Provided as-is, currently not actively maintained.
OctoPrint is eating up too much of my time and I don't find myself at liberty to actively maintain this project for the foreseeable future. If it works for you, great. If it doesn't, sorry, I can't look into it.
netconnectd is a small daemon that ensures connectivity for single-PCB devices such as the Raspberry Pi where you don't always have the means to setup your network interfaces by hand.
It monitors your current link status by checking if there are any other systems reachable and if not fires up an access point (via hostapd and dnsmasq). Additionally it allows control and configuration via a unix domain socket and a command line client/JSON based command protocol that allows listing available wifi cells and configuring a wifi network to use instead of the AP in the future.
It is intended to be used as part of a connectivity solution, acting as the backend to a frontend e.g. in a web application running on the device.
netconnectd has been written to work with Debian based Linux distributions such as Raspbian or Ubuntu and is provided under terms of the AGPLv3 license.
The reason for writing a dedicated service to do that instead of just integrating that kind of functionality directly in the client software is simply that I did want a solution which allowed configuration of wifi networks and starting/stoping of access point mode through a piece of client software without the need for the client software to need to run with superuser privileges (or a myriad of sudo rights having to be built up all around it).
Of course, there already exist such solutions, e.g. NetworkManager and wicd, which allow configuration of network connectivity via inter process communication. There are four problems with the existing solutions though: They use DBUS for the inter process communication (which is rather targeted at desktop applications, not at headless environments, and also brings a certain overhead to the table), they focus on the desktop environment, they are tightly integrated with the existing system and do not offer much flexibility regarding specific needs of client applications in regards to special configuration options and - the biggest of the issues - don't support configuration of access point mode (at least not out of the box and without jumping through big hoops).
Therefore netconnectd was designed based on the following requirements:
- Offer a very lightweight means of inter process communication (JSON messages via a Unix Domain Socket in that case)
- Focus on headless environments (no UI)
- Be as configurable in regards to used tooling as possible (by extensive configuration options via both a config file as well as during startup via command line arguments overriding anything else)
- Be able to fire up an access point mode (via a combination of hostapd, dnsmasq as DHCP server and optionally also a bunch of iptable entries)
Install the hostapd, dnsmasq, logrotate and rfkill packages:
sudo apt-get install hostapd dnsmasq logrotate rfkill
Note for people updating: Netconnectd now depends on the rfkill
tool to be installed on the target system as
well, the above package installation instructions have since been updated to reflect this.
We don't want neither hostapd
nor dnsmasq
to automatically startup, so make sure their automatic start on boot is
disabled:
sudo update-rc.d -f hostapd remove
sudo update-rc.d -f dnsmasq remove
You can verify that this worked by checking that there are no files left in /etc/rc*.d
referencing those two services,
so the following to commands should return 0
:
ls /etc/rc*.d | grep hostapd | wc -l
ls /etc/rc*.d | grep dnsmasq | wc -l
If you are running NetworkManager (default for Ubuntu or other desktop linux distributions, usually not the case for
Raspbian), make sure to disable its own dnsmasq
by editing /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf
and commenting
out the line that says dns=dnsmasq
, it should look something like this afterwards (note the #
in front of the
dns
line):
[main]
plugins=ifupdown,keyfile,ofono
#dns=dnsmasq
no-auto-default=00:22:68:1F:83:AF,
[ifupdown]
managed=false
You'll also need to modify /etc/dhcp/dhclient.conf
to include a timeout setting, e.g.
timeout 60;
Otherwise -- due to a limitation of how Debian/Ubuntu currently parses Wifi configurations in /etc/network/interfaces
-- netconnectd won't be able to detect when it couldn't connect to your configured local wifi and will never start the
access point mode. The value above will mean that it will take a maximum of 60sec before netconnectd will be notified
by the system that the connection was unsuccessful -- you might want to lower that value even more but keep in mind that
your wifi's DHCP server has to respond within that timeout for the connection to be considered successful.
Before you continue make absolutely sure that hostapd works with your wifi card/dongle! To test, create a file
/tmp/hostapd.conf
with the following contents:
interface=wlan0
driver=nl80211
ssid=TestAP
channel=3
wpa=3
wpa_passphrase=MySuperSecretPassphrase
wpa_key_mgmt=WPA-PSK
wpa_pairwise=TKIP CCMP
rsn_pairwise=CCMP
Then run
sudo hostapd -dd /tmp/hostapd.conf
This should not show any errors but start up a new access point named "TestAP" and with passphrase "MySuperSecretPassphrase", verify that with a different wifi enabled device (e.g. mobile phone).
If you run into errors in this step, solve them first, e.g. by googling your wifi dongle plus "hostapd". You might need
a custom version of hostapd (e.g. for the Edimax EW-7811Un or other RTL8188 based cards)
or a custom driver. If you change anything related to hostapd
during getting this to work, verify again afterwards
that the automatic startup of hostapd
is still disabled and if not, disable it again (see above for infos on how
to do that).
It's finally time to install netconnectd
:
cd
git clone https://github.com/foosel/netconnectd
cd netconnectd
sudo python setup.py install
sudo python setup.py install_extras
sudo update-rc.d netconnectd defaults 98
Modify /etc/netconnectd.yaml
as necessary:
- Change the passphrase/psk for your access point
- If necessary change the interface names of your wifi and wired network interfaces
- If your machine is not running NetworkManager, set
wifi > free
tofalse
- if you don't want to reset the wifi interface in case of any detected errors on the driver level, set
wifi > kill
tofalse
Last, start netconnectd:
sudo service netconnectd start
Verify that the logfile looks ok-ish:
less /var/log/netconnectd.log
and that it's indeed running (error handling of the start up script still needs to be improved):
netconnectcli status
Congratulations, netconnectd
is now running and should detect when you don't have any connection available, starting the AP mode to change that.
You can control the daemon via netconnectcli
:
netconnectcli status
displays the current status (which interfaces are connected, is the AP running, etc)netconnectcli start_ap
manually starts the APnetconnectcli stop_ap
manually stops the APnetconnectcli list_wifi
shows the wifi cells currently in rangenetconnectcli configure_wifi <ssid> <psk>
configures the wifi connection (<ssid>
= the wifi's SSID,<psk>
= the wifi's passphrase)netconnectcli select_wifi
manually brings up the wifi configuration
You can always get help with netconnectcli --help
or netconnectcli <command> --help
for specific commands.