostname if it is not - already set and a hostname can be found for the IP for that - device. Sends SIGIO to any programs that have requested - notification of network events. - - Could be extended to fix up nameservice configuration, call - arbitrary scripts, etc, as needed. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-routes - - Set up static routes for a device. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifup-aliases - - Bring up aliases for a device. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/route-<interface-name> - - Contains lines that specify additional routes that should be added when the - associated interface is brought up. - - The files are processed by the ifup-routes script and uses the /sbin/ipcalc - utility for all network masks and numbers. Routes are specified using the - syntax: - - ADDRESSn=<network> - NETMASKn=<network/prefix mask> - GATEWAYn=<next-hop router/gateway IP address> - - The "n" is expected to be consecutive positive integers starting from 0. - For example: - - ADDRESS0=192.168.2.0 - NETMASK0=255.255.255.0 - GATEWAY0=192.168.1.1 - - adds a network route to the 192.168.2.0 network via the gateway at - 192.168.1.1. Since you must already have a route to the network of the - gateway, there is no need to specify a device. - - Note: The ifup-routes script also supports an older syntax designed to be - used directly as an argument to "/sbin/ip route add". - If no "ADDRESSn" lines are found the following will still - work: - - 192.168.2.0/24 dev ppp0 - - adds a network route to the 192.168.2.0 network through ppp0. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/route6-<interface-name> - - Contains lines that are arguments to "/sbin/ip -6 route add" - For example: - - site-local route for network fec0:0:0:2::/64 - via gateway fec0:0:0:1:0:0:0:20 (e.g. on eth0): - - fec0:0:0:2::/64 via fec0:0:0:1:0:0:0:20 - - additional prefix configured to be on-link on eth0: - - 3ffe:fffe:1:2::/64 dev eth0 - - 6to4 route for network 3ffe:ffff:1::/48, either: - - 3ffe:ffff:1::/48 - 3ffe:ffff:1::/48 via ::192.168.1.2 - - Note the special case of 6to4 interface: 'via [relay]' is - automatically added if explicit 'via' wasn't specified. - -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/rule-<interface-name> -/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/rule6-<interface-name> - - Contains lines that specify additional routing rules that should be added - when the associated interface is brought up. - - Each non-comment line is used directly as an argument to "/sbin/ip rule add" - or "/sbin/ip -6 rule add" for rule6 files. - |