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author | Dan Williams <dcbw@redhat.com> | 2008-11-20 14:45:27 +0000 |
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committer | Dan Williams <dcbw@redhat.com> | 2008-11-20 14:45:27 +0000 |
commit | 7eb455978b555db48d337e2f54ab0ab1acea159e (patch) | |
tree | beee777ef458d9618b95af2c77da0ae25259719a /README | |
parent | 9fd459f326b31417318446f6c3eeaf08009f01e8 (diff) | |
download | NetworkManager-7eb455978b555db48d337e2f54ab0ab1acea159e.tar.gz |
Update the readme
git-svn-id: http://svn-archive.gnome.org/svn/NetworkManager/trunk@4311 4912f4e0-d625-0410-9fb7-b9a5a253dbdc
Diffstat (limited to 'README')
-rw-r--r-- | README | 126 |
1 files changed, 74 insertions, 52 deletions
@@ -1,55 +1,77 @@ -THEORY OF OPERATION: +Networking that Just Works +-------------------------- NetworkManager attempts to keep an active network connection available at all times. The point of NetworkManager is to make networking configuration and -setup as painless and automatic as possible. If using DHCP, NetworkManager is -_intended_ to replace default routes, obtain IP addresses from a DHCP server, -and change nameservers whenever it sees fit. In effect, the goal of -NetworkManager is to make networking Just Work. If you have special needs, -we'd like to hear about them, but understand that NetworkManager is not -intended to serve the needs of all users. - - -From a list of all adapters currently installed on the system, NetworkManager -will first try a wired and then a wireless adapter. Wireless adapters that -support wireless scanning are preferred over ones that cannot. NetworkManager -does not try to keep a connection up as long as possible, meaning that plugging -into a wired network will switch the connection to the wired network away from -the wireless one. - -For wireless networking support, NetworkManager keeps a list of wireless -networks, the preferred list. Preferred Networks are wireless networks that -the user has explicitly made NetworkManager associate with at some previous -time. So if the user walks into a Starbucks and explicitly asks NetworkManager -to associate with that Starbucks network, NetworkManager will remember the -Starbucks network information from that point on. Upon returning to that -Starbucks, NetworkManager will attempt to associate _automatically_ with the -Starbucks network since it is now in the Preferred Networks list. The point of -this is to ensure that only the user can determine which wireless networks to -associate with, and that the user is aware which networks are security risks -and which are not. - - -STRUCTURE: - -NetworkManager runs as a root-user system level daemon, since it -must manipulate hardware directly. It communicates over DBUS with a -desktop-level per-user process, nm-applet. Since Preferred Networks are -user-specific, there must be some mechanism of getting this information -per-user. NetworkManager cannot store that information as it is user-specific, -and therefore communicates over DBUS to the user daemon which provides those -lists. NetworkManager also provides an API over DBUS for any DBUS-aware -application to determine the current state of the network, including available -wireless networks the computer is aware of and specific details about those -networks. This API also provides the means for forcing NetworkManager to -associate with a specific wireless network. Use of DBUS allows separation of -NetworkManager, which requires no user-interface, and the parts of the user -interface which might be desktop environment specific. - -The nm-applet provides a DBUS service called NetworkManagerInfo, which should -provide to NetworkManager the Preferred Networks lists upon request. It also -should be able to display a dialog to retrieve a WEP/WPA key or passphrase from -the user when NetworkManager requests it. The GNOME version of -NetworkManagerInfo, for example, stores Preferred Networks in GConf and -WEP/WPA keys in gnome-keyring, and proxies that information to NetworkManager -upon request. +setup as painless and automatic as possible. NetworkManager is intended to +replace default route, replace other routes, set IP addresses, and in general +configure networking as NM sees fit (with the possibility of manual override as +necessary). In effect, the goal of NetworkManager is to make networking Just +Work with a minimum of user hassle, but still allow customization and a high +level of manual network control. If you have special needs, we'd like to hear +about them, but understand that NetworkManager is not intended for every +use-case. + +NetworkManager will attempt to keep every network device in the system up and +active, as long as the device is available for use (has a cable plugged in, +the killswitch isn't turned on, etc). Network connections can be set to +'autoconnect', meaning that NetworkManager will make that connection active +whenever it and the hardware is available. + +"Settings services" store lists of user- or administrator-defined "connections", +which contain all the settings and parameters required to connect to a specific +network. NetworkManager will _never_ activate a connection that is not in this +list, or that the user has not directed NetworkManager to connect to. + + +How it works: + +The NetworkManager daemon runs as a privileged service (since it must access +and control hardware), but provides a D-Bus interface on the system bus to +allow for fine-grained control of networking. NetworkManager does not store +connections or settings, it is only the mechanism by which those connections +are selected and activated. + +To store pre-defined network connections, two separate services, the "system +settings service" and the "user settings service" store connection information +and provide these to NetworkManager, also via D-Bus. Each settings service +can determine how and where it persistently stores the connection information; +for example, the GNOME applet stores its configuration in GConf, and the system +settings service stores it's config in distro-specific formats, or in a distro- +agnostic format, depending on user/administrator preference. + +A variety of other system services are used by NetworkManager to provide +network functionality: wpa_supplicant for wireless connections and 802.1x +wired connections, pppd for PPP and mobile broadband connections, DHCP clients +for dynamic IP addressing, dnsmasq for proxy nameserver and DHCP server +functionality for internet connection sharing, and avahi-autoipd for IPv4 +link-local addresses. Most communication with these daemons occurs, again, +via D-Bus. + + +Why doesn't my network Just Work? + +Driver problems are the #1 cause of why NetworkManager sometimes fails to +connect to wireless networks. Often, the driver simply doesn't behave in a +consistent manner, or is just plain buggy. NetworkManager supports _only_ +those drivers that are shipped with the upstream Linux kernel, because only +those drivers can be easily fixed and debugged. ndiswrapper, vendor binary +drivers, or other out-of-tree drivers may or may not work well with +NetworkManager, precisely because they have not been vetted and improved by the +open-source community, and becuase problems in these drivers usually cannot +be fixed. + +Sometimes, command-line tools like 'iwconfig' will work, but NetworkManager will +fail. This is again often due to buggy drivers, becuase these drivers simply +aren't expecting the dynamic requests that NetworkManager and wpa_supplicant +make. Driver bugs should be filed in the bug tracker of the distribution being +run, since often distributions customize their kernel and drivers. + +Sometimes, it really is NetworkManager's fault. If you think that's the case, +please file a bug at http://bugzilla.gnome.org and choose the NetworkManager +component. Attaching the output of /var/log/messages or /var/log/daemon.log +(wherever your distribution directs syslog's 'daemon' facility output) is often +very helpful, and (if you can get) a working wpa_supplicant config file helps +enormously. + + |