networkctl — Query or modify the status of network links
networkctl
[OPTIONS...] COMMAND [LINK...]
networkctl may be used to query or modify the state of the network links as seen by systemd-networkd. Please refer to systemd-networkd.service(8) for an introduction to the basic concepts, functionality, and configuration syntax.
The following commands are understood:
PATTERN…
]
¶Show a list of existing links and their status. If one or more
PATTERN
s are specified, only links matching one of them are shown.
If no further arguments are specified shows all links,
otherwise just the specified links. Produces output similar to:
IDX LINK TYPE OPERATIONAL SETUP 1 lo loopback carrier unmanaged 2 eth0 ether routable configured 3 virbr0 ether no-carrier unmanaged 4 virbr0-nic ether off unmanaged 4 links listed.
The operational status is one of the following:
The device is missing.
The device is powered down.
The device is powered up, but does not yet have a carrier.
The device has a carrier, but is not yet ready for normal traffic.
One of the bonding or bridge slave network interfaces is in off, no-carrier, or dormant state, and the master interface has no address.
The link has carrier, or for bond or bridge master, all bonding or bridge slave network interfaces are enslaved to the master.
The link has carrier and addresses valid on the local link configured. For bond or bridge master this means that not all slave network interfaces have carrier but at least one does.
The link has carrier and is enslaved to bond or bridge master network interface.
The link has carrier and routable address configured. For bond or bridge master it is not necessary for all slave network interfaces to have carrier, but at least one must.
The setup status is one of the following:
systemd-udevd(8) is still processing the link, we don't yet know if we will manage it.
systemd-udevd(8) has processed the link, but we don't yet know if we will manage it.
Configuration for the link is being retrieved or the link is being configured.
Link has been configured successfully.
systemd-networkd is not handling the link.
systemd-networkd failed to configure the link.
The link is gone, but has not yet been dropped by systemd-networkd.
PATTERN…
]
¶Show information about the specified links: type, state, kernel module driver, hardware and
IP address, configured DNS servers, etc. If one or more PATTERN
s are
specified, only links matching one of them are shown.
When no links are specified, an overall network status is shown. Also see the option
--all
.
Produces output similar to:
● State: routable Online state: online Address: 10.193.76.5 on eth0 192.168.122.1 on virbr0 169.254.190.105 on eth0 fe80::5054:aa:bbbb:cccc on eth0 Gateway: 10.193.11.1 (CISCO SYSTEMS, INC.) on eth0 DNS: 8.8.8.8 8.8.4.4
In the overall network status, the online state depends on the individual online state of all required links. Managed links are required for online by default. In this case, the online state is one of the following:
PATTERN…
]
¶Show discovered LLDP (Link Layer Discovery Protocol) neighbors. If one or more
PATTERN
s are specified only neighbors on those interfaces are shown.
Otherwise shows discovered neighbors on all interfaces. Note that for this feature to work,
LLDP=
must be turned on for the specific interface, see
systemd.network(5) for
details.
Produces output similar to:
LINK SYSTEM-NAME SYSTEM-DESCRIPTION CHASSIS-ID PORT-ID PORT-DESCRIPTION CAPS enp0s25 GS1900 - 00:e0:4c:00:00:00 2 Port #2 ..b........ Capability Flags: o - Other; p - Repeater; b - Bridge; w - WLAN Access Point; r - Router; t - Telephone; d - DOCSIS cable device; a - Station; c - Customer VLAN; s - Service VLAN, m - Two-port MAC Relay (TPMR) 1 neighbor(s) listed.
Show numerical address labels that can be used for address selection. This is the same information that ip-addrlabel(8) shows. See RFC 3484 for a discussion of address labels.
Produces output similar to:
Prefix/Prefixlen Label ::/0 1 fc00::/7 5 fec0::/10 11 2002::/16 2 3ffe::/16 12 2001:10::/28 7 2001::/32 6 ::ffff:0.0.0.0/96 4 ::/96 3 ::1/128 0
DEVICE…
¶Deletes virtual netdevs. Takes interface name or index number.
DEVICE…
¶Bring devices up. Takes interface name or index number.
DEVICE…
¶Bring devices down. Takes interface name or index number.
DEVICE…
¶Renew dynamic configurations e.g. addresses received from DHCP server. Takes interface name or index number.
DEVICE…
¶Send a FORCERENEW message to all connected clients, triggering DHCP reconfiguration. Takes interface name or index number.
DEVICE…
¶Reconfigure network interfaces. Takes interface name or index number. Note that
this does not reload .netdev
or .network
corresponding to the specified interface. So, if you edit config files, it is necessary to call
networkctl reload first to apply new settings.
Reload .netdev
and .network
files.
If a new or modified .netdev
file is found, then the corresponding
netdev is created or updated, respectively. Note, if the corresponding interface already exists,
then some of new settings may not be applied. E.g., VLAN ID cannot be changed after the interface
was created, so changing [VLAN] Id=
will not take effect if the matching VLAN
interface already exists. To apply such settings, the interfaces need to be removed manually before
reload. Also note that even if a .netdev
file is removed,
systemd-networkd does not remove the existing netdev corresponding to the file.
If a new, modified, or removed .network
file is found, then all
interfaces that matched the file are reconfigured.
FILE
|@DEVICE
…
¶Edit network configuration files, which include .network
,
.netdev
, and .link
files. If no network config file
matching the given name is found, a new one will be created under /etc/
or
/run/
, depending on whether --runtime
is specified.
Specially, if the name is prefixed by "@
", it will be treated as
a network interface, and editing will be performed on the network config files associated
with it. Additionally, the interface name can be suffixed with ":network
" (default),
":link
", or ":netdev
", in order to choose the type of network config
to operate on.
If --drop-in=
is specified, edit the drop-in file instead of
the main configuration file. Unless --no-reload
is specified,
systemd-networkd will be reloaded after the edit of the
.network
or .netdev
files finishes.
The same applies for .link
files and
systemd-udevd(8).
Note that the changed link settings are not automatically applied after reloading.
To achieve that, trigger uevents for the corresponding interface. Refer to
systemd.link(5)
for more information.
If --stdin
is specified, the new content will be read from standard input.
In this mode, the old content of the file is discarded.
FILE
|@DEVICE
…]
¶Show network configuration files. This command honors the "@
" prefix in a
similar way as edit, with support for an additional suffix ":all
"
for showing all types of configuration files associated with the interface at once. When no argument
is specified, networkd.conf(5)
and its drop-in files will be shown.
FILE
…
¶Mask network configuration files, which include .network
,
.netdev
, and .link
files. A symlink of the given name will
be created under /etc/
or /run/
, depending on
whether --runtime
is specified, that points to /dev/null
.
If a non-empty config file with the specified name exists under the target directory or a directory
with higher priority (e.g. --runtime
is used while an existing config resides
in /etc/
), the operation is aborted.
This command honors --no-reload
in the same way as edit.
FILE
…
¶Unmask network configuration files, i.e. reverting the effect of mask.
Note that this command operates regardless of the scope of the directory, i.e. --runtime
is of no effect.
This command honors --no-reload
in the same way as edit
and mask.
BOOL
¶Notify systemd-networkd.service
that the persistent storage for the
service is ready. This is called by
systemd-networkd-persistent-storage.service
. Usually, this command should not
be called manually by users or administrators.
The following options are understood:
-a
--all
¶Show all links with status.
-s
--stats
¶Show link statistics with status.
-l
, --full
¶Do not ellipsize the output.
-n
, --lines=
¶When used with status, controls the number of journal lines to show, counting from the most recent ones. Takes a positive integer argument. Defaults to 10.
--drop-in=NAME
¶When used with edit, edit the drop-in file NAME
instead of the main configuration file.
--no-reload
¶When used with edit, mask, or unmask, systemd-networkd.service(8) or systemd-udevd.service(8) will not be reloaded after the operation finishes.
--runtime
¶When used with edit or mask,
operate on the file under /run/
instead of /etc/
.
--stdin
¶When used with edit, the contents of the file will be read from standard input and the editor will not be launched. In this mode, the old contents of the file are automatically replaced. This is useful to "edit" configuration from scripts, especially so that drop-in directories are created and populated in one go.
Multiple drop-ins may be "edited" in this mode with --drop-in=
, and
the same contents will be written to all of them. Otherwise exactly one main configuration file
is expected.
--no-ask-password
¶Do not query the user for authentication for privileged operations.
--json=MODE
¶Shows output formatted as JSON. Expects one of "short
" (for the
shortest possible output without any redundant whitespace or line breaks), "pretty
"
(for a pretty version of the same, with indentation and line breaks) or "off
" (to turn
off JSON output, the default).
-h
, --help
¶--version
¶--no-legend
¶Do not print the legend, i.e. column headers and the footer with hints.
--no-pager
¶Do not pipe output into a pager.