NetworkManager: Difference between revisions
(→Ad-hoc: rw; dnsmasq started by NetworkManager uses configuration from /etc/NetworkManager/dnsmasq.d/*, it will not read /etc/dnsmasq.conf) |
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=== Sharing internet connection over Wi-Fi === | === Sharing internet connection over Wi-Fi === | ||
You can share your internet connection (e.g. 3G or wired) with a few clicks | You can share your internet connection (e.g. 3G or wired) with a few clicks. You will need a supported Wi-Fi card (Cards based on Atheros AR9xx or at least AR5xx are probably best choice). Please note that a [[firewall]] may interfere with internet sharing. | ||
* [[Install]] the {{Pkg|dnsmasq}} package to be able to actually share the connection and edit your Network Manager configuration to use [[dnsmasq]]: | |||
* [[Install]] the {{Pkg|dnsmasq}} package to be able to actually share the connection | |||
{{hc|/etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/dns.conf|<nowiki> | {{hc|/etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/dns.conf|<nowiki> | ||
Line 582: | Line 580: | ||
* Click on applet and choose ''Create new wireless network''. | * Click on applet and choose ''Create new wireless network''. | ||
* Follow wizard (if using WEP, be sure to use 5 or 13 character long password, different lengths will fail). | * Follow wizard (if using WEP, be sure to use 5 or 13 character long password, different lengths will fail). | ||
** Choose either [https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/RealHotspot Hotspot] or Ad-hoc as Wi-Fi mode. | |||
The connection will be saved and remain stored for the next time you need it. | |||
{{Note|Android does not support connecting to Ad-hoc networks. To It is recommended to create a connection using infrastructure mode (i.e. setting Wi-Fi mode to "Hotspot".}} | |||
=== Sharing internet connection over Ethernet === | === Sharing internet connection over Ethernet === |
Revision as of 13:23, 4 June 2018
NetworkManager is a program for providing detection and configuration for systems to automatically connect to network. NetworkManager's functionality can be useful for both wireless and wired networks. For wireless networks, NetworkManager prefers known wireless networks and has the ability to switch to the most reliable network. NetworkManager-aware applications can switch from online and offline mode. NetworkManager also prefers wired connections over wireless ones, has support for modem connections and certain types of VPN. NetworkManager was originally developed by Red Hat and now is hosted by the GNOME project.
Installation
NetworkManager can be installed with the package networkmanager, which contains a daemon, a command line interface (nmcli
) and a curses‐based interface (nmtui
). It has functionality for basic DHCP support. For full featured DHCP and if you require IPv6 support, dhclient integrates it.
Additional interfaces:
- nm-connection-editor for a graphical user interface,
- network-manager-applet for a system tray applet (
nm-applet
).
systemctl --type=service
and then stop them. See #Configuration to enable the NetworkManager service.Mobile broadband support
Install modemmanager, mobile-broadband-provider-info and usb_modeswitch packages for mobile broadband connection support. See USB 3G Modem#Network Manager for details.
PPPoE / DSL support
Install rp-pppoe package for PPPoE / DSL connection support. To actually add PPPoE connection, use nm-connection-editor
and add new DSL/PPPoE connection.
VPN support
NetworkManager VPN support is based on a plug-in system. If you need VPN support via NetworkManager, you have to install one of the following packages:
- networkmanager-openconnect for OpenConnect
- networkmanager-openvpn for OpenVPN
- networkmanager-pptp for PPTP Client
- networkmanager-vpnc for Vpnc
- networkmanager-strongswan for strongSwan
- networkmanager-fortisslvpn-gitAUR
- networkmanager-iodine-gitAUR
- networkmanager-libreswanAUR
- networkmanager-l2tpAUR
- networkmanager-ssh-gitAUR
- networkmanager-sstpAUR
Usage
NetworkManager comes with nmcli(1) and nmtui(1).
nmcli examples
Connect to a wifi network:
nmcli dev wifi connect <SSID> password <password>
Connect to a hidden network:
nmcli dev wifi connect <SSID> password <password> hidden yes
Connect to a wifi on the wlan1
wifi interface:
nmcli dev wifi connect <SSID> password <password> ifname wlan1 [profile name]
Disconnect an interface:
nmcli dev disconnect ifname eth0
Reconnect an interface marked as disconnected:
nmcli con up uuid <uuid>
Get a list of UUIDs:
nmcli con show
See a list of network devices and their state:
nmcli dev
Turn off wifi:
nmcli r wifi off
Front-ends
To configure and have easy access to NetworkManager, most users will want to install an applet. This GUI front-end usually resides in the system tray (or notification area) and allows network selection and configuration of NetworkManager. Various desktop environments have their own applet. Otherwise you can use #nm-applet.
GNOME
GNOME has a built-in tool, accessible from the Network settings.
KDE Plasma
Install the plasma-nm package.
nm-applet
network-manager-applet is a GTK+ 3 front-end which works under Xorg environments with a systray.
To store connection secrets install and configure GNOME/Keyring.
Be aware that after enabling the tick-box option Make available to other users
for a connection, NetworkManager stores the password in plain-text, though the respective file is accessible only to root (or other users via nm-applet
). See #Encrypted Wi-Fi passwords.
In order to run nm-applet
without a systray, you can use trayer or stalonetray. For example, you can add a script like this one in your path:
nmgui
#!/bin/sh nm-applet 2>&1 > /dev/null & stalonetray 2>&1 > /dev/null killall nm-applet
When you close the stalonetray window, it closes nm-applet
too, so no extra memory is used once you are done with network settings.
The applet can show notifications for events such as connecting to or disconnecting from a WiFi network. For these notifications to display, ensure that you have a notification server installed - see Desktop notifications. If you use the applet without a notification server, you might see some messages in stdout/stderr, and the app might hang. See [2].
In order to run nm-applet
with such notifications disabled, start the applet with the following command:
$ nm-applet --no-agent
nm-applet
might be started automatically with a autostart desktop file, to add the --no-agent option modify the Exec line there, i.e.
Exec=nm-applet --no-agent
Appindicator
Appindicator support is available in nm-applet however it is not compiled into the official package, see FS#51740. To use nm-applet in an Appindicator environment, replace network-manager-applet with network-manager-applet-indicatorAUR and then start the applet with the following command:
$ nm-applet --indicator
Alternatively there is networkmanager-dmenu-gitAUR which is a small script to manage NetworkManager connections with dmenu instead of nm-applet
. It provides all essential features such as connect to existing NetworkManager wifi or wired connections, connect to new wifi connections, requests passphrase if required, connect to existing VPN connections, enable/disable networking, launch nm-connection-editor GUI.
Configuration
NetworkManager will require some additional steps to be able run properly. Make sure you have configured /etc/hosts
as described in Network configuration#Set the hostname section.
Enable NetworkManager
NetworkManager is controlled with the NetworkManager.service
systemd unit. Once the NetworkManager daemon is started, it will automatically connect to any available "system connections" that have already been configured. Any "user connections" or unconfigured connections will need nmcli or an applet to configure and connect.
NetworkManager has a global configuration file at /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf
. Addition configuration files can be placed in /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/
. Usually no configuration needs to be done to the global defaults.
Enable NetworkManager Wait Online
If you have services which fail if they are started before the network is up, you may use NetworkManager-wait-online.service
in addition to NetworkManager.service
. This is, however, rarely necessary because most networked daemons start up okay, even if the network has not been configured yet.
In some cases, the service will still fail to start successfully on boot due to the timeout setting in /usr/lib/systemd/system/NetworkManager-wait-online.service
being too short. Change the default timeout from 30 to a higher value.
Set up PolicyKit permissions
See General troubleshooting#Session permissions for setting up a working session.
With a working session, you have several options for granting the necessary privileges to NetworkManager:
- Option 1. Run a Polkit authentication agent when you log in, such as
/usr/lib/polkit-gnome/polkit-gnome-authentication-agent-1
(part of polkit-gnome). You will be prompted for your password whenever you add or remove a network connection. - Option 2. Add yourself to the
wheel
group. You will not have to enter your password, but your user account may be granted other permissions as well, such as the ability to use sudo without entering the root password. - Option 3. Add yourself to the
network
group and create the following file:
/etc/polkit-1/rules.d/50-org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.rules
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) { if (action.id.indexOf("org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.") == 0 && subject.isInGroup("network")) { return polkit.Result.YES; } });
- All users in the
network
group will be able to add and remove networks without a password. This will not work under systemd if you do not have an active session with systemd-logind.
Network services with NetworkManager dispatcher
There are quite a few network services that you will not want running until NetworkManager brings up an interface. Good examples are NTPd and network filesystem mounts of various types (e.g. netfs). NetworkManager has the ability to start these services when you connect to a network and stop them when you disconnect. To activate the feature you need to start the NetworkManager-dispatcher.service
.
Once the feature is active, scripts can be added to the /etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d
directory. These scripts must be owned by root, otherwise the dispatcher will not execute them. For added security, set group ownership to root as well:
# chown root:root scriptname
Also, the script must have write permission for owner only, otherwise the dispatcher will not execute them:
# chmod 755 scriptname
The scripts will be run in alphabetical order at connection time, and in reverse alphabetical order at disconnect time. They receive two arguments: the name of the interface (e.g. eth0
) and the status (up or down for interfaces and vpn-up or vpn-down for vpn connections). To ensure what order they come up in, it is common to use numerical characters prior to the name of the script (e.g. 10_portmap
or 30_netfs
(which ensures that the portmapper is up before NFS mounts are attempted).
Avoiding the dispatcher timeout
If the above is working, then this section is not relevant. However, there is a general problem related to running dispatcher scripts which take longer to be executed. Initially an internal timeout of three seconds only was used. If the called script did not complete in time, it was killed. Later the timeout was extended to about 20 seconds (see the Bugtracker for more information). If the timeout still creates the problem, a work around may be to modify the dispatcher service file /usr/lib/systemd/system/NetworkManager-dispatcher.service
to remain active after exit:
/etc/systemd/system/NetworkManager-dispatcher.service
.include /usr/lib/systemd/system/NetworkManager-dispatcher.service [Service] RemainAfterExit=yes
Now start and enable the modified NetworkManager-dispatcher
service.
RemainAfterExit
line to it will prevent the dispatcher from closing. Unfortunately, the dispatcher has to close before it can run your scripts again. With it the dispatcher will not time out but it also will not close, which means that the scripts will only run once per boot. Therefore, do not add the line unless the timeout is definitely causing a problem.Start OpenNTPD
Install the networkmanager-dispatcher-openntpd package.
Mount remote folder with sshfs
As the script is run in a very restrictive environment, you have to export SSH_AUTH_SOCK
in order to connect to your SSH agent. There are different ways to accomplish this, see this message for more information. The example below works with GNOME Keyring, and will ask you for the password if not unlocked already. In case NetworkManager connects automatically on login, it is likely gnome-keyring has not yet started and the export will fail (hence the sleep). The UUID
to match can be found with the command nmcli con status
or nmcli con list
.
#!/bin/sh USER='username' REMOTE='user@host:/remote/path' LOCAL='/local/path' interface=$1 status=$2 if [ "$CONNECTION_UUID" = "uuid" ]; then case $status in up) export SSH_AUTH_SOCK=$(find /tmp -maxdepth 1 -type s -user "$USER" -name 'ssh') su "$USER" -c "sshfs $REMOTE $LOCAL" ;; down) fusermount -u "$LOCAL" ;; esac fi
Use dispatcher to automatically toggle Wi-Fi depending on LAN cable being plugged in
The idea is to only turn Wi-Fi on when the LAN cable is unplugged (for example when detaching from a laptop dock), and for Wi-Fi to be automatically disabled, once a LAN cable is plugged in again.
Create the following dispatcher script (Source), replacing LAN_interface
with yours.
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/wlan_auto_toggle.sh
#!/bin/sh if [ "$1" = "LAN_interface" ]; then case "$2" in up) nmcli radio wifi off ;; down) nmcli radio wifi on ;; esac fi
en
, e.g. enp0s5
Use dispatcher to connect to a VPN after a network connection is established
In this example we want to connect automatically to a previously defined VPN connection after connecting to a specific Wi-Fi network. First thing to do is to create the dispatcher script that defines what to do after we are connected to the network.
iwgetid
.Create the dispatcher script
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/vpn-up
#!/bin/sh VPN_NAME="name of VPN connection defined in NetworkManager" ESSID="Wi-Fi network ESSID (not connection name)" interface=$1 status=$2 case $status in up|vpn-down) if iwgetid | grep -qs ":\"$ESSID\""; then nmcli con up id "$VPN_NAME" fi ;; down) if iwgetid | grep -qs ":\"$ESSID\""; then if nmcli con show --active | grep "$VPN_NAME"; then nmcli con down id "$VPN_NAME" fi fi ;; esac
If you would like to attempt to automatically connect to VPN for all Wi-Fi networks, you can use the following definition of the ESSID: ESSID=$(iwgetid -r)
. Remember to set the script's permissions accordingly.
Give the script access to VPN password
Trying to connect with the above script may still fail with NetworkManager-dispatcher.service
complaining about 'no valid VPN secrets', because of the way VPN secrets are stored. Fortunately, there are different options to give the above script access to your VPN password.
1: One of them requires editing the VPN connection configuration file to make NetworkManager store the secrets by itself rather than inside a keyring that will be inaccessible for root: open up /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/name of your VPN connection
and change the password-flags
and secret-flags
from 1
to 0
.
If that alone does not work, you may have to create a passwd-file
in a safe location with the same permissions and ownership as the dispatcher script, containing the following:
/path/to/passwd-file
vpn.secrets.password:YOUR_PASSWORD
The script must be changed accordingly, so that it gets the password from the file:
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/vpn-up
#!/bin/sh VPN_NAME="name of VPN connection defined in NetworkManager" ESSID="Wi-Fi network ESSID (not connection name)" interface=$1 status=$2 case $status in up|vpn-down) if iwgetid | grep -qs ":\"$ESSID\""; then nmcli con up id "$VPN_NAME" passwd-file /path/to/passwd-file fi ;; down) if iwgetid | grep -qs ":\"$ESSID\""; then if nmcli con show --active | grep "$VPN_NAME"; then nmcli con down id "$VPN_NAME" fi fi ;; esac
2: Alternatively, change the password-flags
and put the password directly in the configuration file adding the section vpn-secrets
:
[vpn] .... password-flags=0 [vpn-secrets] password=your_password
Some CIFS shares are only available on certain networks or locations (e.g. at home). You can use the dispatcher to only mount CIFS shares that are present at your current location.
The following script will check if we connected to a specific network and mount shares accordingly:
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/mount_cifs
#!/bin/bash if [ "$2" = "up" ]; then if [ "$CONNECTION_UUID" = "uuid" ]; then mount /your/mount/point & # add more shares as needed fi fi
The following script will unmount all CIFS before a disconnect from a specific network:
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d/pre-down.d/mount_cifs
#!/bin/bash umount -a -l -t cifs
As before, do not forget to set the script permissions accordingly.
See also NFS#NetworkManager dispatcher for another example script that parses /etc/fstab
mounts during dispatcher actions.
Proxy settings
NetworkManager does not directly handle proxy settings, but if you are using GNOME or KDE, you could use proxydriver which handles proxy settings using NetworkManager's information. proxydriver is found in the package proxydriverAUR.
In order for proxydriver to be able to change the proxy settings, you would need to execute this command, as part of the GNOME startup process (System -> Preferences -> Startup Applications):
xhost +si:localuser:your_username
See: Proxy settings.
Disable NetworkManager
It might not be obvious, but the service automatically starts through dbus. To completely disable it you can mask the services NetworkManager
and NetworkManager-dispatcher
.
Checking connectivity
NetworkManager can try to reach a page on Internet when connecting to a network. networkmanager is configured by default in /usr/lib/NetworkManager/conf.d/20-connectivity.conf
to check connectivity to archlinux.org. To use a different webserver or disable connectivity checking create /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/20-connectivity.conf
, see "connectivity section" in NetworkManager.conf(5).
For those behind a captive portal, the desktop manager can automatically open a window asking for credentials.
Testing
NetworkManager applets are designed to load upon login so no further configuration should be necessary for most users. If you have already disabled your previous network settings and disconnected from your network, you can now test if NetworkManager will work. The first step is to start NetworkManager.service
.
Some applets will provide you with a .desktop
file so that the NetworkManager applet can be loaded through the application menu. If it does not, you are going to either have to discover the command to use or logout and login again to start the applet. Once the applet is started, it will likely begin polling network connections with for auto-configuration with a DHCP server.
To start the GNOME applet in non-xdg-compliant window managers like awesome:
nm-applet --sm-disable &
For static IP addresses, you will have to configure NetworkManager to understand them. The process usually involves right-clicking the applet and selecting something like 'Edit Connections'.
Troubleshooting
No prompt for password of secured Wi-Fi networks
When trying to connect to a secured Wi-Fi network, no prompt for a password is shown and no connection is established. This happens when no keyring package is installed. An easy solution is to install gnome-keyring. If you want the passwords to be stored in encrypted form, follow GNOME Keyring to set up the gnome-keyring-daemon.
No traffic via PPTP tunnel
PPTP connection logins successfully; you see a ppp0 interface with the correct VPN IP address, but you cannot even ping the remote IP address. It is due to lack of MPPE (Microsoft Point-to-Point Encryption) support in stock Arch pppd. It is recommended to first try with the stock Arch ppp as it may work as intended.
To solve the problem it should be sufficient to install the ppp-mppeAUR[broken link: Template:Aur-mirror] package.
See also WPA2 Enterprise#MS-CHAPv2.
Network management disabled
When NetworkManager shuts down but the pid (state) file is not removed, you will see a Network management disabled
message. If this happens, remove the file manually:
# rm /var/lib/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.state
Problems with internal DHCP client
If you have problems with getting an IP address using the internal DHCP client, consider dhclient as DHCP client.
After installation, update the NetworkManager config file:
/etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/dhcp-client.conf
[main] dhcp=dhclient
This workaround might solve problems in big wireless networks like eduroam.
DHCP problems with dhclient
If you have problems with getting an IP address via DHCP, try to add the following to your /etc/dhclient.conf
:
interface "eth0" { send dhcp-client-identifier 01:aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff; }
Where aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff
is the MAC address of this NIC. The MAC address can be found using the ip link show interface
command from the iproute2 package.
Missing default route
On at least one KDE4 system, no default route was created when establishing wireless connections with NetworkManager. Changing the route settings of the wireless connection to remove the default selection "Use only for resources on this connection" solved the issue.
3G modem not detected
See USB 3G Modem#Network Manager.
Switching off WLAN on laptops
Sometimes NetworkManager will not work when you disable your Wi-Fi adapter with a switch on your laptop and try to enable it again afterwards. This is often a problem with rfkill. To check if the driver notifies rfkill about the wireless adapter's status, use:
$ watch -n1 rfkill list all
If one identifier stays blocked after you switch on the adapter you could try to manually unblock it with (where X is the number of the identifier provided by the above output):
# rfkill event unblock X
Static IP address settings revert to DHCP
Due to an unresolved bug, when changing default connections to a static IP address, nm-applet
may not properly store the configuration change, and will revert to automatic DHCP.
To work around this issue you have to edit the default connection (e.g. "Auto eth0") in nm-applet
, change the connection name (e.g. "my eth0"), uncheck the "Available to all users" checkbox, change your static IP address settings as desired, and click Apply. This will save a new connection with the given name.
Next, you will want to make the default connection not connect automatically. To do so, run nm-connection-editor
(not as root). In the connection editor, edit the default connection (e.g. "Auto eth0") and uncheck "Connect automatically". Click Apply and close the connection editor.
Cannot edit connections as normal user
See #Set up PolicyKit permissions.
Since hidden networks are not displayed in the selection list of the Wireless view, they cannot be forgotten (removed) with the GUI. You can delete one with the following command:
# rm /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/SSID
This works for any other connection.
VPN not working in GNOME
When setting up OpenConnect or vpnc connections in NetworkManager while using GNOME, you will sometimes never see the dialog box pop up and the following error appears in /var/log/errors.log
:
localhost NetworkManager[399]: <error> [1361719690.10506] [nm-vpn-connection.c:1405] get_secrets_cb(): Failed to request VPN secrets #3: (6) No agents were available for this request.
This is caused by the GNOME NM Applet expecting dialog scripts to be at /usr/lib/gnome-shell
, when NetworkManager's packages put them in /usr/lib/networkmanager
.
As a "temporary" fix (this bug has been around for a while now), make the following symlink(s):
- For OpenConnect:
ln -s /usr/lib/networkmanager/nm-openconnect-auth-dialog /usr/lib/gnome-shell/
- For VPNC (i.e. Cisco VPN):
ln -s /usr/lib/networkmanager/nm-vpnc-auth-dialog /usr/lib/gnome-shell/
This may need to be done for any other NM VPN plugins as well, but these are the two most common.
Unable to connect to visible European wireless networks
WLAN chips are shipped with a default regulatory domain. If your access point does not operate within these limitations, you will not be able to connect to the network. Fixing this is easy:
- Install crda
- Uncomment the correct Country Code in
/etc/conf.d/wireless-regdom
- Reboot the system, because the setting is only read on boot
Automatic connect to VPN on boot is not working
The problem occurs when the system (i.e. NetworkManager running as the root user) tries to establish a VPN connection, but the password is not accessible because it is stored in the Gnome keyring of a particular user.
A solution is to keep the password to your VPN in plaintext, as described in step (2.) of #Use dispatcher to connect to a VPN after a network connection is established.
You do not need to use the dispatcher described in step (1.) to auto-connect anymore, if you use the new "auto-connect VPN" option from the nm-applet
GUI.
Systemd Bottleneck
Over time the log files (/var/log/journal
) can become very large. This can have a big impact on boot performance when using NetworkManager, see: Systemd#Boot time increasing over time.
Regular network disconnects, latency and lost packets (WiFi)
NetworkManager does a scan every 2 minutes.
Some WiFi drivers have issues when scanning for base stations whilst connected/associated. Symptoms include VPN disconnects/reconnects and lost packets, web pages failing to load and then refresh fine.
Running journalctl -f
will indicate that this is taking place, messages like the following will be contained in the logs at regular intervals.
NetworkManager[410]: <info> (wlp3s0): roamed from BSSID 00:14:48:11:20:CF (my-wifi-name) to (none) ((none))
There is a patched version of NetworkManager which should prevent this type of scanning: networkmanager-noscanAUR.
Alternatively, if roaming is not important, the periodic scanning behavior can be disabled by locking the BSSID of the access point in the WiFi connection profile.
Unable to turn on wi-fi with Lenovo laptop (IdeaPad, Legion, etc.)
There is an issue with the ideapad_laptop
module on some Lenovo models due to the wi-fi driver incorrectly reporting a soft block. The card can still be manipulated with netctl
, but managers like NetworkManager break. You can verify that this is the problem by checking the output of rfkill list
after toggling your hardware switch and seeing that the soft block persists.
Unloading the ideapad_laptop
module should fix this. (warning: this may disable the laptop keyboard and touchpad also!).
Turn off hostname sending
NetworkManager by default sends the hostname to the DHCP server. Hostname sending can only be disabled per connection not globally (GNOME Bug 768076).
To disable sending your hostname to the DHCP server for a specific connection, add the following to your network connection file:
/etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/your_connection_file
... [ipv4] dhcp-send-hostname=false ... [ipv6] dhcp-send-hostname=false ...
Tips and tricks
Encrypted Wi-Fi passwords
By default, NetworkManager stores passwords in clear text in the connection files at /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/
. To print the stored passwords, use the following command:
# grep -H '^psk=' /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/*
The passwords are accessible to the root user in the filesystem and to users with access to settings via the GUI (e.g. nm-applet
).
It is preferable to save the passwords in encrypted form in a keyring instead of clear text. The downside of using a keyring is that the connections have to be set up for each user.
Using Gnome-Keyring
The keyring daemon has to be started and the keyring needs to be unlocked for the following to work.
Furthermore, NetworkManager needs to be configured not to store the password for all users. Using GNOME nm-applet
, run nm-connection-editor
from a terminal, select a network connection, click Edit
, select the Wifi-Security
tab and click on the right icon of password and check Store the password only for this user
.
Using KDE Wallet
Using KDE's plasma-nm, click the applet, click on the top right Settings
icon, click on a network connection, in the General settings
tab, untick all users may connect to this network
. If the option is ticked, the passwords will still be stored in clear text, even if a keyring daemon is running.
If the option was selected previously and you un-tick it, you may have to use the reset
option first to make the password disappear from the file. Alternatively, delete the connection first and set it up again.
Sharing internet connection over Wi-Fi
You can share your internet connection (e.g. 3G or wired) with a few clicks. You will need a supported Wi-Fi card (Cards based on Atheros AR9xx or at least AR5xx are probably best choice). Please note that a firewall may interfere with internet sharing.
- Install the dnsmasq package to be able to actually share the connection and edit your Network Manager configuration to use dnsmasq:
/etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/dns.conf
[main] dns=dnsmasq
Restart NetworkManager.service
afterwards.
Create the shared connection:
- Click on applet and choose Create new wireless network.
- Follow wizard (if using WEP, be sure to use 5 or 13 character long password, different lengths will fail).
- Choose either Hotspot or Ad-hoc as Wi-Fi mode.
The connection will be saved and remain stored for the next time you need it.
Sharing internet connection over Ethernet
Scenario: your device has internet connection over wi-fi and you want to share the internet connection to other devices over ethernet.
Requirements:
- Install the dnsmasq package to be able to actually share the connection.
- Your internet connected device and the other devices are connected over a suitable ethernet cable (this usually means a cross over cable or a switch in between).
- Internet sharing is not blocked by a firewall.
Steps:
- Run
nm-connection-editor
from terminal. - Add a new ethernet connection.
- Give it some sensible name. For example "Shared Internet"
- Go to "IPv4 Settings".
- For "Method:" select "Shared to other computers".
- Save
Now you should have a new option "Shared Internet" under the Wired connections in NetworkManager.
Checking if networking is up inside a cron job or script
Some cron jobs require networking to be up to succeed. You may wish to avoid running these jobs when the network is down. To accomplish this, add an if test for networking that queries NetworkManager's nm-tool and checks the state of networking. The test shown here succeeds if any interface is up, and fails if they are all down. This is convenient for laptops that might be hardwired, might be on wireless, or might be off the network.
if [ $(nm-tool|grep State|cut -f2 -d' ') == "connected" ]; then #Whatever you want to do if the network is online else #Whatever you want to do if the network is offline - note, this and the else above are optional fi
This useful for a cron.hourly
script that runs fpupdate for the F-Prot virus scanner signature update, as an example. Another way it might be useful, with a little modification, is to differentiate between networks using various parts of the output from nm-tool; for example, since the active wireless network is denoted with an asterisk, you could grep for the network name and then grep for a literal asterisk.
Connect to network with secret on boot
By default, NetworkManager will not connect to networks requiring a secret automatically on boot. This is because it locks such connections to the user who makes it by default, only connecting after they have logged in. To change this, do the following:
- Right click on the
nm-applet
icon in your panel and select Edit Connections and open the Wireless tab - Select the connection you want to work with and click the Edit button
- Check the boxes “Connect Automatically” and “Available to all users”
Log out and log back in to complete.
Automatically unlock keyring after login
NetworkManager requires access to the login keyring to connect to networks requiring a secret. Under most circumstances, this keyring is unlocked automatically at login, but if it is not, and NetworkManager is not connecting on login, you can try the following.
GNOME
- In
/etc/pam.d/gdm
(or your corresponding daemon in/etc/pam.d
), add these lines at the end of the "auth" and "session" blocks if they do not exist already:
auth optional pam_gnome_keyring.so session optional pam_gnome_keyring.so auto_start
- In
/etc/pam.d/passwd
, use this line for the 'password' block:
password optional pam_gnome_keyring.so
- Next time you log in, you should be asked if you want the password to be unlocked automatically on login.
SLiM login manager
See SLiM#Gnome Keyring.
Troubleshooting
While you may type both values at connection time, plasma-nm 0.9.3.2-1 and above are capable of retrieving OpenConnect username and password directly from KWallet.
Open "KDE Wallet Manager" and look up your OpenConnect VPN connection under "Network Management|Maps". Click "Show values" and enter your credentials in key "VpnSecrets" in this form (replace username and password accordingly):
form:main:username%SEP%username%SEP%form:main:password%SEP%password
Next time you connect, username and password should appear in the "VPN secrets" dialog box.
Ignore specific devices
Sometimes it may be desired that NetworkManager ignores specific devices and does not try to configure addresses and routes for them. You can quickly and easily ignore devices by MAC or interface-name by using the following in /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/unmanaged.conf
:
[keyfile] unmanaged-devices=mac:00:22:68:1c:59:b1;mac:00:1E:65:30:D1:C4;interface-name:eth0
After you have put this in, restart NetworkManager, and you should be able to configure interfaces without NetworkManager altering what you have set.
Enable DNS Caching
See dnsmasq#NetworkManager to enable the plugin that allows DNS caching using dnsmasq.
Configuring MAC Address Randomization
MAC randomization can be used for increased privacy by not disclosing your real MAC address to the network.
NetworkManager supports two types MAC Address Randomization: randomization during scanning, and for network connections. Both modes can be configured by modifying /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf
or by creating a separate configuration file in /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/
which is recommended since the aforementioned config file may be overwritten by NetworkManager.
Randomization during Wi-Fi scanning is enabled by default, but it may be disabled by adding the following lines to /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf
or a dedicated configuration file under /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d
:
[device] wifi.scan-rand-mac-address=no
MAC randomization for network connections can be set to different modes for both wireless and ethernet interfaces. See the Gnome blog post for more details on the different modes.
In terms of MAC randomization the most important modes are stable and random. Stable generates a random MAC address when you connect to a new network and associates the two permanently. This means that you will use the same MAC address every time you connect to that network. In contrast, random will generate a new MAC address every time you connect to a network, new or previously known. You can configure the MAC randomization by adding the desired configuration under /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d
.
[device-mac-randomization] # "yes" is already the default for scanning wifi.scan-rand-mac-address=yes [connection-mac-randomization] # Randomize MAC for every ethernet connection ethernet.cloned-mac-address=random # Generate a random MAC for each WiFi and associate the two permanently. wifi.cloned-mac-address=stable
See the following GNOME blogpost for more details.
Enable IPv6 Privacy Extensions
See IPv6#NetworkManager.
Working with wired connections
By default, NetworkManager generates a connection profile for each wired ethernet connection it finds. At the point when generating the connection, it does not know whether there will be more ethernet adapters available. Hence, it calls the first wired connection "Wired connection 1". You can avoid generating this connection, by configuring no-auto-default
(see NetworkManager.conf(5)), or by simply deleting it. Then NetworkManager will remember not to generate a connection for this interface again.
You can also edit the connection (and persist it to disk) or delete it. NetworkManager will not re-generate a new connection. Then you can change the name to whatever you want. You can use something like nm-connection-editor for this task.
resolv.conf
NetworkManager overwrites resolv.conf by default.
This can be stopped by adding dns=none
to the [main]
section in /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf
.
After that /etc/resolv.conf
might be a broken symlink that you will need to remove. Then, just create a new /etc/resolv.conf
file.
NetworkManager also offers hooks via so called dispatcher scripts that can be used to alter the /etc/resolv.conf
after network changes. See #Network services with NetworkManager dispatcher and NetworkManager(8) for more information.
If you use dhclient, you may try the networkmanager-dispatch-resolvAUR[broken link: Template:Aur-mirror] package.
Use openresolv
To configure NetworkManager to use openresolv, set the rc-manager
option to resolvconf
with a configuration file in /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/
:
/etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/rc-manager.conf
[main] rc-manager=resolvconf
Others options are available in NetworkManager.conf(5).