NetworkManager.conf(1) - NetworkManager configuration file



  • NETWORKMANAGER.CON(5)			      Configuration			   NETWORKMANAGER.CON(5)
    
    
    
    NAME
           NetworkManager.conf - NetworkManager configuration file
    
    SYNOPSIS
           /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf, /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/name.conf,
           /usr/lib/NetworkManager/conf.d/name.conf, /var/lib/NetworkManager/NetworkManager-intern.conf
    
    DESCRIPTION
           NetworkManager.conf is the configuration file for NetworkManager. It is used to set up various
           aspects of NetworkManager's behavior. The location of the main file and configuration directories
           may be changed through use of the --config, --config-dir, --system-config-dir, and
           --intern-config argument for NetworkManager, respectively.
    
           If a default NetworkManager.conf is provided by your distribution's packages, you should not
           modify it, since your changes may get overwritten by package updates. Instead, you can add
           additional .conf files to the /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d directory. These will be read in order,
           with later files overriding earlier ones. Packages might install further configuration snippets
           to /usr/lib/NetworkManager/conf.d. This directory is parsed first, even before
           NetworkManager.conf. The loading of a file /usr/lib/NetworkManager/conf.d/name.conf can be
           prevented by adding a file /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/name.conf. In this case, the file from the
           etc configuration shadows the file from the system configuration directory.
    
           NetworkManager can overwrite certain user configuration options via D-Bus or other internal
           operations. In this case it writes those changes to
           /var/lib/NetworkManager/NetworkManager-intern.conf. This file is not intended to be modified by
           the user, but it is read last and can shadow user configuration from NetworkManager.conf.
    
           Certain settings from the configuration can be reloaded at runtime either by sending SIGHUP
           signal or via D-Bus' Reload call.
    
    FILE FORMAT
           The configuration file format is so-called key file (sort of ini-style format). It consists of
           sections (groups) of key-value pairs. Lines beginning with a '#' and blank lines are considered
           comments. Sections are started by a header line containing the section enclosed in '[' and ']',
           and ended implicitly by the start of the next section or the end of the file. Each key-value pair
           must be contained in a section.
    
           For keys that take a list of devices as their value, you can specify devices by their MAC
           addresses or interface names, or "*" to specify all devices. See the section called “Device List
           Format” below.
    
           Minimal system settings configuration file looks like this:
    
    	   [main]
    	   plugins=keyfile
    
           As an extension to the normal keyfile format, you can also append a value to a previously-set
           list-valued key by doing:
    
    	   plugins+=another-plugin
    	   plugins-=remove-me
    
    
    MAIN SECTION
           plugins
    	   Lists system settings plugin names separated by ','. These plugins are used to read and write
    	   system-wide connections. When multiple plugins are specified, the connections are read from
    	   all listed plugins. When writing connections, the plugins will be asked to save the
    	   connection in the order listed here; if the first plugin cannot write out that connection
    	   type (or can't write out any connections) the next plugin is tried, etc. If none of the
    	   plugins can save the connection, an error is returned to the user.
    
    	   If NetworkManager defines a distro-specific network-configuration plugin for your system,
    	   then that will normally be listed here. (See below for the available plugins.) Note that the
    	   keyfile plugin is always appended to the end of this list (if it doesn't already appear
    	   earlier in the list), so if there is no distro-specific plugin for your system then you can
    	   leave this key unset and NetworkManager will fall back to using keyfile.
    
           monitor-connection-files
    	   Whether the configured settings plugin(s) should set up file monitors and immediately pick up
    	   changes made to connection files while NetworkManager is running. This is disabled by
    	   default; NetworkManager will only read the connection files at startup, and when explicitly
    	   requested via the ReloadConnections D-Bus call. If this key is set to 'true', then
    	   NetworkManager will reload connection files any time they changed. Automatic reloading is not
    	   advised because there are race conditions involved and it depends on the way how the editor
    	   updates the file. In some situations, NetworkManager might first delete and add the
    	   connection anew, instead of updating the existing one. Also, NetworkManager might pick up
    	   incomplete settings while the user is still editing the files.
    
           auth-polkit
    	   Whether the system uses PolicyKit for authorization. If false, all requests will be allowed.
    	   If true, non-root requests are authorized using PolicyKit. The default value is true.
    
           dhcp
    	   This key sets up what DHCP client NetworkManager will use. Allowed values are dhclient,
    	   dhcpcd, and internal. The dhclient and dhcpcd options require the indicated clients to be
    	   installed. The internal option uses a built-in DHCP client which is not currently as
    	   featureful as the external clients.
    
    	   If this key is missing, available DHCP clients are looked for in this order: dhclient,
    	   dhcpcd, internal.
    
           no-auto-default
    	   Specify devices for which NetworkManager shouldn't create default wired connection (Auto
    	   eth0). By default, NetworkManager creates a temporary wired connection for any Ethernet
    	   device that is managed and doesn't have a connection configured. List a device in this option
    	   to inhibit creating the default connection for the device. May have the special value * to
    	   apply to all devices.
    
    	   When the default wired connection is deleted or saved to a new persistent connection by a
    	   plugin, the device is added to a list in the file
    	   /var/run/NetworkManager/no-auto-default.state to prevent creating the default connection for
    	   that device again.
    
    	   See the section called “Device List Format” for the syntax how to specify a device.
    
    	   Example:
    
    	       no-auto-default=00:22:68:5c:5d:c4,00:1e:65:ff:aa:ee
    	       no-auto-default=eth0,eth1
    	       no-auto-default=*
    
    
           ignore-carrier
    	   This setting is deprecated for the per-device setting ignore-carrier which overwrites this
    	   setting if specified (See ???). Otherwise, it is a list of matches to specify for which
    	   device carrier should be ignored. See the section called “Device List Format” for the syntax
    	   how to specify a device.
    
           assume-ipv6ll-only
    	   Specify devices for which NetworkManager will try to generate a connection based on initial
    	   configuration when the device only has an IPv6 link-local address.
    
    	   See the section called “Device List Format” for the syntax how to specify a device.
    
           configure-and-quit
    	   When set to 'true', NetworkManager quits after performing initial network configuration but
    	   spawns small helpers to preserve DHCP leases and IPv6 addresses. This is useful in
    	   environments where network setup is more or less static or it is desirable to save process
    	   time but still handle some dynamic configurations. When this option is true, network
    	   configuration for WiFi, WWAN, Bluetooth, ADSL, and PPPoE interfaces cannot be preserved due
    	   to their use of external services, and these devices will be deconfigured when NetworkManager
    	   quits even though other interface's configuration may be preserved. Also, to preserve DHCP
    	   addresses the 'dhcp' option must be set to 'internal'. The default value of the
    	   'configure-and-quit' option is 'false', meaning that NetworkManager will continue running
    	   after initial network configuration and continue responding to system and hardware events,
    	   D-Bus requests, and user commands.
    
           dns
    	   Set the DNS (resolv.conf) processing mode.
    
    	   default: The default if the key is not specified. NetworkManager will update resolv.conf to
    	   reflect the nameservers provided by currently active connections.
    
    	   dnsmasq: NetworkManager will run dnsmasq as a local caching nameserver, using a "split DNS"
    	   configuration if you are connected to a VPN, and then update resolv.conf to point to the
    	   local nameserver.
    
    	   unbound: NetworkManager will talk to unbound and dnssec-triggerd, providing a "split DNS"
    	   configuration with DNSSEC support. The /etc/resolv.conf will be managed by dnssec-trigger
    	   daemon.
    
    	   none: NetworkManager will not modify resolv.conf. This implies rc-manager unmanaged
    
           rc-manager
    	   Set the resolv.conf management mode. The default value depends on NetworkManager build
    	   options, and this version of NetworkManager was build with a default of "file". Regardless of
    	   this setting, NetworkManager will always write resolv.conf to its runtime state directory.
    
    	   symlink: NetworkManager will symlink /etc/resolv.conf to its private resolv.conf file in the
    	   runtime state directory. If /etc/resolv.conf already is a symlink pointing to a different
    	   location, the file will not be modified. This allows the user to disable managing by pointing
    	   the link /etc/resolv.conf to somewhere else.
    
    	   file: NetworkManager will write /etc/resolv.conf as file. If it finds a symlink, it will
    	   follow the symlink and update the target instead.
    
    	   resolvconf: NetworkManager will run resolvconf to update the DNS configuration.
    
    	   netconfig: NetworkManager will run netconfig to update the DNS configuration.
    
    	   unmanaged: don't touch /etc/resolv.conf.
    
    	   none: deprecated alias for symlink.
    
           debug
    	   Comma separated list of options to aid debugging. This value will be combined with the
    	   environment variable NM_DEBUG. Currently the following values are supported:
    
    	   RLIMIT_CORE: set ulimit -c unlimited to write out core dumps. Beware, that a core dump can
    	   contain sensitive information such as passwords or configuration settings.
    
    	   fatal-warnings: set g_log_set_always_fatal() to core dump on warning messages from glib. This
    	   is equivalent to the --g-fatal-warnings command line option.
    
    KEYFILE SECTION
           This section contains keyfile-plugin-specific options, and is normally only used when you are not
           using any other distro-specific plugin.
    
           hostname
    	   This key is deprecated and has no effect since the hostname is now stored in /etc/hostname or
    	   other system configuration files according to build options.
    
           path
    	   The location where keyfiles are read and stored. This defaults to
    	   "/etc/NetworkManager/conf.d".
    
           unmanaged-devices
    	   Set devices that should be ignored by NetworkManager.
    
    	   See the section called “Device List Format” for the syntax how to specify a device.
    
    	   Example:
    
    	       unmanaged-devices=interface-name:em4
    	       unmanaged-devices=mac:00:22:68:1c:59:b1;mac:00:1E:65:30:D1:C4;interface-name:eth2
    
    
    IFUPDOWN SECTION
           This section contains ifupdown-specific options and thus only has effect when using the ifupdown
           plugin.
    
           managed
    	   If set to true, then interfaces listed in /etc/network/interfaces are managed by
    	   NetworkManager. If set to false, then any interface listed in /etc/network/interfaces will be
    	   ignored by NetworkManager. Remember that NetworkManager controls the default route, so
    	   because the interface is ignored, NetworkManager may assign the default route to some other
    	   interface.
    
    	   The default value is false.
    
    LOGGING SECTION
           This section controls NetworkManager's logging. Any settings here are overridden by the
           --log-level and --log-domains command-line options.
    
           level
    	   The default logging verbosity level. One of OFF, ERR, WARN, INFO, DEBUG, TRACE. The ERR level
    	   logs only critical errors. WARN logs warnings that may reflect operation. INFO logs various
    	   informational messages that are useful for tracking state and operations. DEBUG enables
    	   verbose logging for debugging purposes. TRACE enables even more verbose logging then DEBUG
    	   level. Subsequent levels also log all messages from earlier levels; thus setting the log
    	   level to INFO also logs error and warning messages.
    
           domains
    	   The following log domains are available: PLATFORM, RFKILL, ETHER, WIFI, BT, MB, DHCP4, DHCP6,
    	   PPP, WIFI_SCAN, IP4, IP6, AUTOIP4, DNS, VPN, SHARING, SUPPLICANT, AGENTS, SETTINGS, SUSPEND,
    	   CORE, DEVICE, OLPC, WIMAX, INFINIBAND, FIREWALL, ADSL, BOND, VLAN, BRIDGE, DBUS_PROPS, TEAM,
    	   CONCHECK, DCB, DISPATCH, AUDIT, SYSTEMD, VPN_PLUGIN.
    
    	   In addition, these special domains can be used: NONE, ALL, DEFAULT, DHCP, IP.
    
    	   You can specify per-domain log level overrides by adding a colon and a log level to any
    	   domain. E.g., "WIFI:DEBUG,WIFI_SCAN:OFF".
    
    	   Domain descriptions:
    	       PLATFORM	   : OS (platform) operations
    	       RFKILL	   : RFKill subsystem operations
    	       ETHER	   : Ethernet device operations
    	       WIFI	   : Wi-Fi device operations
    	       BT	   : Bluetooth operations
    	       MB	   : Mobile broadband operations
    	       DHCP4	   : DHCP for IPv4
    	       DHCP6	   : DHCP for IPv6
    	       PPP	   : Point-to-point protocol operations
    	       WIFI_SCAN   : Wi-Fi scanning operations
    	       IP4	   : IPv4-related operations
    	       IP6	   : IPv6-related operations
    	       AUTOIP4	   : AutoIP operations
    	       DNS	   : Domain Name System related operations
    	       VPN	   : Virtual Private Network connections and operations
    	       SHARING	   : Connection sharing
    	       SUPPLICANT  : WPA supplicant related operations
    	       AGENTS	   : Secret agents operations and communication
    	       SETTINGS	   : Settings/config service operations
    	       SUSPEND	   : Suspend/resume
    	       CORE	   : Core daemon and policy operations
    	       DEVICE	   : Activation and general interface operations
    	       OLPC	   : OLPC Mesh device operations
    	       WIMAX	   : WiMAX device operations
    	       INFINIBAND  : InfiniBand device operations
    	       FIREWALL	   : FirewallD related operations
    	       ADSL	   : ADSL device operations
    	       BOND	   : Bonding operations
    	       VLAN	   : VLAN operations
    	       BRIDGE	   : Bridging operations
    	       DBUS_PROPS  : D-Bus property changes
    	       TEAM	   : Teaming operations
    	       CONCHECK	   : Connectivity check
    	       DCB	   : Data Center Bridging (DCB) operations
    	       DISPATCH	   : Dispatcher scripts
    	       AUDIT	   : Audit records
    	       SYSTEMD	   : Messages from internal libsystemd
    	       VPN_PLUGIN  : logging messages from VPN plugins
    
    	       NONE	   : when given by itself logging is disabled
    	       ALL	   : all log domains
    	       DEFAULT	   : default log domains
    	       DHCP	   : shortcut for "DHCP4,DHCP6"
    	       IP	   : shortcut for "IP4,IP6"
    
    	       HW	   : deprecated alias for "PLATFORM"
    
    	   In general, the logfile should not contain passwords or private data. However, you are always
    	   advised to check the file before posting it online or attaching to a bug report.  VPN_PLUGIN
    	   is special as it might reveal private information of the VPN plugins with verbose levels.
    	   Therefore this domain will be excluded when setting ALL or DEFAULT to more verbose levels
    	   then INFO.
    
           backend
    	   The logging backend. Supported values are "debug", "syslog", "journal". "debug" uses syslog
    	   and logs to standard error. If NetworkManager is started in debug mode (--debug) this option
    	   is ignored and "debug" is always used. Otherwise, the default is "syslog".
    
           audit
    	   Whether the audit records are delivered to auditd, the audit daemon. If false, audit records
    	   will be sent only to the NetworkManager logging system. If set to true, they will be also
    	   sent to auditd. The default value is false.
    
    CONNECTION SECTION
           Specify default values for connections.
    
           Example:
    
    	   [connection]
    	   ipv6.ip6-privacy=0
    
    
       Supported Properties
           Not all properties can be overwritten, only the following properties are supported to have their
           default values configured (see nm-settings(5) for details). A default value is only consulted if
           the corresponding per-connection value explicitly allows for that.
    
           connection.autoconnect-slaves
    
           connection.lldp
    
           ethernet.cloned-mac-address
    	   If left unspecified, it defaults to "permanent".
    
           ethernet.generate-mac-address-mask
    
           ethernet.wake-on-lan
    
           ipv4.dad-timeout
    
           ipv4.dhcp-timeout
    	   If left unspecified, the default value for the interface type is used.
    
           ipv4.route-metric
    
           ipv6.ip6-privacy
    	   If ipv6.ip6-privacy is unset, use the content of
    	   "/proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/default/use_tempaddr" as last fallback.
    
           ipv6.route-metric
    
           vpn.timeout
    	   If left unspecified, default value of 60 seconds is used.
    
           wifi.cloned-mac-address
    	   If left unspecified, it defaults to "permanent".
    
           wifi.generate-mac-address-mask
    
           wifi.mac-address-randomization
    	   If left unspecified, MAC address randomization is disabled. This setting is deprecated for
    	   wifi.cloned-mac-address.
    
           wifi.powersave
    	   If left unspecified, the default value "ignore" will be used.
    
       Sections
           You can configure multiple connection sections, by having different sections with a name that all
           start with "connection". Example:
    
    	   [connection]
    	   ipv6.ip6-privacy=0
    	   connection.autoconnect-slaves=1
    	   vpn.timeout=120
    
    	   [connection-wifi-wlan0]
    	   match-device=interface-name:wlan0
    	   ipv4.route-metric=50
    
    	   [connection-wifi-other]
    	   match-device=type:wifi
    	   ipv4.route-metric=55
    	   ipv6.ip6-privacy=1
    
           The sections within one file are considered in order of appearance, with the exception that the
           [connection] section is always considered last. In the example above, this order is
           [connection-wifi-wlan0], [connection-wlan-other], and [connection]. When checking for a default
           configuration value, the sections are searched until the requested value is found. In the example
           above, "ipv4.route-metric" for wlan0 interface is set to 50, and for all other Wi-Fi typed
           interfaces to 55. Also, Wi-Fi devices would have IPv6 private addresses enabled by default, but
           other devices would have it disabled. Note that also "wlan0" gets "ipv6.ip6-privacy=1", because
           although the section "[connection-wifi-wlan0]" matches the device, it does not contain that
           property and the search continues.
    
           When having different sections in multiple files, sections from files that are read later have
           higher priority. So within one file the priority of the sections is top-to-bottom. Across
           multiple files later definitions take precedence.
    
           The following properties further control how a connection section applies.
    
           match-device
    	   An optional device spec that restricts when the section applies. See the section called
    	   “Device List Format” for the possible values.
    
           stop-match
    	   An optional boolean value which defaults to no. If the section matches (based on
    	   match-device), further sections will not be considered even if the property in question is
    	   not present. In the example above, if [connection-wifi-wlan0] would have stop-match set to
    	   yes, the device wlan0 would have ipv6.ip6-privacy property unspecified. That is, the search
    	   for the property would not continue in the connection sections [connection-wifi-other] or
    	   [connection].
    
    DEVICE SECTION
           Contains per-device persistent configuration.
    
           Example:
    
    	   [device]
    	   match-device=interface-name:eth3
    	   unmanaged=1
    
    
       Supported Properties
           The following properties can be configured per-device.
    
           ignore-carrier
    	   Specify devices for which NetworkManager will (partially) ignore the carrier state. Normally,
    	   for device types that support carrier-detect, such as Ethernet and InfiniBand, NetworkManager
    	   will only allow a connection to be activated on the device if carrier is present (ie, a cable
    	   is plugged in), and it will deactivate the device if carrier drops for more than a few
    	   seconds.
    
    	   A device with carrier ignored will allow activating connections on that device even when it
    	   does not have carrier, provided that the connection uses only statically-configured IP
    	   addresses. Additionally, it will allow any active connection (whether static or dynamic) to
    	   remain active on the device when carrier is lost.
    
    	   Note that the "carrier" property of NMDevices and device D-Bus interfaces will still reflect
    	   the actual device state; it's just that NetworkManager will not make use of that information.
    
    	   This setting overwrites the deprecated main.ignore-carrier setting above.
    
           wifi.scan-rand-mac-address
    	   Configures MAC address randomization of a Wi-Fi device during scanning. This defaults to yes
    	   in which case a random, locally-administered MAC address will be used. The setting
    	   wifi.scan-generate-mac-address-mask allows to influence the generated MAC address to use
    	   certain vendor OUIs. If disabled, the MAC address during scanning is left unchanged to
    	   whatever is configured. For the configured MAC address while the device is associated, see
    	   instead the per-connection setting wifi.cloned-mac-address.
    
           wifi.scan-generate-mac-address-mask
    	   Like the per-connection settings ethernet.generate-mac-address-mask and
    	   wifi.generate-mac-address-mask, this allows to configure the generated MAC addresses during
    	   scanning. See nm-settings(5) for details.
    
       Sections
           The [device] section works the same as the [connection] section. That is, multiple sections that
           all start with the prefix "device" can be specified. The settings "match-device" and "stop-match"
           are available to match a device section on a device. The order of multiple sections is also
           top-down within the file and later files overwrite previous settings. See the section called
           “Sections” for details.
    
    CONNECTIVITY SECTION
           This section controls NetworkManager's optional connectivity checking functionality. This allows
           NetworkManager to detect whether or not the system can actually access the internet or whether it
           is behind a captive portal.
    
           uri
    	   The URI of a web page to periodically request when connectivity is being checked. This page
    	   should return the header "X-NetworkManager-Status" with a value of "online". Alternatively,
    	   it's body content should be set to "NetworkManager is online". The body content check can be
    	   controlled by the response option. If this option is blank or missing, connectivity checking
    	   is disabled.
    
           interval
    	   Specified in seconds; controls how often connectivity is checked when a network connection
    	   exists. If set to 0 connectivity checking is disabled. If missing, the default is 300
    	   seconds.
    
           response
    	   If set controls what body content NetworkManager checks for when requesting the URI for
    	   connectivity checking. If missing, defaults to "NetworkManager is online"
    
    GLOBAL-DNS SECTION
           This section specifies global DNS settings that override connection-specific configuration.
    
           searches
    	   A list of search domains to be used during hostname lookup.
    
           options
    	   A list of of options to be passed to the hostname resolver.
    
    GLOBAL-DNS-DOMAIN SECTIONS
           Sections with a name starting with the "global-dns-domain-" prefix allow to define global DNS
           configuration for specific domains. The part of section name after "global-dns-domain-" specifies
           the domain name a section applies to. More specific domains have the precedence over less
           specific ones and the default domain is represented by the wildcard "*". A default domain section
           is mandatory.
    
           servers
    	   A list of addresses of DNS servers to be used for the given domain.
    
           options
    	   A list of domain-specific DNS options. Not used at the moment.
    
    .CONFIG SECTIONS
           This is a special section that contains options which apply to the configuration file that
           contains the option.
    
           enable
    	   Defaults to "true". If "false", the configuration file will be skipped during loading. Note
    	   that the main configuration file NetworkManager.conf cannot be disabled.
    
    	       # always skip loading the config file
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=false
    
    	   You can also match against the version of NetworkManager. For example the following are valid
    	   configurations:
    
    	       # only load on version 1.0.6
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=nm-version:1.0.6
    
    	       # load on all versions 1.0.x, but not 1.2.x
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=nm-version:1.0
    
    	       # only load on versions >= 1.1.6. This does not match
    	       # with version 1.2.0 or 1.4.4. Only the last digit is considered.
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=nm-version-min:1.1.6
    
    	       # only load on versions >= 1.2. Contrary to the previous
    	       # example, this also matches with 1.2.0, 1.2.10, 1.4.4, etc.
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=nm-version-min:1.2
    
    	       # Match against the maximum allowed version. The example matches
    	       # versions 1.2.0, 1.2.2, 1.2.4. Again, only the last version digit
    	       # is allowed to be smaller. So this would not match match on 1.1.10.
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=nm-version-max:1.2.6
    
    	   You can also match against the value of the environment variable NM_CONFIG_ENABLE_TAG, like:
    
    	       # always skip loading the file when running NetworkManager with
    	       # environment variable "NM_CONFIG_ENABLE_TAG=TAG1"
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=env:TAG1
    
    	   More then one match can be specified. The configuration will be enabled if one of the
    	   predicates matches ("or"). The special prefix "except:" can be used to negate the match. Note
    	   that if one except-predicate matches, the entire configuration will be disabled. In other
    	   words, a except predicate always wins over other predicates.
    
    	       # enable the configuration either when the environment variable
    	       # is present or the version is at least 1.2.0.
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=env:TAG2,nm-version-min:1.2
    
    	       # enable the configuration for version >= 1.2.0, but disable
    	       # it when the environment variable is set to "TAG3"
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=except:env:TAG3,nm-version-min:1.2
    
    	       # enable the configuration on >= 1.3, >= 1.2.6, and >= 1.0.16.
    	       # Useful if a certain feature is only present since those releases.
    	       [.config]
    	       enable=nm-version-min:1.3,nm-version-min:1.2.6,nm-version-min:1.0.16
    
    
    PLUGINS
           keyfile
    	   The keyfile plugin is the generic plugin that supports all the connection types and
    	   capabilities that NetworkManager has. It writes files out in an .ini-style format in
    	   /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections.
    
    	   The stored connection file may contain passwords and private keys, so it will be made
    	   readable only to root, and the plugin will ignore files that are readable or writable by any
    	   user or group other than root.
    
    	   This plugin is always active, and will automatically be used to store any connections that
    	   aren't supported by any other active plugin.
    
           ifcfg-rh
    	   This plugin is used on the Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux distributions to read and
    	   write configuration from the standard /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-* files. It
    	   currently supports reading Ethernet, Wi-Fi, InfiniBand, VLAN, Bond, Bridge, and Team
    	   connections. Enabling ifcfg-rh implicitly enables ibft plugin, if it is available. This can
    	   be disabled by adding no-ibft.
    
           ifcfg-suse
    	   This plugin is deprecated and its selection has no effect. The keyfile plugin should be used
    	   instead.
    
           ifupdown
    	   This plugin is used on the Debian and Ubuntu distributions, and reads Ethernet and Wi-Fi
    	   connections from /etc/network/interfaces.
    
    	   This plugin is read-only; any connections (of any type) added from within NetworkManager when
    	   you are using this plugin will be saved using the keyfile plugin instead.
    
           ibft, no-ibft
    	   This plugin allows to read iBFT configuration (iSCSI Boot Firmware Table). The configuration
    	   is read using /sbin/iscsiadm. Users are expected to configure iBFT connections via the
    	   firmware interfaces. If ibft support is available, it is automatically enabled after
    	   ifcfg-rh. This can be disabled by no-ibft. You can also explicitly specify ibft to load the
    	   plugin without ifcfg-rh or to change the plugin order.
    
    	   Note that ibft plugin uses /sbin/iscsiadm and thus requires CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability.
    
    APPENDIX
       Device List Format
           The configuration options main.no-auto-default, main.ignore-carrier, keyfile.unmanaged-devices,
           connection*.match-device and device*.match-device select devices based on a list of matchings.
           Devices can be specified using the following format:
    
           *
    	   Matches every device.
    
           IFNAME
    	   Case sensitive match of interface name of the device. Globbing is not supported.
    
           HWADDR
    	   Match the permanent MAC address of the device. Globbing is not supported
    
           interface-name:IFNAME, interface-name:~IFNAME
    	   Case sensitive match of interface name of the device. Simple globbing is supported with * and
    	   ?. Ranges and escaping is not supported.
    
           interface-name:=IFNAME
    	   Case sensitive match of interface name of the device. Globbing is disabled and IFNAME is
    	   taken literally.
    
           mac:HWADDR
    	   Match the permanent MAC address of the device. Globbing is not supported
    
           s390-subchannels:HWADDR
    	   Match the device based on the subchannel address. Globbing is not supported
    
           type:TYPE
    	   Match the device type. Valid type names are as reported by "nmcli -f GENERAL.TYPE device
    	   show". Globbing is not supported.
    
           except:SPEC
    	   Negative match of a device.	SPEC must be explicitly qualified with a prefix such as
    	   interface-name:. A negative match has higher priority then the positive matches above.
    
           SPEC[,;]SPEC
    	   Multiple specs can be concatenated with commas or semicolons. The order does not matter as
    	   matches are either inclusive or negative (except:), with negative matches having higher
    	   priority.
    
    	   Backslash is supported to escape the separators ';' and ',', and to express special
    	   characters such as newline ('\n'), tabulator ('\t'), whitespace ('\s') and backslash ('\\').
    	   The globbing of interface names cannot be escaped. Whitespace is not a separator but will be
    	   trimmed between two specs (unless escaped as '\s').
    
           Example:
    
    	   interface-name:em4
    	   mac:00:22:68:1c:59:b1;mac:00:1E:65:30:D1:C4;interface-name:eth2
    	   interface-name:vboxnet*,except:interface-name:vboxnet2
    	   *,except:mac:00:22:68:1c:59:b1
    
    
    SEE ALSO
           NetworkManager(8), nmcli(1), nmcli-examples(7), nm-online(1), nm-settings(5), nm-applet(1), nm-
           connection-editor(1)
    
    
    
    NetworkManager 1.4.0								   NETWORKMANAGER.CON(5)
    

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