Provided by: netplan.io_0.106-0ubuntu3_amd64 bug

NAME

       netplan - YAML network configuration abstraction for various backends

SYNOPSIS

       netplan [ COMMAND | help ]

COMMANDS

       See netplan help for a list of available commands on this system.

DESCRIPTION

   Introduction
       Distribution  installers, cloud instantiation, image builds for particular devices, or any
       other way to deploy an operating system put its desired network  configuration  into  YAML
       configuration file(s).  During early boot, the netplan "network renderer" runs which reads
       /{lib,etc,run}/netplan/*.yaml and writes configuration to /run  to  hand  off  control  of
       devices to the specified networking daemon.

       • Configured  devices get handled by systemd-networkd by default, unless explicitly marked
         as managed by a specific renderer (NetworkManager)

       • Devices not covered by the network config do not get touched at all.

       • Usable in initramfs (few dependencies and fast)

       • No persistent generated config, only original YAML config

       • Parser supports multiple config files to allow  applications  like  libvirt  or  lxd  to
         package  up  expected  network  config (virbr0, lxdbr0), or to change the global default
         policy to use NetworkManager for everything.

       • Retains  the  flexibility  to  change  backends/policy  later  or  adjust  to   removing
         NetworkManager, as generated configuration is ephemeral.

   General structure
       netplan's configuration files use the YAML (http://yaml.org/spec/1.1/current.html) format.
       All  /{lib,etc,run}/netplan/*.yaml  are   considered.    Lexicographically   later   files
       (regardless  of  in  which  directory they are) amend (new mapping keys) or override (same
       mapping keys) previous ones.  A file in /run/netplan completely shadows a file  with  same
       name  in  /etc/netplan,  and a file in either of those directories shadows a file with the
       same name in /lib/netplan.

       The top-level node in a netplan configuration file is a  network:  mapping  that  contains
       version:  2  (the YAML currently being used by curtin, MaaS, etc.  is version 1), and then
       device definitions grouped  by  their  type,  such  as  ethernets:,  modems:,  wifis:,  or
       bridges:.   These  are the types that our renderer can understand and are supported by our
       backends.

       Each type block contains device definitions as a map where the keys (called "configuration
       IDs") are defined as below.

   Device configuration IDs
       The  key  names  below  the  per-device-type  definition maps (like ethernets:) are called
       "ID"s.  They must be unique throughout the  entire  set  of  configuration  files.   Their
       primary  purpose  is  to  serve  as  anchor  names  for  composite devices, for example to
       enumerate the members of a bridge that is currently being defined.

       (Since 0.97) If an interface is defined with an ID in a configuration  file;  it  will  be
       brought  up by the applicable renderer.  To not have netplan touch an interface at all, it
       should be completely omitted from the netplan configuration files.

       There are two physically/structurally different classes of device definitions, and the  ID
       field has a different interpretation for each:

       Physical devices

              (Examples: ethernet, modem, wifi) These can dynamically come and go between reboots
              and even during runtime (hot plugging).  In the generic case, they can be  selected
              by  match:  rules  on  desired  properties, such as name/name pattern, MAC address,
              driver, or device paths.  In general these will match any number of devices (unless
              they refer to properties which are unique such as the full path or MAC address), so
              without further knowledge about the hardware these will always be considered  as  a
              group.

              It  is valid to specify no match rules at all, in which case the ID field is simply
              the interface name to be matched.  This is mostly useful if you want to keep simple
              cases  simple,  and  it's how network device configuration has been done for a long
              time.

              If there are match: rules, then the ID field is a purely opaque name which is  only
              being used for references from definitions of compound devices in the config.

       Virtual devices

              (Examples: veth, bridge, bond, vrf) These are fully under the control of the config
              file(s) and the network stack.  I.  e.  these devices are being created instead  of
              matched.   Thus match: and set-name: are not applicable for these, and the ID field
              is the name of the created virtual device.

   Properties for physical device types
       Note: Some options will not work reliably for devices matched by name only and rendered by
       networkd,  due  to  interactions  with device renaming in udev.  Match devices by MAC when
       setting options like: wakeonlan or *-offload.

       • match (mapping)

                This  selects  a  subset  of  available  physical  devices  by  various  hardware
                properties.  The following configuration will then apply to all matching devices,
                as soon as they appear.  All specified properties must match.

         • name (scalar)

                  Current interface name.  Globs are supported, and  the  primary  use  case  for
                  matching on names, as selecting one fixed name can be more easily achieved with
                  having no match: at all and just using the ID (see above).  (NetworkManager: as
                  of v1.14.0)

         • macaddress (scalar)

                  Device's  6-byte  permanent  MAC  address in the form "XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX" or 20
                  bytes for InfiniBand devices (IPoIB).  Globs are  not  allowed.   This  doesn't
                  match virtual MAC addresses for veth, bridge, bond, vlan, ...

         • driver (scalar or sequence of scalars) – sequence since 0.104

                  Kernel  driver  name, corresponding to the DRIVER udev property.  A sequence of
                  globs is supported, any of which  must  match.   Matching  on  driver  is  only
                  supported with networkd.

         Examples:

         • All cards on second PCI bus:

                  match:
                    name: enp2*

         • Fixed MAC address:

                  match:
                    macaddress: 11:22:33:AA:BB:FF

         • First card of driver ixgbe:

                  match:
                    driver: ixgbe
                    name: en*s0

         • First card with a driver matching bcmgenet or smsc*:

                  match:
                    driver: ["bcmgenet", "smsc*"]
                    name: en*

       • set-name (scalar)

                When  matching  on  unique  properties  such  as  path or MAC, or with additional
                assumptions such as "there will only ever be one wifi device", match rules can be
                written  so  that  they only match one device.  Then this property can be used to
                give that device a more  specific/desirable/nicer  name  than  the  default  from
                udev's  ifnames.   Any additional device that satisfies the match rules will then
                fail to get renamed and keep the original kernel name (and  dmesg  will  show  an
                error).

       • wakeonlan (bool)

                Enable wake on LAN.  Off by default.

       • emit-lldp (bool) – since 0.99

                (networkd backend only) Whether to emit LLDP packets.  Off by default.

       • receive-checksum-offload (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd  backend  only)  If  set  to  true  (false),  the  hardware offload for
                checksumming of ingress network packets is enabled (disabled).  When  unset,  the
                kernel's default will be used.

       • transmit-checksum-offload (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd  backend  only)  If  set  to  true  (false),  the  hardware offload for
                checksumming of egress network packets is enabled (disabled).   When  unset,  the
                kernel's default will be used.

       • tcp-segmentation-offload (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd  backend  only)  If  set  to true (false), the TCP Segmentation Offload
                (TSO) is enabled (disabled).  When unset, the kernel's default will be used.

       • tcp6-segmentation-offload (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd backend only) If set to true (false),  the  TCP6  Segmentation  Offload
                (tx-tcp6-segmentation)  is  enabled (disabled).  When unset, the kernel's default
                will be used.

       • generic-segmentation-offload (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the Generic Segmentation  Offload
                (GSO) is enabled (disabled).  When unset, the kernel's default will be used.

       • generic-receive-offload (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the Generic Receive Offload (GRO)
                is enabled (disabled).  When unset, the kernel's default will be used.

       • large-receive-offload (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd backend only) If set to true (false), the Large Receive  Offload  (LRO)
                is enabled (disabled).  When unset, the kernel's default will be used.

       • openvswitch (mapping) – since 0.100

                This  provides  additional  configuration for the openvswitch network device.  If
                Open vSwitch is not available on the  system,  netplan  treats  the  presence  of
                openvswitch configuration as an error.

                Any  supported  network  device that is declared with the openvswitch mapping (or
                any bond/bridge that includes an interface  with  an  openvswitch  configuration)
                will be created in openvswitch instead of the defined renderer.  In the case of a
                vlan definition declared the same way, netplan will create a fake VLAN bridge  in
                openvswitch with the requested vlan properties.

         • external-ids (mapping) – since 0.100

                  Passed-through directly to Open vSwitch

         • other-config (mapping) – since 0.100

                  Passed-through directly to Open vSwitch

         • lacp (scalar) – since 0.100

                  Valid for bond interfaces.  Accepts active, passive or off (the default).

         • fail-mode (scalar) – since 0.100

                  Valid for bridge interfaces.  Accepts secure or standalone (the default).

         • mcast-snooping (bool) – since 0.100

                  Valid for bridge interfaces.  False by default.

         • protocols (sequence of scalars) – since 0.100

                  Valid  for  bridge  interfaces or the network section.  List of protocols to be
                  used when negotiating a connection with the  controller.   Accepts  OpenFlow10,
                  OpenFlow11, OpenFlow12, OpenFlow13, OpenFlow14, OpenFlow15 and OpenFlow16.

         • rstp (bool) – since 0.100

                  Valid for bridge interfaces.  False by default.

         • controller (mapping) – since 0.100

                  Valid for bridge interfaces.  Specify an external OpenFlow controller.

           • addresses (sequence of scalars)

                    Set  the  list of addresses to use for the controller targets.  The syntax of
                    these  addresses  is  as  defined  in  ovs-vsctl(8).    Example:   addresses:
                    [tcp:127.0.0.1:6653, "ssl:[fe80::1234%eth0]:6653"]connection-mode (scalar)

                    Set  the  connection  mode for the controller.  Supported options are in-band
                    and out-of-band.  The default is in-band.

         • ports (sequence of sequence of scalars) – since 0.100

                  Open vSwitch patch ports.  Each port is declared as a pair of names  which  can
                  be referenced as interfaces in dependent virtual devices (bonds, bridges).

           Example:

                  openvswitch:
                    ports:
                      - [patch0-1, patch1-0]

         • ssl (mapping) – since 0.100

                  Valid  for  global  openvswitch  settings.   Options for configuring SSL server
                  endpoint for the switch.

           • ca-cert (scalar)

                    Path to a file containing the CA certificate to be used.

           • certificate (scalar)

                    Path to a file containing the server certificate.

           • private-key (scalar)

                    Path to a file containing the private key for the server.

   Properties for all device typesrenderer (scalar)

                Use the given networking backend for this definition.   Currently  supported  are
                networkd  and  NetworkManager.   This  property  can  be  specified  globally  in
                network:, for a device type (in e.  g.  ethernets:) or for  a  particular  device
                definition.  Default is networkd.

                (Since  0.99)  The renderer property has one additional acceptable value for vlan
                objects (i.  e.  defined in vlans:): sriov.  If a vlan is defined with the  sriov
                renderer  for an SR-IOV Virtual Function interface, this causes netplan to set up
                a hardware VLAN filter for it.  There can be only one defined per VF.

       • dhcp4 (bool)

                Enable DHCP for IPv4.  Off by default.

       • dhcp6 (bool)

                Enable DHCP for IPv6.  Off by default.  This covers both stateless DHCP  -  where
                the  DHCP server supplies information like DNS nameservers but not the IP address
                - and stateful DHCP, where the server provides both the  address  and  the  other
                information.

                If   you  are  in  an  IPv6-only  environment  with  completely  stateless  auto-
                configuration (SLAAC with RDNSS), this option can be set to cause  the  interface
                to   be  brought  up.   (Setting  accept-ra  alone  is  not  sufficient.)   Auto-
                configuration will still honor the contents of the router advertisement and  only
                use DHCP if requested in the RA.

                Note that rdnssd(8) is required to use RDNSS with networkd.  No extra software is
                required for NetworkManager.

       • ipv6-mtu (scalar) – since 0.98  >  Set  the  IPv6  MTU  (only  supported  with  networkd
         backend).   Note  >  that  needing  to set this is an unusual requirement.  > > Requires
         feature: ipv6-mtuipv6-privacy (bool)

                Enable IPv6 Privacy Extensions (RFC 4941) for the specified interface, and prefer
                temporary  addresses.   Defaults  to  false  -  no  privacy extensions.  There is
                currently no way to have a private address but prefer the public address.

       • link-local (sequence of scalars)

                Configure the link-local addresses to bring up.  Valid  options  are  'ipv4'  and
                'ipv6',  which  respectively  allow enabling IPv4 and IPv6 link local addressing.
                If this field is not defined, the default  is  to  enable  only  IPv6  link-local
                addresses.   If  the  field is defined but configured as an empty set, IPv6 link-
                local addresses are disabled as well as IPv4 link- local addresses.

                This feature enables or disables link-local addresses for  a  protocol,  but  the
                actual  implementation  differs  per backend.  On networkd, this directly changes
                the behavior and may add an extra  address  on  an  interface.   When  using  the
                NetworkManager  backend,  enabling link-local has no effect if the interface also
                has DHCP enabled.

         Examples:

         • Enable only IPv4 link-local: link-local: [ ipv4 ]

         • Enable all link-local addresses: link-local: [ ipv4, ipv6 ]

         • Disable all link-local addresses: link-local: [ ]ignore-carrier (bool) – since 0.104

                (networkd backend only) Allow the specified interface to be configured even if it
                has no carrier.

       • critical (bool)

                Designate  the  connection as "critical to the system", meaning that special care
                will be taken by to not release the assigned IP when  the  daemon  is  restarted.
                (not recognized by NetworkManager)

       • dhcp-identifier (scalar)

                (networkd  backend  only) Sets the source of DHCPv4 client identifier.  If mac is
                specified, the MAC address of the link is used.  If this option is omitted, or if
                duid  is specified, networkd will generate an RFC4361-compliant client identifier
                for the interface by combining the link's IAID and DUID.

       • dhcp4-overrides (mapping)

                (networkd backend only) Overrides default DHCP behavior; see the  DHCP  Overrides
                section below.

       • dhcp6-overrides (mapping)

                (networkd  backend  only) Overrides default DHCP behavior; see the DHCP Overrides
                section below.

       • accept-ra (bool)

                Accept Router Advertisement that would have the kernel configure IPv6 by  itself.
                When  enabled,  accept  Router  Advertisements.  When disabled, do not respond to
                Router Advertisements.  If unset use the host kernel default setting.

       • addresses (sequence of scalars and mappings)

                Add static addresses to the interface in addition to the  ones  received  through
                DHCP  or  RA.   Each  sequence  entry  is  in  CIDR notation, i.  e.  of the form
                addr/prefixlen.  addr is an IPv4 or IPv6 address as  recognized  by  inet_pton(3)
                and prefixlen the number of bits of the subnet.

                For  virtual devices (bridges, bonds, vlan) if there is no address configured and
                DHCP is disabled, the interface may still be brought  online,  but  will  not  be
                addressable from the network.

                In  addition to the addresses themselves one can specify configuration parameters
                as mappings.  Current supported options are:

         • lifetime (scalar) – since 0.100

                  Default:  forever.   This  can  be  forever  or  0  and  corresponds   to   the
                  PreferredLifetime  option  in  systemd-networkd's  Address  section.  Currently
                  supported on the networkd backend only.

         • label (scalar) – since 0.100

                  An IP address label, equivalent to the ip  address  label  command.   Currently
                  supported on the networkd backend only.

         Examples:

         • Simple: addresses: [192.168.14.2/24, "2001:1::1/64"]

         • Advanced:

                  ethernets:
                    eth0:
                      addresses:
                        - "10.0.0.15/24":
                            lifetime: 0
                            label: "maas"
                        - "2001:1::1/64"

       • ipv6-address-generation (scalar) – since 0.99

                Configure  method  for  creating  the address for use with RFC4862 IPv6 Stateless
                Address  Auto-configuration  (only  supported   with   NetworkManager   backend).
                Possible values are eui64 or stable-privacy.

       • ipv6-address-token (scalar) – since 0.100

                Define  an IPv6 address token for creating a static interface identifier for IPv6
                Stateless  Address  Auto-configuration.   This   is   mutually   exclusive   with
                ipv6-address-generation.

       • gateway4, gateway6 (scalar)

                Deprecated,  see  Default  routes.   Set  default  gateway for IPv4/6, for manual
                address configuration.  This requires setting addresses too.  Gateway IPs must be
                in  a form recognized by inet_pton(3).  There should only be a single gateway per
                IP address family set in your global config, to make it unambiguous.  If you need
                multiple default routes, please define them via routing-policy.

         Examples

         • IPv4: gateway4: 172.16.0.1

         • IPv6: gateway6: "2001:4::1"nameservers (mapping)

                Set  DNS servers and search domains, for manual address configuration.  There are
                two supported fields: addresses: is a list of IPv4 or IPv6 addresses  similar  to
                gateway*, and search: is a list of search domains.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  id0:
                    [...]
                    nameservers:
                      search: [lab, home]
                      addresses: [8.8.8.8, "FEDC::1"]

       • macaddress (scalar)

                Set   the   device's   MAC  address.   The  MAC  address  must  be  in  the  form
                "XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX".

                Note: This will not work reliably for devices matched by name only  and  rendered
                by  networkd, due to interactions with device renaming in udev.  Match devices by
                MAC when setting MAC addresses.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  id0:
                    match:
                      macaddress: 52:54:00:6b:3c:58
                    [...]
                    macaddress: 52:54:00:6b:3c:59

       • mtu (scalar)

                Set the Maximum Transmission Unit for the interface.  The default is 1500.  Valid
                values depend on your network interface.

                Note:  This  will not work reliably for devices matched by name only and rendered
                by networkd, due to interactions with device renaming in udev.  Match devices  by
                MAC when setting MTU.

       • optional (bool)

                An  optional  device  is  not required for booting.  Normally, networkd will wait
                some time for  device  to  become  configured  before  proceeding  with  booting.
                However,  if a device is marked as optional, networkd will not wait for it.  This
                is only supported by networkd, and the default is false.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  eth7:
                    # this is plugged into a test network that is often
                    # down - don't wait for it to come up during boot.
                    dhcp4: true
                    optional: true

       • optional-addresses (sequence of scalars)

                Specify types of addresses that are not required for a device  to  be  considered
                online.   This changes the behavior of backends at boot time to avoid waiting for
                addresses that are marked optional, and thus consider the interface  as  "usable"
                sooner.  This does not disable these addresses, which will be brought up anyway.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  eth7:
                    dhcp4: true
                    dhcp6: true
                    optional-addresses: [ ipv4-ll, dhcp6 ]

       • activation-mode (scalar) – since 0.103

                Allows  specifying  the management policy of the selected interface.  By default,
                netplan brings up any configured interface if possible.   Using  the  activation-
                mode  setting  users  can  override that behavior by either specifying manual, to
                hand over control over the interface state to the administrator or (for  networkd
                backend  only) off to force the link in a down state at all times.  Any interface
                with  activation-mode  defined  is  implicitly  considered  optional.   Supported
                officially as of networkd v248+.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  eth1:
                    # this interface will not be put into an UP state automatically
                    dhcp4: true
                    activation-mode: manual

       • routes (sequence of mappings)

                Configure static routing for the device; see the Routing section below.

       • routing-policy (sequence of mappings)

                Configure policy routing for the device; see the Routing section below.

       • neigh-suppress (scalar) – since 0.105

                Takes  a  boolean.  Configures whether ARP and ND neighbor suppression is enabled
                for this port.  When unset, the kernel's default will be used.

   DHCP Overrides
       Several DHCP behavior overrides are available.  Most currently only have any  effect  when
       using the networkd backend, with the exception of use-routes and route-metric.

       Overrides only have an effect if the corresponding dhcp4 or dhcp6 is set to true.

       If  both  dhcp4 and dhcp6 are true, the networkd backend requires that dhcp4-overrides and
       dhcp6-overrides contain the same keys and values.  If the values do not  match,  an  error
       will be shown and the network configuration will not be applied.

       When   using   the   NetworkManager   backend,  different  values  may  be  specified  for
       dhcp4-overrides and dhcp6-overrides, and will be applied to the DHCP client  processes  as
       specified in the netplan YAML.

       • dhcp4-overrides, dhcp6-overrides (mapping)

                The  dhcp4-overrides  and  `dhcp6-override``  mappings  override the default DHCP
                behavior.

         • use-dns (bool)

                  Default: true.  When true, the DNS servers received from the DHCP  server  will
                  be  used  and  take  precedence over any statically configured ones.  Currently
                  only has an effect on the networkd backend.

         • use-ntp (bool)

                  Default: true.  When true, the NTP servers received from the DHCP  server  will
                  be used by systemd-timesyncd and take precedence over any statically configured
                  ones.  Currently only has an effect on the networkd backend.

         • send-hostname (bool)

                  Default: true.  When true, the machine's hostname will  be  sent  to  the  DHCP
                  server.  Currently only has an effect on the networkd backend.

         • use-hostname (bool)

                  Default:  true.   When true, the hostname received from the DHCP server will be
                  set as the transient hostname of the system.  Currently only has an  effect  on
                  the networkd backend.

         • use-mtu (bool)

                  Default: true.  When true, the MTU received from the DHCP server will be set as
                  the MTU of the network interface.  When false, the MTU advertised by  the  DHCP
                  server will be ignored.  Currently only has an effect on the networkd backend.

         • hostname (scalar)

                  Use  this  value  for the hostname which is sent to the DHCP server, instead of
                  machine's hostname.  Currently only has an effect on the networkd backend.

         • use-routes (bool)

                  Default: true.  When true, the routes received from the  DHCP  server  will  be
                  installed  in  the  routing table normally.  When set to false, routes from the
                  DHCP server will be ignored: in this case, the user is responsible  for  adding
                  static routes if necessary for correct network operation.  This allows users to
                  avoid  installing  a  default  gateway  for  interfaces  configured  via  DHCP.
                  Available for both the networkd and NetworkManager backends.

         • route-metric (scalar)

                  Use  this value for default metric for automatically-added routes.  Use this to
                  prioritize routes for  devices  by  setting  a  lower  metric  on  a  preferred
                  interface.  Available for both the networkd and NetworkManager backends.

         • use-domains (scalar) – since 0.98

                  Takes  a  boolean,  or  the  special value "route".  When true, the domain name
                  received from the DHCP server will be used as DNS search domain over this link,
                  similar  to  the effect of the Domains= setting.  If set to "route", the domain
                  name received from the DHCP server will be used for routing DNS  queries  only,
                  but  not  for searching, similar to the effect of the Domains= setting when the
                  argument is prefixed with "~".

                  Requires feature: dhcp-use-domains

   Routing
       Complex routing is possible with netplan.   Standard  static  routes  as  well  as  policy
       routing using routing tables are supported via the networkd backend.

       These options are available for all types of interfaces.

   Default routes
       The  most  common  need for routing concerns the definition of default routes to reach the
       wider Internet.  Those default routes can only defined once  per  IP  family  and  routing
       table.  A typical example would look like the following:

              eth0:
                [...]
                routes:
                  - to: default # could be 0.0.0.0/0 optionally
                    via: 10.0.0.1
                    metric: 100
                    on-link: true
                  - to: default # could be ::/0 optionally
                    via: cf02:de:ad:be:ef::2
              eth1:
                [...]
                routes:
                  - to: default
                    via: 172.134.67.1
                    metric: 100
                    on-link: true
                    # Not on the main routing table,
                    # does not conflict with the eth0 default route
                    table: 76

       • routes (mapping)

                The  routes  block  defines standard static routes for an interface.  At least to
                must be specified.  If type is local or nat a default scope of host  is  assumed.
                If  type is unicast and no gateway (via) is given or type is broadcast, multicast
                or anycast a default scope of link is assumed.  Otherwise, a global scope is  the
                default setting.

                For  from,  to, and via, both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are recognized, and must be
                in the form addr/prefixlen or addr.

         • from (scalar)

                  Set a source IP address for traffic going through the route.   (NetworkManager:
                  as of v1.8.0)

         • to (scalar)

                  Destination address for the route.

         • via (scalar)

                  Address to the gateway to use for this route.

         • on-link (bool)

                  When  set  to  "true",  specifies  that  the route is directly connected to the
                  interface.  (NetworkManager: as of v1.12.0 for IPv4 and v1.18.0 for IPv6)

         • metric (scalar)

                  The relative priority of the route.  Must be a positive integer value.

         • type (scalar)

                  The  type  of  route.   Valid  options  are  "unicast"  (default),   "anycast",
                  "blackhole",  "broadcast",  "local",  "multicast",  "nat", "prohibit", "throw",
                  "unreachable" or "xresolve".

         • scope (scalar)

                  The route scope, how wide-ranging it is to the network.   Possible  values  are
                  "global", "link", or "host".  Applies to IPv4 only.

         • table (scalar)

                  The  table number to use for the route.  In some scenarios, it may be useful to
                  set routes in a separate routing table.  It  may  also  be  used  to  refer  to
                  routing  policy  rules which also accept a table parameter.  Allowed values are
                  positive integers starting from 1.  Some values are already in use to refer  to
                  specific  routing  tables: see /etc/iproute2/rt_tables.  (NetworkManager: as of
                  v1.10.0)

         • mtu (scalar) – since 0.101

                  The MTU to be used for the route, in bytes.  Must be a positive integer value.

         • congestion-window (scalar) – since 0.102

                  The congestion window to be used  for  the  route,  represented  by  number  of
                  segments.  Must be a positive integer value.

         • advertised-receive-window (scalar) – since 0.102

                  The  receive  window  to  be advertised for the route, represented by number of
                  segments.  Must be a positive integer value.

       • routing-policy (mapping)

                The routing-policy block defines  extra  routing  policy  for  a  network,  where
                traffic may be handled specially based on the source IP, firewall marking, etc.

                For  from,  to,  both  IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are recognized, and must be in the
                form addr/prefixlen or addr.

         • from (scalar)

                  Set a source IP address to match traffic for this policy rule.

         • to (scalar)

                  Match on traffic going to the specified destination.

         • table (scalar)

                  The table number to match for the route.  In some scenarios, it may  be  useful
                  to  set  routes  in  a separate routing table.  It may also be used to refer to
                  routes which also accept  a  table  parameter.   Allowed  values  are  positive
                  integers  starting from 1.  Some values are already in use to refer to specific
                  routing tables: see /etc/iproute2/rt_tables.

         • priority (scalar)

                  Specify a priority for the routing policy rule, to influence the order in which
                  routing  rules  are processed.  A higher number means lower priority: rules are
                  processed in order by increasing priority number.

         • mark (scalar)

                  Have this routing policy rule match on traffic that  has  been  marked  by  the
                  iptables  firewall  with  this  value.   Allowed  values  are positive integers
                  starting from 1.

         • type-of-service (scalar)

                  Match this policy rule based on the type  of  service  number  applied  to  the
                  traffic.

   Authentication
       Netplan  supports  advanced  authentication  settings for ethernet and wifi interfaces, as
       well as individual wifi networks, by means of the auth block.

       • auth (mapping)

                Specifies authentication settings for a device of type ethernets:, or an  access-
                points: entry on a wifis: device.

                The auth block supports the following properties:

         • key-management (scalar)

                  The  supported key management modes are none (no key management); psk (WPA with
                  pre-shared key, common for home wifi); eap (WPA with EAP, common for enterprise
                  wifi); and 802.1x (used primarily for wired Ethernet connections).

         • password (scalar)

                  The password string for EAP, or the pre-shared key for WPA-PSK.

           The following properties can be used if key-management is eap or 802.1x:

         • method (scalar)

                  The  EAP  method  to  use.   The  supported  EAP  methods  are  tls (TLS), peap
                  (Protected EAP), and ttls (Tunneled TLS).

         • identity (scalar)

                  The identity to use for EAP.

         • anonymous-identity (scalar)

                  The identity to pass over the unencrypted channel  if  the  chosen  EAP  method
                  supports passing a different tunnelled identity.

         • ca-certificate (scalar)

                  Path   to   a  file  with  one  or  more  trusted  certificate  authority  (CA)
                  certificates.

         • client-certificate (scalar)

                  Path to a file containing the certificate to  be  used  by  the  client  during
                  authentication.

         • client-key (scalar)

                  Path to a file containing the private key corresponding to client-certificate.

         • client-key-password (scalar)

                  Password  to  use  to  decrypt the private key specified in client-key if it is
                  encrypted.

         • phase2-auth (scalar) – since 0.99

                  Phase 2 authentication mechanism.

   Properties for device type ethernets:
       Ethernet device definitions,  beyond  common  ones  described  above,  also  support  some
       additional properties that can be used for SR-IOV devices.

       • link (scalar) – since 0.99

                (SR-IOV devices only) The link property declares the device as a Virtual Function
                of the selected Physical Function device, as identified by the given netplan id.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  enp1: {...}
                  enp1s16f1:
                    link: enp1

       • virtual-function-count (scalar) – since 0.99

                (SR-IOV devices only) In certain special cases VFs might need  to  be  configured
                outside  of  netplan.   For  such  configurations  virtual-function-count  can be
                optionally used to set an explicit number of  Virtual  Functions  for  the  given
                Physical  Function.   If  unset, the default is to create only as many VFs as are
                defined in the netplan configuration.  This should  be  used  for  special  cases
                only.

                Requires feature: sriovembedded-switch-mode (scalar) – since 0.104

                (SR-IOV  devices  only)  Change  the operational mode of the embedded switch of a
                supported SmartNIC PCI device (e.g.  Mellanox ConnectX-5).  Possible  values  are
                switchdev or legacy, if unspecified the vendor's default configuration is used.

                Requires feature: eswitch-modedelay-virtual-functions-rebind (bool) – since 0.104

                (SR-IOV  devices  only) Delay rebinding of SR-IOV virtual functions to its driver
                after changing the embedded-switch-mode setting to a later stage.  Can be enabled
                when bonding/VF LAG is in use.  Defaults to false.

                Requires feature: eswitch-modeinfiniband-mode (scalar) – since 0.105

                (InfiniBand  devices  only)  Change  the  operational  mode  of  a  IPoIB device.
                Possible values are datagram or connected.  If unspecified the  kernel's  default
                configuration is used.

                Requires feature: infiniband

   Properties for device type modems:
       GSM/CDMA  modem  configuration is only supported for the NetworkManager backend.  systemd-
       networkd does not support modems.

       Requires feature: modemsapn (scalar) – since 0.99

                Set the carrier APN (Access Point Name).  This can be omitted if  auto-config  is
                enabled.

       • auto-config (bool) – since 0.99

                Specify  whether  to  try  and  auto-configure the modem by doing a lookup of the
                carrier against the Mobile Broadband Provider database.  This may  not  work  for
                all carriers.

       • device-id (scalar) – since 0.99

                Specify  the  device ID (as given by the WWAN management service) of the modem to
                match.  This can be found using mmcli.

       • network-id (scalar) – since 0.99

                Specify the Network ID (GSM LAI format).  If this is specified, the  device  will
                not roam networks.

       • number (scalar) – since 0.99

                The  number  to dial to establish the connection to the mobile broadband network.
                (Deprecated for GSM)

       • password (scalar) – since 0.99

                Specify the password used to authenticate with the carrier network.  This can  be
                omitted if auto-config is enabled.

       • pin (scalar) – since 0.99

                Specify the SIM PIN to allow it to operate if a PIN is set.

       • sim-id (scalar) – since 0.99

                Specify the SIM unique identifier (as given by the WWAN management service) which
                this connection applies to.  If given, the connection will apply  to  any  device
                also  allowed  by  device-id  which  contains  a  SIM  card  matching  the  given
                identifier.

       • sim-operator-id (scalar) – since 0.99

                Specify the MCC/MNC string (such as "310260" or  "21601")  which  identifies  the
                carrier  that  this  connection  should  apply to.  If given, the connection will
                apply to any device also allowed by device-id and sim-id  which  contains  a  SIM
                card provisioned by the given operator.

       • username (scalar) – since 0.99

                Specify  the username used to authenticate with the carrier network.  This can be
                omitted if auto-config is enabled.

   Properties for device type wifis:
       Note that systemd-networkd does not natively  support  wifi,  so  you  need  wpasupplicant
       installed if you let the networkd renderer handle wifi.

       • access-points (mapping)

                This  provides pre-configured connections to NetworkManager.  Note that users can
                of course select other access points/SSIDs.  The keys  of  the  mapping  are  the
                SSIDs, and the values are mappings with the following supported properties:

         • password (scalar)

                  Enable  WPA/WPA2 authentication and set the passphrase for it.  If neither this
                  nor an auth block are given, the network is assumed to be open.  The setting

                         password: "S3kr1t"

                  is equivalent to

                         auth:
                           key-management: psk
                           password: "S3kr1t"

         • mode (scalar)

                  Possible access point modes are infrastructure (the  default),  ap  (create  an
                  access  point  to  which  other  devices  can connect), and adhoc (peer to peer
                  networks  without  a  central  access  point).   ap  is  only  supported   with
                  NetworkManager.

         • bssid (scalar) – since 0.99

                  If specified, directs the device to only associate with the given access point.

         • band (scalar) – since 0.99

                  Possible  bands  are 5GHz (for 5GHz 802.11a) and 2.4GHz (for 2.4GHz 802.11), do
                  not restrict the 802.11 frequency band of the network if unset (the default).

         • channel (scalar) – since 0.99

                  Wireless channel to use for the  Wi-Fi  connection.   Because  channel  numbers
                  overlap  between bands, this property takes effect only if the band property is
                  also set.

         • hidden (bool) – since 0.100

                  Set to true to change the SSID scan technique for  connecting  to  hidden  WiFi
                  networks.   Note  this  may  have  slower  performance  compared  to false (the
                  default) when connecting to publicly broadcast SSIDs.

       • wakeonwlan (sequence of scalars) – since 0.99

                This enables WakeOnWLan on  supported  devices.   Not  all  drivers  support  all
                options.     May    be   any   combination   of   any,   disconnect,   magic_pkt,
                gtk_rekey_failure, eap_identity_req, four_way_handshake,  rfkill_release  or  tcp
                (NetworkManager only).  Or the exclusive default flag (the default).

       • regulatory-domain (scalar) – since 0.105

                This  can  be  used  to  define  the  radio's  regulatory  domain, to make use of
                additional WiFi channels outside the "world domain".  Takes an  ISO  /  IEC  3166
                country  code (like GB) or 00 to reset to the "world domain".  See wireless-regdb
                (https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/sforshee/wireless-
                regdb.git/tree/db.txt) for available values.

                Requires   dependency:   iw,   if   it   is  to  be  used  outside  the  networkd
                (wpa_supplicant) backend.

   Properties for device type bridges:interfaces (sequence of scalars)

                All devices matching this ID list will be added to the bridge.  This  may  be  an
                empty  list,  in  which  case  the  bridge  will be brought online with no member
                interfaces.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  switchports:
                    match: {name: "enp2*"}
                [...]
                bridges:
                  br0:
                    interfaces: [switchports]

       • parameters (mapping)

                Customization parameters for special bridging options.  Time intervals  may  need
                to be expressed as a number of seconds or milliseconds: the default value type is
                specified below.  If necessary, time intervals can  be  qualified  using  a  time
                suffix (such as "s" for seconds, "ms" for milliseconds) to allow for more control
                over its behavior.

         • ageing-time, aging-time (scalar)

                  Set the period of time to keep a MAC address in the forwarding database after a
                  packet is received.  This maps to the AgeingTimeSec= property when the networkd
                  renderer is  used.   If  no  time  suffix  is  specified,  the  value  will  be
                  interpreted as seconds.

         • priority (scalar)

                  Set the priority value for the bridge.  This value should be a number between 0
                  and 65535.  Lower values mean higher priority.   The  bridge  with  the  higher
                  priority will be elected as the root bridge.

         • port-priority (scalar)

                  Set  the  port  priority to .  The priority value is a number between 0 and 63.
                  This metric is used in the designated port and root port selection algorithms.

         • forward-delay (scalar)

                  Specify the period of time the bridge will remain  in  Listening  and  Learning
                  states  before  getting  to  the  Forwarding  state.   This  field  maps to the
                  ForwardDelaySec= property for the networkd renderer.   If  no  time  suffix  is
                  specified, the value will be interpreted as seconds.

         • hello-time (scalar)

                  Specify the interval between two hello packets being sent out from the root and
                  designated bridges.  Hello packets communicate information  about  the  network
                  topology.   When  the networkd renderer is used, this maps to the HelloTimeSec=
                  property.  If no time suffix is specified, the value  will  be  interpreted  as
                  seconds.

         • max-age (scalar)

                  Set  the maximum age of a hello packet.  If the last hello packet is older than
                  that value, the bridge will attempt to become the root bridge.   This  maps  to
                  the  MaxAgeSec= property when the networkd renderer is used.  If no time suffix
                  is specified, the value will be interpreted as seconds.

         • path-cost (scalar)

                  Set the cost of a path on the bridge.  Faster interfaces should  have  a  lower
                  cost.   This allows a finer control on the network topology so that the fastest
                  paths are available whenever possible.

         • stp (bool)

                  Define whether the bridge should use Spanning Tree Protocol.  The default value
                  is "true", which means that Spanning Tree should be used.

   Properties for device type bonds:interfaces (sequence of scalars)

                All devices matching this ID list will be added to the bond.

         Example:

                ethernets:
                  switchports:
                    match: {name: "enp2*"}
                [...]
                bonds:
                  bond0:
                    interfaces: [switchports]

       • parameters (mapping)

                Customization parameters for special bonding options.  Time intervals may need to
                be expressed as a number of seconds or milliseconds: the default  value  type  is
                specified  below.   If  necessary,  time  intervals can be qualified using a time
                suffix (such as "s" for seconds, "ms" for milliseconds) to allow for more control
                over its behavior.

         • mode (scalar)

                  Set the bonding mode used for the interfaces.  The default is balance-rr (round
                  robin).  Possible values are balance-rr, active-backup, balance-xor, broadcast,
                  802.3ad,  balance-tlb, and balance-alb.  For Open vSwitch active-backup and the
                  additional modes balance-tcp and balance-slb are supported.

         • lacp-rate (scalar)

                  Set the rate at which LACPDUs are transmitted.  This is only useful in  802.3ad
                  mode.  Possible values are slow (30 seconds, default), and fast (every second).

         • mii-monitor-interval (scalar)

                  Specifies  the  interval  for  MII monitoring (verifying if an interface of the
                  bond has carrier).  The default is 0; which disables MII monitoring.   This  is
                  equivalent  to  the  MIIMonitorSec= field for the networkd backend.  If no time
                  suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.

         • min-links (scalar)

                  The minimum number of links up in a bond to consider the bond interface  to  be
                  up.

         • transmit-hash-policy (scalar)

                  Specifies  the  transmit  hash policy for the selection of ports.  This is only
                  useful in balance-xor, 802.3ad and  balance-tlb  modes.   Possible  values  are
                  layer2, layer3+4, layer2+3, encap2+3, and encap3+4.

         • ad-select (scalar)

                  Set the aggregation selection mode.  Possible values are stable, bandwidth, and
                  count.  This option is only used in 802.3ad mode.

         • all-members-active (bool) – since 0.106

                  If the bond should drop duplicate frames received on inactive ports,  set  this
                  option  to  false.   If they should be delivered, set this option to true.  The
                  default value is false, and is the desirable behavior in most situations.

                  Alias: all-slaves-activearp-interval (scalar)

                  Set the interval value for how frequently ARP link  monitoring  should  happen.
                  The  default  value  is  0,  which  disables  ARP monitoring.  For the networkd
                  backend, this maps to the ARPIntervalSec=  property.   If  no  time  suffix  is
                  specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.

         • arp-ip-targets (sequence of scalars)

                  IPs  of  other  hosts on the link which should be sent ARP requests in order to
                  validate that a port is up.  This option is only used when arp-interval is  set
                  to  a  value  other than 0.  At least one IP address must be given for ARP link
                  monitoring to function.  Only IPv4 addresses are supported.  You can specify up
                  to 16 IP addresses.  The default value is an empty list.

         • arp-validate (scalar)

                  Configure  how  ARP replies are to be validated when using ARP link monitoring.
                  Possible values are none, active, backup, and all.

         • arp-all-targets (scalar)

                  Specify whether to use any ARP IP target being up as sufficient for a  port  to
                  be  considered  up;  or  if  all the targets must be up.  This is only used for
                  active-backup mode when arp-validate is enabled.  Possible values are  any  and
                  all.

         • up-delay (scalar)

                  Specify  the  delay before enabling a link once the link is physically up.  The
                  default value is 0.  This maps to the UpDelaySec=  property  for  the  networkd
                  renderer.   This  option is only valid for the miimon link monitor.  If no time
                  suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.

         • down-delay (scalar)

                  Specify the delay before disabling a link once the link  has  been  lost.   The
                  default  value  is 0.  This maps to the DownDelaySec= property for the networkd
                  renderer.  This option is only valid for the miimon link monitor.  If  no  time
                  suffix is specified, the value will be interpreted as milliseconds.

         • fail-over-mac-policy (scalar)

                  Set  whether  to  set all ports to the same MAC address when adding them to the
                  bond, or how else the system should handle MAC addresses.  The possible  values
                  are none, active, and follow.

         • gratuitous-arp (scalar)

                  Specify  how  many  ARP packets to send after failover.  Once a link is up on a
                  new port, a notification is sent and possibly repeated if this value is set  to
                  a number greater than 1.  The default value is 1 and valid values are between 1
                  and 255.  This only affects active-backup mode.

                  For historical reasons, the misspelling gratuitious-arp is  also  accepted  and
                  has the same function.

         • packets-per-member (scalar) – since 0.106

                  In  balance-rr  mode,  specifies  the  number  of packets to transmit on a port
                  before switching to the next.  When this value is set to 0, ports are chosen at
                  random.   Allowable  values  are  between 0 and 65535.  The default value is 1.
                  This setting is only used in balance-rr mode.

                  Alias: packets-per-slaveprimary-reselect-policy (scalar)

                  Set the reselection policy for the primary port.   On  failure  of  the  active
                  port, the system will use this policy to decide how the new active port will be
                  chosen and how recovery will be  handled.   The  possible  values  are  always,
                  better, and failure.

         • resend-igmp (scalar)

                  In modes balance-rr, active-backup, balance-tlb and balance-alb, a failover can
                  switch IGMP traffic from one port to another.

                  This parameter specifies how many IGMP  membership  reports  are  issued  on  a
                  failover  event.   Values  range  from 0 to 255.  0 disables sending membership
                  reports.  Otherwise, the first  membership  report  is  sent  on  failover  and
                  subsequent reports are sent at 200ms intervals.

         • learn-packet-interval (scalar)

                  Specify  the interval between sending learning packets to each port.  The value
                  range is between 1 and 0x7fffffff.  The default value is 1.  This  option  only
                  affects  balance-tlb  and balance-alb modes.  Using the networkd renderer, this
                  field maps to the LearnPacketIntervalSec=  property.   If  no  time  suffix  is
                  specified, the value will be interpreted as seconds.

         • primary (scalar)

                  Specify  a device to be used as a primary port, or preferred device to use as a
                  port for the bond (i.e.  the preferred device to send data  through),  whenever
                  it is available.  This only affects active-backup, balance-alb, and balance-tlb
                  modes.

   Properties for device type tunnels:
       Tunnels allow traffic to pass as if it was between systems  on  the  same  local  network,
       although  systems  may be far from each other but reachable via the Internet.  They may be
       used to support IPv6 traffic on a network where the ISP does not provide the  service,  or
       to     extend     and     "connect"     separate     local     networks.     Please    see
       <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunneling_protocol>  for  more  general  information  about
       tunnels.

       • mode (scalar)

                Defines  the  tunnel  mode.   Valid  options  are  sit, gre, ip6gre, ipip, ipip6,
                ip6ip6, vti, vti6, wireguard and vxlan.  Additionally, the networkd backend  also
                supports  gretap  and  ip6gretap  modes.  In addition, the NetworkManager backend
                supports isatap tunnels.

       • local (scalar)

                Defines the address of the local endpoint of the tunnel.  (For VXLAN) This should
                match  one  of  the  parent's  IP  addresses  or make use of the networkd special
                values.

       • remote (scalar)

                Defines the address of the remote endpoint of the tunnel or  multicast  group  IP
                address for VXLAN.

       • ttl (scalar) – since 0.103

                Defines  the  Time  To  Live  (TTL)  of  the tunnel.  Takes a number in the range
                1..255.

       • key (scalar or mapping)

                Define keys to use for the tunnel.  The key can be a number or a dotted quad  (an
                IPv4  address).   For  wireguard it can be a base64-encoded private key or (as of
                networkd v242+) an absolute path to a file, containing  the  private  key  (since
                0.100).   It  is used for identification of IP transforms.  This is only required
                for vti and vti6 when using the networkd backend.

                This field may be used as a scalar (meaning that a single key is specified and to
                be  used  for  input,  output  and  private  key), or as a mapping, where you can
                further specify input/output/private.

         • input (scalar)

                  The input key for the tunnel

         • output (scalar)

                  The output key for the tunnel

         • private (scalar) – since 0.100

                  A base64-encoded private key required for WireGuard tunnels.  When the systemd-
                  networkd  backend  (v242+) is used, this can also be an absolute path to a file
                  containing the private key.

       • keys (scalar or mapping)

                Alternate name for the key field.  See above.

         Examples:

                tunnels:
                  tun0:
                    mode: gre
                    local: ...
                    remote: ...
                    keys:
                      input: 1234
                      output: 5678

                tunnels:
                  tun0:
                    mode: vti6
                    local: ...
                    remote: ...
                    key: 59568549

                tunnels:
                  wg0:
                    mode: wireguard
                    addresses: [...]
                    peers:
                      - keys:
                          public: rlbInAj0qV69CysWPQY7KEBnKxpYCpaWqOs/dLevdWc=
                          shared: /path/to/shared.key
                        ...
                    key: mNb7OIIXTdgW4khM7OFlzJ+UPs7lmcWHV7xjPgakMkQ=

                tunnels:
                  wg0:
                    mode: wireguard
                    addresses: [...]
                    peers:
                      - keys:
                          public: rlbInAj0qV69CysWPQY7KEBnKxpYCpaWqOs/dLevdWc=
                        ...
                    keys:
                      private: /path/to/priv.key

       WireGuard specific keys:

       • mark (scalar) – since 0.100

                Firewall mark for outgoing WireGuard packets from this interface, optional.

       • port (scalar) – since 0.100

                UDP port to listen at or auto.  Optional, defaults to auto.

       • peers (sequence of mappings) – since 0.100

                A list of peers, each having keys documented below.

         Example:

                tunnels:
                  wg0:
                    mode: wireguard
                    key: /path/to/private.key
                    mark: 42
                    port: 5182
                    peers:
                      - keys:
                          public: rlbInAj0qV69CysWPQY7KEBnKxpYCpaWqOs/dLevdWc=
                        allowed-ips: [0.0.0.0/0, "2001:fe:ad:de:ad:be:ef:1/24"]
                        keepalive: 23
                        endpoint: 1.2.3.4:5
                      - keys:
                          public: M9nt4YujIOmNrRmpIRTmYSfMdrpvE7u6WkG8FY8WjG4=
                          shared: /some/shared.key
                        allowed-ips: [10.10.10.20/24]
                        keepalive: 22
                        endpoint: 5.4.3.2:1

         • endpoint (scalar) – since 0.100

                  Remote endpoint IPv4/IPv6 address or a hostname, followed by a colon and a port
                  number.

         • allowed-ips (sequence of scalars) – since 0.100

                  A  list  of  IP  (v4  or  v6) addresses with CIDR masks from which this peer is
                  allowed to send incoming traffic and to which outgoing traffic for this peer is
                  directed.   The  catch-all  0.0.0.0/0  may  be  specified for matching all IPv4
                  addresses, and ::/0 may be specified for matching all IPv6 addresses.

         • keepalive (scalar) – since 0.100

                  An interval in seconds, between 1 and 65535 inclusive, of how often to send  an
                  authenticated  empty  packet  to the peer for the purpose of keeping a stateful
                  firewall or NAT mapping valid persistently.  Optional.

         • keys (mapping) – since 0.100

                  Define keys to use for the WireGuard peers.

                  This field can be used as a mapping, where you can further specify  the  public
                  and shared keys.

           • public (scalar) – since 0.100

                    A base64-encoded public key, required for WireGuard peers.

           • shared (scalar) – since 0.100

                    A  base64-encoded  preshared  key.   Optional  for WireGuard peers.  When the
                    systemd-networkd backend (v242+) is used, this can also be an  absolute  path
                    to a file containing the preshared key.

       VXLAN specific keys:

       • id (scalar) – since 0.105

                The  VXLAN  Network  Identifier (VNI or VXLAN Segment ID).  Takes a number in the
                range 1..16777215.

       • link (scalar) – since 0.105

                netplan ID of the parent device definition to which this VXLAN gets connected.

       • type-of-service (scalar) – since 0.105

                The Type Of Service byte value for a vxlan interface.

       • mac-learning (scalar) – since 0.105

                Takes a boolean.  When true, enables dynamic MAC learning to discover remote  MAC
                addresses.

       • ageing, aging (scalar) – since 0.105

                The lifetime of Forwarding Database entry learned by the kernel, in seconds.

       • limit (scalar) – since 0.105

                Configures maximum number of FDB entries.

       • arp-proxy (scalar) – since 0.105

                Takes  a  boolean.  When true, bridge-connected VXLAN tunnel endpoint answers ARP
                requests from the local bridge on behalf of remote  Distributed  Overlay  Virtual
                Ethernet (DOVE) clients.  Defaults to false.

       • notifications (sequence of scalars) – since 0.105

                Takes  the  flags  l2-miss and l3-miss to enable netlink LLADDR and/or netlink IP
                address miss notifications.

       • short-circuit (scalar) – since 0.105

                Takes a boolean.  When true, route short circuiting is turned on.

       • checksums (sequence of scalars) – since 0.105

                Takes the flags udp,  zero-udp6-tx,  zero-udp6-rx,  remote-tx  and  remote-rx  to
                enable  transmitting  UDP checksums in VXLAN/IPv4, send/receive zero checksums in
                VXLAN/IPv6 and enable sending/receiving checksum offloading in VXLAN.

       • extensions (sequence of scalars) – since 0.105

                Takes the flags group-policy and generic-protocol to enable  the  "Group  Policy"
                and/or "Generic Protocol" VXLAN extensions.

       • port (scalar) – since 0.105

                Configures  the  default  destination  UDP  port.  If the destination port is not
                specified then Linux kernel default will be used.  Set to 4789 to  get  the  IANA
                assigned value.

       • port-range (sequence of scalars) – since 0.105

                Configures  the  source  port range for the VXLAN.  The kernel assigns the source
                UDP port based on the flow to help the receiver to do load balancing.  When  this
                option  is  not  set, the normal range of local UDP ports is used.  Uses the form
                [LOWER, UPPER].

       • flow-label (scalar) – since 0.105

                Specifies the flow label  to  use  in  outgoing  packets.   The  valid  range  is
                0-1048575.

       • do-not-fragment (scalar) – since 0.105

                Allows  setting  the  IPv4 Do not Fragment (DF) bit in outgoing packets.  Takes a
                boolean value.  When unset, the kernel's default will be used.

   Properties for device type vlans:id (scalar)

                VLAN ID, a number between 0 and 4094.

       • link (scalar)

                netplan ID of the underlying device definition on which this VLAN gets created.

       Example:

              ethernets:
                eno1: {...}
              vlans:
                en-intra:
                  id: 1
                  link: eno1
                  dhcp4: yes
                en-vpn:
                  id: 2
                  link: eno1
                  addresses: [...]

   Properties for device type vrfs:table (scalar) – since 0.105

                The numeric routing table identifier.  This setting is compulsory.

       • interfaces (sequence of scalars) – since 0.105

                All devices matching this ID list will be added to the vrf.  This may be an empty
                list, in which case the vrf will be brought online with no member interfaces.

       • routes (sequence of mappings) – since 0.105

                Configure  static  routing  for  the  device; see the Routing section.  The table
                value is implicitly set to the VRF's table.

       • routing-policy (sequence of mappings) – since 0.105

                Configure policy routing for the device; see  the  Routing  section.   The  table
                value is implicitly set to the VRF's table.

       Example:

              vrfs:
                vrf20:
                  table: 20
                  interfaces: [ br0 ]
                  routes:
                    - to: default
                      via: 10.10.10.3
                  routing-policy:
                    - from: 10.10.10.42
                [...]
                bridges:
                  br0:
                    interfaces: []

   Properties for device type nm-devices:
       The  nm-devices  device  type  is  for  internal use only and should not be used in normal
       configuration files.  It enables a fallback  mode  for  unsupported  settings,  using  the
       passthrough mapping.

   Backend-specific configuration parameters
       In  addition  to  the  other  fields  available to configure interfaces, some backends may
       require to record some of their own parameters  in  netplan,  especially  if  the  netplan
       definitions  are generated automatically by the consumer of that backend.  Currently, this
       is only used with NetworkManager.

       • networkmanager (mapping) – since 0.99

                Keeps the NetworkManager-specific configuration parameters used by the daemon  to
                recognize connections.

         • name (scalar) – since 0.99

                  Set the display name for the connection.

         • uuid (scalar) – since 0.99

                  Defines  the  UUID  (unique  identifier)  for  this connection, as generated by
                  NetworkManager itself.

         • stable-id (scalar) – since 0.99

                  Defines the stable  ID  (a  different  form  of  a  connection  name)  used  by
                  NetworkManager  in case the name of the connection might otherwise change, such
                  as when sharing connections between users.

         • device (scalar) – since 0.99

                  Defines the interface name for which this connection applies.

         • passthrough (mapping) – since 0.102

                  Can be used as a fallback mechanism to missing keyfile settings.

SEE ALSO

       netplan-generate(8),  netplan-apply(8),  netplan-try(8),  netplan-get(8),  netplan-set(8),
       netplan-dbus(8), systemd-networkd(8), NetworkManager(8)

AUTHORS

       Mathieu  Trudel-Lapierre (<cyphermox@ubuntu.com>); Martin Pitt (<martin.pitt@ubuntu.com>);
       Lukas Märdian (<slyon@ubuntu.com>).

                                                                            YAML configuration(5)