Hi. I'm developing a special kind of scripting language which many might find useful: http://code.google.com/p/badvpn/wiki/NCD It was (originally) designed for programming dynamic configuration of network interfaces, iptables etc. For example, there are commands that observe the presence and link status of network interfaces. Many commands are reversible, which makes it very easy to do cleanup automatically and implicitly, like removing IP addresses or routes when the link goes down on an interface. The major advantage of this language compared to existing systems like NetworkManager and wicd is that it's extremely hackable; you can fine tune almost any part of the process. For example, this simple script will create a network bridge, ensure that interfaces eth0 and eth1 are in the bridge whenever they exist (consider hotplugging USB interfaces), and only after eth0 (!) is up and running will it obtain an IP address on br0 (!) using DHCP (since we know DHCP server is on eth0 not eth1). process bridge { # Choose name of bridge. var("br6") bridge_dev; # Create the bridge (and destroy it on deinit). run({"/sbin/brctl", "addbr", bridge_dev}, {"/sbin/brctl", "delbr", bridge_dev}); # Set bridge up. net.up(bridge_dev); # Wake up ports. provide("BRIDGE"); # Wait for port eth0 where we expect to have the DHCP server. depend("BRIDGE-link"); # Obtain IP address. net.ipv4.dhcp(bridge_dev) dhcp; # Sanity check IP address. ip_in_network(dhcp.addr, "127.0.0.0", "8") test_local; ifnot(test_local); # Assign IP address (and remove it when anything goes wrong, # e.g. lease times out, eth0 disappears or loses link...). net.ipv4.addr(bridge_dev, dhcp.addr, dhcp.prefix); println("Got address: ", dhcp.addr, "/", dhcp.prefix); rprintln("Lost address"); } process bridge_port_eth0 { depend("BRIDGE") br; # Choose name of device. var("eth0") dev; # Wait for device to start existing (and trigger deinit # when it stops existing). net.backend.waitdevice(dev); # Add it to the bridge (and remove it when it stops # existing or we're quitting). run({"/sbin/brctl", "addif", br.bridge_dev, dev}, {"/sbin/brctl", "delif", br.bridge_dev, dev}); # Set device up. net.up(dev); # Wait for link. net.backend.waitlink(dev); # Wake up bridge process so it can start DHCP. provide("BRIDGE-link"); } # other ports: same as above, just no need to wait for link process bridge_port_eth1 { depend("BRIDGE") br; var("eth1") dev; net.backend.waitdevice(dev); run({"/sbin/brctl", "addif", br.bridge_dev, dev}, {"/sbin/brctl", "delif", br.bridge_dev, dev}); net.up(dev); } Note that nothing is ever leaked here. When the NCD interpreter receives SIGTERM, it automatically cleans up everything (removes IP addresses, destroys bridge...). The language is suitable for much more than network configs. For instance, it allows receiving input/evdev events from a single device with only a few lines of code: process main { sys.evdev("/dev/input/by-id/usb-BTC_USB_Multimedia_Keyboard-event-kbd") evdev; println("Event: ", evdev.type, " ", evdev.value, " ", evdev.code); val_equal(evdev.code, "KEY_ENTER") is_enter; If (is_enter) { println("You pressed enter!"); }; evdev->nextevent(); } With some more code it's possible to automatically listen on all event devices as they come and go. I think it would also make a great base to build an init system upon (implement init process in NCD language). I've toyed a little with this and got something very simple working, see http://code.google.com/p/ncdinit/ . Best regards, Ambroz Bizjak -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-admin" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html