Provided by: connman_1.43-1_amd64 

NAME
main.conf - ConnMan configuration file
SYNOPSIS
/etc/connman/main.conf
DESCRIPTION
main.conf is a configuration file for ConnMan. The configuration file is optional but it can be used to
set up various aspects of ConnMan's behavior. The location of the file may be changed through use of the
--config= argument for connman(8).
FILE FORMAT
The configuration file consists of sections (groups) of key-value pairs. Lines beginning with a '#' and
blank lines are considered comments. Sections are started by a header line containing the section
enclosed in '[' and ']', and ended implicitly by the start of the next section or the end of the file.
Each key-value pair must be contained in a section.
Description of sections and available keys follows:
[General]
This section is the only mandatory section of the configuration file.
InputRequestTimeout=secs
Set input request timeout. Default is 120 seconds The request for inputs like passphrase will
timeout after certain amount of time. Use this setting to increase the value in case of different
user interface designs.
BrowserLaunchTimeout=secs
Set browser launch timeout. Default is 300 seconds The request for launching a browser for portal
pages will timeout after certain amount of time. Use this setting to increase the value in case of
different user interface designs.
BackgroundScanning=true | false
Enable background scanning. Default is true. If wifi is disconnected, the background scanning
will follow a simple backoff mechanism from 3s up to 5 minutes. Then, it will stay in 5 minutes
unless user specifically asks for scanning through a D-Bus call. If so, the mechanism will start
again from 3s. This feature activates also the background scanning while being connected, which is
required for roaming on wifi. When BackgroundScanning is false, ConnMan will not perform any scan
regardless of wifi is connected or not, unless it is requested by the user through a D-Bus call.
UseGatewaysAsTimeservers=true| false
Assume that service gateways also function as timeservers. Default is false.
FallbackTimeservers=server[,...]
List of Fallback timeservers separated by ",". These timeservers are used for NTP sync when there
are no timeservers set by the user or by the service, and when UseGatewaysAsTimeservers = false.
These can contain a mixed combination of fully qualified domain names, IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
FallbackNameservers=server[,...]
List of fallback nameservers separated by "," appended to the list of nameservers given by the
service. The nameserver entries must be in numeric format, host names are ignored.
DefaultAutoConnectTechnologies=technology[,...]
List of technologies that are marked autoconnectable by default, separated by commas ",". The
default value for this entry when empty is ethernet,wifi,cellular. Services that are
automatically connected must have been set up and saved to storage beforehand.
DefaultFavoriteTechnologies=technology[,...]
List of technologies that are marked favorite by default, separated by commas ",". The default
value for this entry when empty is ethernet. Connects to services from this technology even if not
setup and saved to storage.
AlwaysConnectedTechnologies=technology[,...]
List of technoolgies which are always connected regardless of PreferredTechnologies setting
(AutoConnect = true). The default value is empty and this feature is disabled unless explicitly
enabled in the config file.
PreferredTechnologies=technology[,...]
List of preferred technologies from the most preferred one to the least preferred one separated by
commas ",". Services of the listed technology type will be tried one by one in the order given,
until one of them gets connected or they are all tried. A service of a preferred technology type
in state 'ready' will get the default route when compared to another preferred type further down
the list with state 'ready' or with a non-preferred type; a service of a preferred technology type
in state 'online' will get the default route when compared to either a non-preferred type or a
preferred type further down in the list.
NetworkInterfaceBlacklist=interface[,...]
List of blacklisted network interfaces separated by ",". Found interfaces will be compared to the
list and will not be handled by connman, if their first characters match any of the list entries.
Default value is vmnet,vboxnet,virbr,ifb.
AllowHostnameUpdates=true | false
Allow connman to change the system hostname. This can happen for example if we receive DHCP
hostname option. Default value is true.
AllowDomainnameUpdates=true | false
Allow connman to change the system domainname. This can happen for example if we receive DHCP
domainname option. Default value is true.
SingleConnectedTechnology=true | false
Keep only a single connected technology at any time. When a new service is connected by the user
or a better one is found according to PreferredTechnologies, the new service is kept connected and
all the other previously connected services are disconnected. With this setting it does not matter
whether the previously connected services are in 'online' or 'ready' states, the newly connected
service is the only one that will be kept connected. A service connected by the user will be used
until going out of network coverage. With this setting enabled applications will notice more
network breaks than normal. Note this options can't be used with VPNs. Default value is false.
TetheringTechnologies=technology[,...]
List of technologies that are allowed to enable tethering separated by ",". The default value is
wifi,bluetooth,gadget. Only those technologies listed here are used for tethering. If one wants to
tether ethernet, then add "ethernet" in the list. NOTE that if ethernet tethering is enabled,
then a DHCP server is started on all ethernet interfaces. Tethered ethernet should never be
connected to corporate or home network as it will disrupt normal operation of these networks. Due
to this ethernet is not tethered by default. Do not activate ethernet tethering unless you really
know what you are doing.
PersistentTetheringMode=true | false
Restore earlier tethering status when returning from offline mode, re-enabling a technology, and
after restarts and reboots. Default value is false.
Enable6to4=true | false
Automatically enable Anycast 6to4 if possible. This is not recommended, as the use of 6to4 will
generally lead to a severe degradation of connection quality. See RFC6343. Default value is
false (as recommended by RFC6343 section 4.1).
VendorClassID=string
Set DHCP option 60 (Vendor Class ID) to the given string. This option can be used by DHCP servers
to identify specific clients without having to rely on MAC address ranges, etc
EnableOnlineCheck=true | false
Enable or disable use of HTTP GET as an online status check. When a service is in a READY state,
and is selected as default, ConnMan will issue an HTTP GET request to verify that end-to-end
connectivity is successful. Only then the service will be transitioned to ONLINE state. If this
setting is false, the default service will remain in READY state. Default value is true.
NOTE: EnableOnlineCheck is deprecated; please use OnlineCheckMode with a mode of either one-shot
or none.
OnlineCheckMode=mode
This indicates the "online" HTTP-based Internet reachability check mode and supercedes and
deprecates EnableOnlineCheck. Possible values for mode are none, one-shot, and continuous. The
default value of mode is one-shot.
In none mode, there are no "online" HTTP-based Internet reachability checks. Any connected service
and the manager state will terminate at the "ready" state and will not progress to "online".
In one-shot mode, there is a single, one-shot "online" HTTP-based Internet reachability check for
the default service. When the check succeeds, the associated service and the manager state will
terminate at the "online" state. When the check fails, subsequent checks will be rescheduled
according to OnlineCheckIntervalStyle, OnlineCheckInitialInterval, and OnlineCheckMaxInterval and
will continue indefinitely until one succeeds or unti the service is disconnected.
In continuous mode, there are ongoing "online" HTTP-based Internet reachability check for the
default service. As with "one-shot" mode, when the first check succeeds, the associated service
and the manager state will terminate at the "online" state. Thereafter, subsequent checks will be
scheduled according to OnlineCheckIntervalStyle and OnlineCheckMaxInterval. When the check fails,
subsequent checks will be rescheduled according to OnlineCheckIntervalStyle,
OnlineCheckInitialInterval, and OnlineCheckMaxInterval. When and if OnlineCheckFailuresThreshold
is met, the service and manager state will be demoted to "ready" and the service will have its
"Error" property set to "online-check-failed" while subsequent checks will continue. In the
interim, if available, another service may be promoted to the default service and online checks
will be initiated for it. When and if, for the demoted service, OnlineCheckSuccessesThreshold is
met, the service "Error" property will be cleared and the service state promoted to "online",
potentially causing it to become the default service again.
OnlineCheckIPv4URL=url,OnlineCheckIPv6URL=url
Urls (IPv4 and IPv6 respectively) used during the online status check. Please refer to the README
for more detailed information. Default values are http://ipv4.connman.net/online/status.html and
http://ipv6.connman.net/online/status.html respectively.
OnlineCheckConnectTimeout=secs[.milliseconds]
The time, in decimal seconds (for example, 12.3), to wait for a successful TCP connection to the
host associated with OnlineCheckIPv4URL or OnlineCheckIPv6URL (see above). Connections that take
longer than OnlineCheckConnectTimeout will be aborted. The default value is zero ('0') which
indicates that no explicit connection timeout will be used, leaving the timeout to the underlying
operating system and network stack.
OnlineCheckInitialInterval=interval,OnlineCheckMaxInterval=interval
Range of intervals between two online check requests. Please refer to the README for more
detailed information. Default values are 1 and 12 respectively.
OnlineCheckIntervalStyle=fibonacci | geometric
The style or mathematical series function used to compute the actual time, in seconds, between two
"ready" to "online" HTTP-based Internet reachability checks. The value of which may be either
"geometric" or "fibonacci" with a default value of "geometric".
The "geometric" style or function simply takes the square of the online check interval (see
OnlineCheckInitialInterval and OnlineCheckMaxInterval above). For example, at a check interval of
6, the time, in seconds, is 36 (6^2) seconds.
The "fibonacci" style or function takes the value of the Fibonacci sequence at the online check
interval. For example, at a check interval of 6, the time, in seconds, is 8 seconds.
The "fibonacci" series and style is more aggressive in check rate up to 12 steps (its equivalence
point with "geometric" at 144 seconds) than "geometric" but backs off far more aggressively past
that point reaching an hour at interval 19 which "geometric" does not reach until interval 60.
EnableOnlineToReadyTransition=true | false
In addition to EnableOnlineCheck setting, enable or disable use of HTTP GET to detect the loss of
end-to-end connectivity. If this setting is false, when the default service transitions to ONLINE
state, the HTTP GET request is no more called until next cycle, initiated by a transition of the
default service to DISCONNECT state. If this setting is true, the HTTP GET request keeps beeing
called to guarantee that end-to-end connectivity is still successful. If not, the default service
will transition to READY state, enabling another service to become the default one, in
replacement. Default value is false.
NOTE: EnableOnlineToReadyTransition is deprecated; please use OnlineCheckMode with a mode of
either continuous or none.
OnlineCheckFailuresThreshold=failures
When OnlineCheckMode is "continuous", this is the number of failed back-to-back "ready" to
"online" HTTP-based Internet reachability checks that will be allowed before marking a service as
"failed" from a reachability perspective, sorting it at a lower priority than other services not
so marked.
Lower values may result in higher-frequency network service cycling while higher values may result
in a longer period of time before failing from a non-Internet reachable service to one that might
be.
See OnlineCheckIntervalStyle, OnlineCheckInitialInterval, and OnlineCheckMaxInterval for other
values that influence network service failure/recovery transition time. The default value is 6.
OnlineCheckSuccessesThreshold=successes
When OnlineCheckMode is "continuous", this is the number of successful back-to-back "ready" to
"online" HTTP-based Internet reachability checks that must be met before clearing a service as
"failed" from a reachability perspective and allowing it to transition to the "online" state
again, allowing it to sort back to a higher priority relative to other network services.
Lower values may result in higher-frequency network service cycling while higher values may result
in a longer period of time before transitioning back to more a preferred, Internet reachable
network service.
See OnlineCheckIntervalStyle, OnlineCheckInitialInterval, and OnlineCheckMaxInterval for other
values that influence network service failure/recovery transition time.
The default value is 6.
AutoConnectRoamingServices=true | false
Automatically connect roaming services. This is not recommended unless you know you won't have any
billing problem. Default value is false.
AddressConflictDetection=true | false
Enable or disable the implementation of IPv4 address conflict detection according to RFC5227.
ConnMan will send probe ARP packets to see if an IPv4 address is already in use before assigning
the address to an interface. If an address conflict occurs for a statically configured address,
an IPv4LL address will be chosen instead (according to RFC3927). If an address conflict occurs for
an address offered via DHCP, ConnMan send a DHCP DECLINE once and for the second conflict resort
to finding an IPv4LL address. Default value is false.
Localtime=string
Path to localtime file. Defaults to /etc/localtime.
RegdomFollowsTimezone=true | false
Enable regdomain to be changed along timezone changes. With this option set to true each time the
timezone changes the first present ISO3166 country code is being read from
/usr/share/zoneinfo/zone1970.tab and set as regdom value. Default value is false.
ResolvConf=string
Path to resolv.conf file. If the file does not exist, but intermediate directories exist, it will
be created. If this option is not set, it tries to write into /run/connman/resolv.conf and
fallbacks to /etc/resolv.conf if it fails (/run/connman does not exist or is not writeable). If
you do not want to update resolv.conf, you can set /dev/null.
EXAMPLE
The following example configuration disables hostname updates and enables ethernet tethering.
[General]
AllowHostnameUpdates = false
AllowDomainnameUpdates = false
TetheringTechnologies = ethernet,wifi,bluetooth,gadget
SEE ALSO
connman(8)
2015-10-15 connman.conf(5)