ambrop7 411450e13b ncd: modules: net_ipv4_dhcp: expose server MAC address 14 年之前
..
examples 30af9719cb ncd: examples: remove volumekeys.ncd, add events.ncd which uses sys.watch_input() and also handles power button events 14 年之前
modules 411450e13b ncd: modules: net_ipv4_dhcp: expose server MAC address 14 年之前
BEventLock.c cb1485dcd3 rearrange source flow such that 'flow' does not depend on 'system' 14 年之前
BEventLock.h cb1485dcd3 rearrange source flow such that 'flow' does not depend on 'system' 14 年之前
CMakeLists.txt 87139ff54b ncd: modules: add alias 14 年之前
NCDConfig.c a849bca889 ncd: NCDConfig: rename NCDConfig_interfaces to NCDConfig_processes 14 年之前
NCDConfig.h a849bca889 ncd: NCDConfig: rename NCDConfig_interfaces to NCDConfig_processes 14 年之前
NCDConfigParser.c a849bca889 ncd: NCDConfig: rename NCDConfig_interfaces to NCDConfig_processes 14 年之前
NCDConfigParser.h a849bca889 ncd: NCDConfig: rename NCDConfig_interfaces to NCDConfig_processes 14 年之前
NCDConfigParser_parse.y a849bca889 ncd: NCDConfig: rename NCDConfig_interfaces to NCDConfig_processes 14 年之前
NCDConfigTokenizer.c 854c3c6d5d ncdconfig: move to ncd 14 年之前
NCDConfigTokenizer.h 854c3c6d5d ncdconfig: move to ncd 14 年之前
NCDIfConfig.c 9222a2ef20 Minor changes. NCDIfConfig: fix open_tuntap return value 14 年之前
NCDIfConfig.h 501ea0f98b ncd: Improve interface module interface. Support routes without a gateway. NCDIfConfig: add functions for creating and removing TUN/TAP devices. 15 年之前
NCDInterfaceMonitor.c cb1485dcd3 rearrange source flow such that 'flow' does not depend on 'system' 14 年之前
NCDInterfaceMonitor.h cb1485dcd3 rearrange source flow such that 'flow' does not depend on 'system' 14 年之前
NCDModule.c f2aea39226 ncd: add interface for providing special variables/objects in template processes 14 年之前
NCDModule.h 8013046c64 ncd: allow modules to have a "base type" to allow more powerful method definitions, such as recursive 14 年之前
NCDRfkillMonitor.c cb1485dcd3 rearrange source flow such that 'flow' does not depend on 'system' 14 年之前
NCDRfkillMonitor.h cb1485dcd3 rearrange source flow such that 'flow' does not depend on 'system' 14 年之前
NCDValue.c 4e2042e681 ncd: NCDValue: NCDValue_Compare: add assertions 14 年之前
NCDValue.h edfc9e6eff ncd: NCDValue: add NCDValue_Compare 14 年之前
README e3c7ceb3fc ncd: update README 14 年之前
include_linux_input.h 37020bce35 ncd: add sys.evdev module 15 年之前
ncd.c a849bca889 ncd: NCDConfig: rename NCDConfig_interfaces to NCDConfig_processes 14 年之前
ncd.h 1e408e6826 ncd: Fix NCDModule to signal module->NCD events directly instead of via jobs. Fixes possible 15 年之前
parse_linux_input.sh 37020bce35 ncd: add sys.evdev module 15 年之前

README

# 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.
#
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");
}