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1120 of 44 results
765.
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Located in src/libnmc-setting/nm-meta-setting-desc.c:8312
864.
If TRUE, indicates that the network is a non-broadcasting network that hides its SSID. This works both in infrastructure and AP mode. In infrastructure mode, various workarounds are used for a more reliable discovery of hidden networks, such as probe-scanning the SSID. However, these workarounds expose inherent insecurities with hidden SSID networks, and thus hidden SSID networks should be used with caution. In AP mode, the created network does not broadcast its SSID. Note that marking the network as hidden may be a privacy issue for you (in infrastructure mode) or client stations (in AP mode), as the explicit probe-scans are distinctly recognizable on the air.
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Located in src/libnmc-setting/settings-docs.h.in:405
879.
Key management used for the connection. One of "none" (WEP), "ieee8021x" (Dynamic WEP), "wpa-none" (Ad-Hoc WPA-PSK), "wpa-psk" (infrastructure WPA-PSK), "sae" (SAE) or "wpa-eap" (WPA-Enterprise). This property must be set for any Wi-Fi connection that uses security.
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Located in ../clients/common/settings-docs.h.in:27
886.
Pre-Shared-Key for WPA networks. For WPA-PSK, it's either an ASCII passphrase of 8 to 63 characters that is (as specified in the 802.11i standard) hashed to derive the actual key, or the key in form of 64 hexadecimal character. The WPA3-Personal networks use a passphrase of any length for SAE authentication.
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Located in src/libnmc-setting/settings-docs.h.in:427
995.
This represents the identity of the connection used for various purposes. It allows to configure multiple profiles to share the identity. Also, the stable-id can contain placeholders that are substituted dynamically and deterministically depending on the context. The stable-id is used for generating IPv6 stable private addresses with ipv6.addr-gen-mode=stable-privacy. It is also used to seed the generated cloned MAC address for ethernet.cloned-mac-address=stable and wifi.cloned-mac-address=stable. It is also used as DHCP client identifier with ipv4.dhcp-client-id=stable and to derive the DHCP DUID with ipv6.dhcp-duid=stable-[llt,ll,uuid]. Note that depending on the context where it is used, other parameters are also seeded into the generation algorithm. For example, a per-host key is commonly also included, so that different systems end up generating different IDs. Or with ipv6.addr-gen-mode=stable-privacy, also the device's name is included, so that different interfaces yield different addresses. The '$' character is treated special to perform dynamic substitutions at runtime. Currently supported are "${CONNECTION}", "${DEVICE}", "${MAC}", "${BOOT}", "${RANDOM}". These effectively create unique IDs per-connection, per-device, per-boot, or every time. Note that "${DEVICE}" corresponds to the interface name of the device and "${MAC}" is the permanent MAC address of the device. Any unrecognized patterns following '$' are treated verbatim, however are reserved for future use. You are thus advised to avoid '$' or escape it as "$$". For example, set it to "${CONNECTION}-${BOOT}-${DEVICE}" to create a unique id for this connection that changes with every reboot and differs depending on the interface where the profile activates. If the value is unset, a global connection default is consulted. If the value is still unset, the default is similar to "${CONNECTION}" and uses a unique, fixed ID for the connection.
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Located in ../clients/common/settings-docs.h.in:152
1122.
The total number of virtual functions to create. Note that when the sriov setting is present NetworkManager enforces the number of virtual functions on the interface also when it is zero. To prevent any changes to SR-IOV parameters don't add a sriov setting to the connection.
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Located in ../clients/common/settings-docs.h.in:313
1183.
The Wi-Fi Display (WFD) Information Elements (IEs) to set. Wi-Fi Display requires a protocol specific information element to be set in certain Wi-Fi frames. These can be specified here for the purpose of establishing a connection. This setting is only useful when implementing a Wi-Fi Display client.
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Located in src/libnmc-setting/settings-docs.h.in:372
1187.
The use of fwmark is optional and is by default off. Setting it to 0 disables it. Otherwise it is a 32-bit fwmark for outgoing packets.
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Located in ../clients/common/settings-docs.h.in:365
1188.
The listen-port. If listen-port is not specified, the port will be chosen randomly when the interface comes up.
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Located in src/libnmc-setting/settings-docs.h.in:394
1190.
Whether to automatically add routes for the AllowedIPs ranges of the peers. If TRUE (the default), NetworkManager will automatically add routes in the routing tables according to ipv4.route-table and ipv6.route-table. If FALSE, no such routes are added automatically. In this case, the user may want to configure static routes in ipv4.routes and ipv6.routes, respectively.
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Located in ../clients/common/settings-docs.h.in:384
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Contributors to this translation: Carbo Kuo, Chao-Hsiung Liao, Copied by Zanata, Elmaz Yu, Hsiu-Ming Chang, Jouston Huang, Keng-Yu Lin, Po-Hsu Lin, Roy Chan, Terry Chuang, Walter Cheuk, akong, samuel-hk.