CONFIGD(8) | System Manager's Manual | CONFIGD(8) |
configd
— System
Configuration Daemon
configd |
[-bdv ] [-B
bundleID] [-V
bundleID] [-t
bundle-path] |
The configd
daemon is responsible for many
configuration aspects of the local system. configd
maintains data reflecting the desired and current state of the system,
provides notifications to applications when this data changes, and hosts a
number of configuration agents in the form of loadable bundles.
Each configuration agent is responsible for a well-defined aspect
of configuration management. The agents look to one or more input sources
(preferences, low-level kernel events, configd
notifications, etc) and, through a set of policy modules, interacts with the
system to establish the desired operational configuration.
Access to the data maintained by configd
is via the SystemConfiguration.framework SCDynamicStore APIs.
The command line options are as follows:
-b
-B
bundleID-d
configd
in the foreground without forking.
This is useful for debugging.-v
configd
into verbose mode. Displays debugging
information about bundles as they are being loaded.-V
bundleID-t
bundle-pathAt the present time, the majority of the configuration agents (or
bundles) hosted by configd
are used to establish and
maintain the network configuration. These agents include:
This bundle is responsible for monitoring kernel events and conveying changes to the network state (e.g. link status) to other configuration agents and interested applications.
This bundle provides a name to each of the system's network interfaces. The bundle queries the IOKit Registry for a list of network devices attached to the system and gives them BSD style names such as "en0".
This agent is responsible for establishing and maintaining IPv4 and IPv6 addresses on the system. These addresses may be manually specified in the network preferences or acquired using DHCP (or BOOTP), DHCPv6, and RTADV.
This agent is responsible for establishing and maintaining the primary network service, the default route, the active DNS configuration, and the active network proxies on the system.
This agent is responsible for establishing and maintaining the media type, media options, and MTU for ethernet interfaces.
This agent is responsible for conveying the network configuration preferences specified by the administrator to the various configuration agents (IPv4, IPv6, ...).
This agent is responsible for establishing and maintaining PPP connections on the system.
configd
bundlesLog messages generated by configd
and any
configuration agents will are sent to the system log daemon by
syslog(3). The syslog facility used is LOG_DAEMON. If the
-d
option is specified, log messages with written to
stdout (or stderr if the priority is greater than LOG_NOTICE).
configd
was designed to run without any
intervention but if you insist on sending a signal to the daemon then the
following are available:
The configd
daemon appeared in Mac OS X
Public Beta.
Unless started with the -d
option,
configd
will register with
launchd(8) such that the daemon will be restarted in the
event of a crash. This registration will be removed during
"graceful" shutdowns of the daemon.
This daemon and its current behavior may change without notice. Do not rely on its existence or its behavior. Consider it an unsupported command.
April 14, 2020 | Mac OS X |