# This is an example configuration file for ifupdown-ng, which allows # the system administrator to configure the behaviour of ifupdown-ng. # # The settings specified here are the defaults of ifupdown-ng. # allow_addon_scripts: # Enable support for /etc/if-X.d addon scripts. These are used for # compatibility with legacy setups, and may be disabled for performance # improvements in setups where only ifupdown-ng executors are used. # Valid values are 0 and 1, the default is 1. allow_addon_scripts = 1 # allow_any_iface_as_template: # Enable any interface to act as a template for another interface. # This is presently the default, but is deprecated. An admin may choose # to disable this setting in order to require inheritance from specified # templates. Valid values are 0 and 1, the default is 1. allow_any_iface_as_template = 1 # compat_create_interfaces: # Denotes where or not to create interfaces when compat_* settings are # active and it would be necessary to create an interface to be fully # compliant. This could happen when inheriting bridge VLAN settings to # an interface within a bridges bridge-ports setting but no interface # stanza is found. Valid values are 0 and 1, the default is 1. compat_create_interfaces = 1 # compat_ifupdown2_bridge_ports_inherit_vlans: # In ifupdown2 as well as the set on a bridge # interface will be inherited by all member ports if not set explicitly. # When set to 1 ifupdown-ng behaves the same way and will internally copy # both options from the bridge member ports if they are not set on the # member port. Valid values are 0 and 1, the default is 1. compat_ifupdown2_bridge_ports_inherit_vlans = 1 # implicit_template_conversion: # In some legacy configs, a template may be declared as an iface, and # ifupdown-ng automatically converts those declarations to a proper # template. If this setting is disabled, inheritance will continue to # work against non-template interfaces without converting them to a # template. Valid values are 0 and 1, the default is 1. implicit_template_conversion = 1 # use_hostname_for_dhcp: # Automatically learn the hostname property, used for DHCP configuration # by querying the system hostname using uname(2). This is basically # equivalent to `hostname $(hostname)` without having to specify any # configuration. Valid values are 0 and 1, the default is 1. use_hostname_for_dhcp = 1