# This file contains some examples of using NCD, the Network Configuration Daemon.
#
# A short introduction to NCD follows.
#
# NCD is a general-purpose system configuration system, operated with a unique programming language.
# The configuration consists of one or more so-called processes that can be considered executing in
# parallel. Further, each process consists of one or more statements, representing the individual
# actions. Statements are implemented as modules built into NCD.
#
# Inside a process, statements can be considered "executed" one after another. That is, when NCD
# starts up, it initializes the first statement, putting it in the DOWN state. When the statement
# reports having transitioned into the UP state, it initializes the next statement in the DOWN state,
# and so on.
#
# However, execution can go in the other direction too. A statement in the UP state can, at any time,
# report having transitioned into the DOWN state. At this point, any statements after that one will
# automatically be de-initialized. The de-initiazation is done from the bottom up. First the last
# initialized statement after the problematic statement is requested to terminate and enters the
# DYING state. After it terminates, its preceding statement enters the DYING state, and so on, until
# all statements following the problematic statement have been de-initiazed.
#
# The backward-execution is the key feature of NCD, and is particularly well suited for programming
# system configurations. Read on to see why.
#
# Statements in NCD can be divided into two categories:
# - Statements that configure something. These statements transition into the UP state "immediately".
# On de-initialization, such statements perform the reverse operation of what they did when initialized.
# Imaginary example: a statement that turn a light on intialization, and turns if off on de-initialization.
# - Statements that wait for something. These statements may remain in the DOWN state indefinitely.
# They enter the UP state when the waited-for condition is satisfied, and also go back into the DOWN
# state when it is no longer satisfied.
# Imaginary example: a statement that is UP when a switch is turned on, and DOWN when it is turned off.
#
# Using the two example statements, we can constuct a process that controls the light based on the switch:
# (these are not really implemented in NCD :)
#
# process light {
# wait_switch();
# turn_light();
# }
#
# When the switch is turned on, wait_switch() will transition to UP, initializing turn_light(), turning the
# light on. When the switch is turned off, wait_switch() will transition to DOWN, causing the de-initialization
# of turn_light(), turning the light off.
# We can add another turn_light() at the end to make the switch control two lights.
#
# A more complex example: We have a christmas three with lights on it. There are multiple "regular" lights,
# controlled with switches, and a special "top" light. The regular lights take a long time to turn on, and
# each takes a different, unpredictable time. We want the top light to be turned on if and only if all the regular
# lights are completely on.
#
# This problem can easily be solved using dependencies. NCD has built-in support for dependencies, provided
# in the form of provide() and depend() statements. A depend() statement is DOWN when its corresponding
# provide() statement is not initialized, and UP when it is. When a provide() is requested to de-initialize, it
# transitions the depend() statements back into the DOWN state, and, before actually dying, waits for any
# statements following them to de-initialize.
#
# The christmas three problem can then be programmed as follows:
#
# process light1 {
# wait_switch1();
# turn_light1();
# provide("L1");
# }
#
# process light2 {
# wait_switch2();
# turn_light2();
# provide("L2");
# }
#
# process top_light {
# depend("L1");
# depend("L2");
# turn_top_light();
# }
#
# Follow some real examples of network configuration using NCD.
# For a list of implemented statements and their descriptions, take a look at the BadVPN source code, in
# the ncd/modules/ folder.
#
#
# Network card using DHCP.
#
process lan {
# Make the interface name a variable so we can refer to it.
# The NCD language has no notion of assigning a variable. Instead variables are
# provided by statements preceding the statement where they are used.
# The built-in var() statement can be used to make an alias.
var("eth0") dev;
# Wait for the network card to appear, set it up and wait for the cable to be
# plugged it.
net.backend.waitdevice(dev);
net.up(dev);
net.backend.waitlink(dev);
# Start DHCP.
net.ipv4.dhcp(dev) dhcp;
# DHCP has obtained an address.
# Because net.ipv4.dhcp does no checks of the IP address, as a safety measure, do not proceed
# if the address is local.
ip_in_network(dhcp.addr, "127.0.0.0", "8") test_local;
ifnot(test_local);
# Assign the obtained address to the interface.
net.ipv4.addr(dev, dhcp.addr, dhcp.prefix);
# Add a default route.
# <dest> <dest_prefix> <gateway/"none"> <metric> <device>
net.ipv4.route("0.0.0.0", "0", dhcp.gateway, "20", dev);
# Add DNS servers, as provided by DHCP.
# "20" is the priority of the servers. When applying DNS servers, NCD collects the servers
# from all active net.dns() statements, sorts them by priority ascending (stable), and writes
# them to /etc/resolv.conf, overwriting anything that was previously there.
net.dns(dhcp.dns_servers, "20");
}
#
# Network card with static configuration.
#
process lan2 {
# Make the interface name a variable so we can refer to it.
var("eth1") dev;
# Wait for the network card to appear, set it up and wait for the cable to be
# plugged it.
net.backend.waitdevice(dev);
net.up(dev);
net.backend.waitlink(dev);
# Assign an IP address.
# "24" is prefix length, i.e. subnet mask 255.255.255.0
net.ipv4.addr(dev, "192.168.62.3", "24");
# Add a default route.
net.ipv4.route("0.0.0.0", "0", "192.168.62.3", "20", dev);
# Build a list of DNS servers.
# The NCD language does not support "expressions" - statement arguments must be
# constant strings or variables referring to preceding statements.
# A list can be constructed using the built-in list() statement.
list("192.168.62.5", "192.168.62.6") dns_servers;
# Add the DNS servers.
net.dns(dns_servers, "20");
}
#
# Wireless network interface using wpa_supplicant.
#
process WLAN {
# Set device.
var("wlan0") dev;
# Wait for device and rfkill switch.
net.backend.waitdevice(dev);
net.backend.rfkill("wlan", dev);
# Start wpa_supplicant on this interface, using configuration in /etc/wpa_supplicant/all.conf .
list() args;
net.backend.wpa_supplicant(dev, "/etc/wpa_supplicant/all.conf", "/usr/sbin/wpa_supplicant", args) sup;
# wpa_supplicant tells us what network we connected to. Look below for how this can be used to
# have different configurations, "BadVPN, but configured differently based on what network we're in".
println("connected to wireless network: bssid=", sup.bssid, " ssid=", sup.ssid);
# Wireless connection successful, here comes network config (DHCP/static/whatever) ...
}
#
# A BadVPN VPN interface for access to the virtual network (only).
#
process lan {
... (something like above) ...
# Alias our IP address for easy access from the "vpn" process (or, for a static address, alias
# it before assigning it, and assign it using the alias).
var(dhcp.addr) ipaddr;
# Allow VPN to start at this point.
# (and require it to stop before deconfiguring the interface if e.g. the cable is plugged out)
provide("LAN");
}
process vpn {
# Need the local interface to be working in order start VPN.
depend("LAN") landep;
# Choose the name of the network interface.
var("tap3") dev;
# Construct command line arguments for badvpn-client. Adapt according to your setup.
# "--tapdev" will be provided automatically.
# Alias the port number that the VPN process will bind to.
var("6000") port;
# Construct dynamic parts of command line options.
# The VPN client program needs to know some IP addresses in order to tell other peers where to connect to.
# Obtain this informations from variables in the "lan" process through the depend() statement.
# Construct the local address (addr + port).
concat(landep.ipaddr, ":", port) local_addr_arg;
# Construct the Internet address (assuming we are behind a NAT).
# Need to know the NAT's external address here. But we could queried it somehow.
# That is if we have preconfigured the NAT router to forward ports. But we could implement a statement
# that obtains the mappings dynamically with UPnP!
concat("1.2.3.4", ":", port) internet_addr_arg;
# Finally construct the complete arguments, using the above address arguments.
list(
"--logger", "syslog", "--syslog-ident", "badvpn",
"--server-addr", "badvpn.example.com:7000",
"--ssl", "--nssdb", "sql:/home/badvpn/nssdb", "--client-cert-name", "peer-someone",
"--transport-mode", "udp", "--encryption-mode", "blowfish", "--hash-mode", "md5", "--otp", "blowfish", "3000", "2000",
"--scope", "mylan", "--scope", "internet",
"--bind-addr", "0.0.0.0:6000", "--num-ports", "20",
"--ext-addr", local_addr_arg, "mylan",
"--ext-addr", internet_addr_arg, "internet"
) args;
# Start the BadVPN backend.
# "badvpn" is the user account which the VPN client will run as.
# If you use SSL, the NSS database must be accessible to this user.
net.backend.badvpn(dev, "badvpn", "/usr/bin/badvpn-client-26", args);
# Assign an IP address to the VPN interface.
# (we could easily use DHCP here!)
net.ipv4.addr(dev, "10.0.0.1", "24");
}
#
# BadVPN, but configured differently based on what network we're in.
# The network is identified based on the IP address we were assigned by DHCP.
# The different configuration provide specific arguents to badvpn-client.
#
process lan {
... (interface config stuff using DHCP, see above) ...
... (the 'ipaddr' variable holds the local IP address) ...
# Match the address to various known networks.
ip_in_network(ipaddr, "192.168.4.0", "24") is_lan1;
ip_in_network(ipaddr, "192.168.7.0", "24") is_lan2;
# Allow VPN to start at this point.
provide("LAN");
}
process vpn {
...
# Construct common arguments here ...
list( ... ) common_args;
# Choose appropriate configuration by waking up the configuration processes
# and waiting for one to complete.
provide("VPN_CONF_START");
depend("VPN_CONF_END") config;
# Concatenate common and configuration-specific arguments.
concatlist(common_args, config.args) args;
...
}
process vpn_config_lan1 {
depend("VPN_CONF_START") dep;
# Proceed only if we're in lan1.
if(dep.landep.is_lan1);
list(
...
) args;
provide("VPN_CONF_END");
}
process vpn_config_lan2 {
depend("VPN_CONF_START") dep;
# Proceed only if we're in lan2.
if(dep.landep.is_lan2);
list(
...
) args;
provide("VPN_CONF_END");
}
process vpn_config_inet {
depend("VPN_CONF_START") dep;
# Proceed only if we're not in any known network.
ifnot(dep.landep.is_lan1);
ifnot(dep.landep.is_lan2);
list(
...
) args;
provide("VPN_CONF_END");
}
#
# Two wired network interfaces (eth0, eth1), both of which may be used for Internet access.
# When both are working, give priority to eth1 (e.g. if eth0 is up, but later eth1 also comes
# up, the configuration will be changed to use eth1 for Internet access).
#
process eth0 {
# Set device.
var("eth0") dev;
# Wait for device.
net.backend.waitdevice(dev);
net.up(dev);
net.backend.waitlink(dev);
# DHCP configuration.
net.ipv4.dhcp(dev) dhcp;
ip_in_network(dhcp.addr, "127.0.0.0", "8") test_local;
ifnot(test_local);
var(dhcp.addr) addr;
var(dhcp.prefix) addr_prefix;
var(dhcp.gateway) gateway;
var(dhcp.dns_servers) dns_servers;
# Assign IP address.
net.ipv4.addr(dev, addr, addr_prefix);
# Go on configuring the network.
multiprovide("NET-eth0");
}
process eth1 {
# Set device.
var("eth1") dev;
# Wait for device.
net.backend.waitdevice(dev);
net.up(dev);
net.backend.waitlink(dev);
# Static configuration.
var("192.168.111.116") addr;
var("24") addr_prefix;
var("192.168.111.1") gateway;
list("192.168.111.14", "193.2.1.66") dns_servers;
# Assign IP address.
net.ipv4.addr(dev, addr, addr_prefix);
# Go on configuring the network.
multiprovide("NET-eth1");
}
process NETCONF {
# Wait for some network connection. Prefer eth1 by putting it in front of eth0.
list("NET-eth1", "NET-eth0") pnames;
multidepend(pnames) ifdep;
# Alias device values.
var(ifdep.dev) dev;
var(ifdep.addr) addr;
var(ifdep.addr_prefix) addr_prefix;
var(ifdep.gateway) gateway;
var(ifdep.dns_servers) dns_servers;
# Add default route.
net.ipv4.route("0.0.0.0", "0", gateway, "20", dev);
# Configure DNS servers.
net.dns(dns_servers, "20");
}