| .\" connman(8) manual page |
| .\" |
| .\" Copyright (C) 2012 Intel Corporation |
| .\" |
| .TH CONNMAN "8" "21 August 2012" |
| .SH NAME |
| ConnMan \- network management daemon |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .B connmand [\-\-version] | [\-\-help] |
| .PP |
| .B connmand [\-\-config=<filename>] [\-\-debug=<file1>:<file2>:...] [\-\-device=<interface1>,<interface2>,...] [\-\-nodevice=<interface1>,<interface2>,..] [\-\-wifi=<driver1>,<driver2>,...] [\-\-plugin=<plugin1>,<plugin2>,...] [\-\-noplugin=<plugin1>,<plugin2>,...] [\-\-nodaemon] [\-\-nodnsproxy] |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| The \fIConnMan\fP provides a daemon for managing internet connections |
| within devices running the Linux operating system. The Connection Manager is |
| designed to be slim and to use as few resources as possible. |
| It is a fully modular system that can be extended, through plug-ins, |
| to support all kinds of wired or wireless technologies. |
| Also, configuration methods, like DHCP and domain name resolving, |
| are implemented using plug-ins. |
| The plug-in approach allows for easy adaption and modification for various |
| use cases. |
| .P |
| .SH OPTIONS |
| The following options are supported: |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-version" |
| Print the ConnMan software version and exit. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-help" |
| Print ConnMan's available options and exit. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-config=<filename>" |
| Specify configuration file to set up various settings for ConnMan. If not |
| specified, the default value of '<SYSCONFDIR>/connman/main.conf' |
| is used; where <SYSCONFDIR> is dependent on your distribution (usually |
| it's /etc). See \fBconnman.conf\fP(5) for more information on configuration |
| file. The use of config file is optional and sane default values |
| are used if config file is missing. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-debug=<file1>:<file2>:..." |
| Sets how much information ConnMan sends to the log destination (usually |
| syslog's "daemon" facility). If the file options are omitted, then debugging |
| information from all the source files are printed. If file options are |
| present, then only debug prints from that source file are printed. |
| Example: --debug=src/service.c:plugins/wifi.c |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-device=<interface1>,<interface2>,..." |
| Only manage these network interfaces. By default all network interfaces |
| are managed. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-nodevice=<interface1>,<interface2>,..." |
| Never manage these network interfaces. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-plugin=<plugin1>,<plugin2>,..." |
| Load these plugins only. The option can be a pattern containing |
| "*" and "?" characters. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-noplugin=<plugin1>,<plugin2>,..." |
| Never load these plugins. The option can be a pattern containing |
| "*" and "?" characters. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-wifi=<driver1>,<driver2>,..." |
| Wifi driver that WiFi/Supplicant should use. If omitted, then the value |
| of "nl80211,wext" is used by default. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-nodaemon" |
| Do not daemonize. This is useful for debugging, and directs log output to |
| the controlling terminal in addition to syslog. |
| .TP |
| .I "\-\-nodnsproxy" |
| Do not act as a DNS proxy. By default ConnMan will direct all DNS traffic |
| to itself by setting nameserver to 127.0.0.1 in \fBresolv.conf\fP(5) file. |
| If this is not desired and you want that all programs call directly some |
| DNS server, then you can use the --nodnsproxy option. |
| If this option is used, then ConnMan is not able to cache the DNS queries |
| because the DNS traffic is not going through ConnMan and that can cause |
| some extra network traffic. |
| .SH SEE ALSO |
| .BR connman.conf (5). |