If your network does not include a DHCP server or it is disabled (typically, these are built into most modern ADSL/cable modems or routers), you may need to configure your network settings manually.
Configuring your network manually
Getting ready
Before you start, you will need to determine the network settings for your network.
You will need to find out the following information from your router's settings or another computer connected to the network:
- IPv4 address: This address will need to be selected to be similar to other computers on the network (typically, the first three numbers should match, that is, 192.168.1.X if netmask is 255.255.255.0), but it should not already be used by another computer. However, avoid x.x.x.255 as the last address, since this is reserved as a broadcast address.
- Subnet mask: This number determines the range of addresses the computer will respond to (for a home network, it is typically 255.255.255.0, which allows up to 254 addresses). This is also sometimes referred to as the netmask.
- Default gateway address: This address is usually your router's IP address, through which the computers connect to the internet.
- DNS servers: The Domain Name Service (DNS) server converts names into IP addresses by looking them up. Usually, they will already be configured on your router, in which case you can use your router's address. Alternatively, your Internet Service Provider (ISP) may provide some addresses, or you can use Google's public DNS servers at the addresses 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. These are also called nameservers in some systems.
For Windows, you can obtain this information by connecting to the internet and running the following command:
ipconfig /all
Locate the active connection (usually called Local Area Connection 1 or similar if you are using a wired connection, or if you are using Wi-Fi, it is called a wireless network connection) and find the information required, as follows:
For Linux and macOS X, you can obtain the required information with the following command (note that it is ifconfig rather than ipconfig):
ifconfig
The DNS servers are called nameservers and are usually listed in the resolv.conf file. You can use the less command as follows to view its contents (press Q to quit when you have finished viewing it):
less /etc/resolv.conf
How to do it...
To set the network interface settings, edit /etc/network/interfaces using the
following code:
sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces
Now perform the following steps:
- We can add the details for our particular network, the IP address number we want to allocate to it, the netmask address of the network, and the gateway address, as follows:
iface eth0 inet static address 192.168.1.10 netmask 255.255.255.0 gateway 192.168.1.254
- Save and exit by pressing Ctrl + X, Y, and Enter.
- To set the name servers for DNS, edit /etc/resolv.conf using the following code:
sudo nano /etc/resolv.conf
- Add the addresses for your DNS servers as follows:
nameserver 8.8.8.8 nameserver 8.8.4.4
- Save and exit by pressing Ctrl + X, Y, and Enter.
There's more...
You can configure the network settings by editing cmdline.txt in the BOOT partition and adding settings to the startup command line with ip.
The ip option takes the following form:
ip=client-ip:nfsserver-ip:gw-ip:netmask:hostname:device:autoconf
- The client-ip option is the IP address you want to allocate to Raspberry Pi
- The gw-ip option will set the gateway server address if you need to set it manually
- The netmask option will directly set the netmask of the network
- The hostname option will allow you to change the default raspberrypi hostname
- The device option allows you to specify a default network device if more than one network device is present
- The autoconf option allows the automatic configuration to be switched on or off