wsdd implements a Web Service Discovery host daemon. This enables (Samba) hosts, like your local NAS device, to be found by Web Service Discovery Clients like Windows.
It also implements the client side of the discovery protocol which allows to search for Windows machines and other devices implementing WSD. This mode of operation is called discovery mode.
Since NetBIOS discovery is not supported by Windows anymore, wsdd makes hosts to appear in Windows again using the Web Service Discovery method. This is beneficial for devices running Samba, like NAS or file sharing servers on your local network. The discovery mode searches for other WSD servers in the local subnet.
With Windows 10 version 1511, support for SMBv1 and thus NetBIOS device discovery was disabled by default. Depending on the actual edition, later versions of Windows starting from version 1709 ("Fall Creators Update") do not allow the installation of the SMBv1 client anymore. This causes hosts running Samba not to be listed in the Explorer's "Network (Neighborhood)" views. While there is no connectivity problem and Samba will still run fine, users might want to have their Samba hosts to be listed by Windows automatically.
You may ask: What about Samba itself, shouldn't this functionality be included in Samba!? Yes, maybe. However, using Samba as file sharing service is still possible even if the host running Samba is not listed in the Network Neighborhood. You can still connect using the host name (given that name resolution works) or IP address. So you can have network drives and use shared folders as well. In addition, there is a patch lurking around in the Samba bug tracker since 2015. So it may happen that this feature gets integrated into Samba at some time in the future.
wsdd requires Python 3.7 and later only. It runs on Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, MacOS and SunOS/Illumos. Other Unixes, such as NetBSD, might work as well but were not tested.
Although Samba is not strictly required by wsdd itself, it makes sense to run wsdd only on hosts with a running Samba daemon. Note that the OpenRC/Gentoo init script depends on the Samba service.
This section provides instructions how to install wsdd on different OS distributions. Sufficient privileges are assumed to be in effect, e.g. by being root or using sudo.
Install wsdd from the Extra repository.
wsdd is included in RedHat/CentOS' EPEL repository. After setting that up, you can install wsdd like on Fedora where it is sufficient to issue
dnf install wsdd
Wsdd is included in the official package repositories of Debian and Ubuntu (universe) since versions 12 (Bookworm) and 22.04 LTS (Jammy Jellyfish), respectively. This also applies to Linux Mint, starting from version 21 (Vanessa). Thus, it is sufficient to install it via
apt install wsdd
The wsdd port can be installed via
pkg install py39-wsdd
You can choose between two overlays: the GURU project and an author-maintained dedicated overlay which can be selected as follows
emerge eselect-repository
eselect repository enable guru
emerge --sync
After setting up one of them you can install wsdd with
emerge wsdd
No installation steps are required. Just place the wsdd.py file anywhere you
want to, rename it to wsdd, and run it from there. The init scripts/unit files
assume that wsdd is installed under /usr/bin/wsdd or /usr/local/bin/wsdd in
case of FreeBSD. There are no configuration files. No special privileges are
required to run wsdd, so it is advisable to run the service as an unprivileged,
possibly dedicated, user for the service.
The etc directory of the repo contains sample configuration files for
different init(1) systems, e.g. FreeBSD's rc.d, Gentoo's openrc, and systemd
which is used in most contemporary Linux distros. Those files may be used as
templates. They are likely to require adjustments to the actual
distribution/installation where they are to be used.
Traffic for the following ports, directions and addresses must be allowed.
239.255.255.250 for IPv4ff02::c for IPv6You should further restrict the traffic to the (link-)local subnet, e.g. by
using the fe80::/10 address space for IPv6. Please note that IGMP traffic
must be enabled in order to get IPv4 multicast traffic working.
For UFW and firewalld, application/service profiles can be found in the respective directories. Note that UFW profiles only allow to grant the traffic on specific UDP and TCP ports, but a restriction on the IP range (like link local for IPv6) or the multicast traffic is not possible.
By default wsdd runs in host mode and binds to all interfaces with only warnings and error messages enabled. In this configuration the host running wsdd is discovered with its configured hostname and belong to a default workgroup. The discovery mode, which allows to search for other WSD-compatible devices must be enabled explicitly. Both modes can be used simultaneously. See below for details.
-4, --ipv4only (see below)-6, --ipv6only
Restrict to the given address family. If both options are specified no addreses will be available and wsdd will exit.
-A, --no-autostart
Do not start networking activities automatically when the program is started.
The API interface (see man page) can be used to start and stop the
networking activities while the application is running.
-c DIRECTORY, --chroot DIRECTORY
Chroot into a separate directory to prevent access to other directories of
the system. This increases security in case of a vulnerability in wsdd.
Consider setting the user and group under which wssd is running by using
the -u option.
-H HOPLIMIT, --hoplimit HOPLIMIT
Set the hop limit for multicast packets. The default is 1 which should prevent packets from leaving the local network segment.
-i INTERFACE/ADDRESS, --interface INTERFACE/ADDRESS
Specify on which interfaces wsdd will be listening on. If no interfaces are specified, all interfaces are used. The loop-back interface is never used, even when it was explicitly specified. For interfaces with IPv6 addresses, only link-local addresses will be used for announcing the host on the network. This option can be provided multiple times in order to use more than one interface.
This option also accepts IP addresses that the service should bind to. For IPv6, only link local addresses are actually considered as noted above.
-l PATH/PORT, --listen PATH/PORT
Enable the API server on the with a Unix domain socket on the given PATH
or a local TCP socket bound to the given PORT. Refer to the man page for
details on the API.
--metadata-timeout TIMEOUT
Set the timeout for HTTP-based metadata exchange. Default is 2.0 seconds.
--source-port PORT
Set the source port for outgoing multicast messages, so that replies will
use this as the destination port.
This is useful for firewalls that do not detect incoming unicast replies
to a multicast as part of the flow, so the port needs to be fixed in order
to be allowed manually.
-s, --shortlog
Use a shorter logging format that only includes the level and message. This is useful in cases where the logging mechanism, like systemd on Linux, automatically prepend a date and process name plus ID to the log message.
-u USER[:GROUP], --user USER[:GROUP]
Change user (and group) when running before handling network packets.
Together with -c this option can be used to increase security if the
execution environment, like the init system, cannot ensure this in
another way.
-U UUID, --uuid UUID
The WSD specification requires a device to have a unique address that is
stable across reboots or changes in networks. In the context of the
standard, it is assumed that this is something like a serial number. Wsdd
attempts to read the machine ID from /etc/machine-id and /etc/hostid
(in that order) before potentially chrooting in another environment. If
reading the machine ID fails, wsdd falls back to a version 5 UUID with the
DNS namespace and the host name of the local machine as inputs. Thus, the
host name should be stable and not be modified, e.g. by DHCP. However, if
you want wsdd to use a specific UUID you can use this option.
-v, --verbose
Additively increase verbosity of the log output. A single occurrence of -v/--verbose sets the log level to INFO. More -v options set the log level to DEBUG.
-V, --version
Show the version number and exit.
In host mode, the device running wsdd can be discovered by Windows.
-d DOMAIN, --domain DOMAIN
Assume that the host running wsdd joined an ADS domain. This will make
wsdd report the host being a domain member. It disables workgroup
membership reporting. The (provided) hostname is automatically converted
to lower case. Use the -p option to change this behavior.
-n HOSTNAME, --hostname HOSTNAME
Override the host name wsdd uses during discovery. By default the machine's host name is used (look at hostname(1)). Only the host name part of a possible FQDN will be used in the default case.
-o, --no-server
Disable host operation mode which is enabled by default. The host will not be discovered by WSD clients when this flag is provided.
-p, --preserve-case
Preserve the hostname as it is. Without this option, the hostname is
converted as follows. For workgroup environments (see -w) the hostname
is made upper case by default. Vice versa it is made lower case for usage
in domains (see -d).
-t, --nohttp
Do not service http requests of the WSD protocol. This option is intended for debugging purposes where another process may handle the Get messages.
-w WORKGROUP, --workgroup WORKGROUP
By default wsdd reports the host is a member of a workgroup rather than a
domain (use the -d/--domain option to override this). With -w/--workgroup
the default workgroup name can be changed. The default work group name is
WORKGROUP. The (provided) hostname is automatically converted to upper
case. Use the -p option to change this behavior.
This mode allows to search for other WSD-compatible devices.
-D, --discovery
Enable discovery mode to search for other WSD hosts/servers. Found servers
are printed to stdout with INFO priority. The server interface (see -l
option) can be used for a programatic interface. Refer to the man page for
details of the API.
handle traffic on eth0 only, but only with IPv6 addresses
wsdd -i eth0 -6
or
wsdd --interface eth0 --ipv6only
set the Workgroup according to smb.conf and be verbose
SMB_GROUP=$(grep -i '^\s*workgroup\s*=' smb.conf | cut -f2 -d= | tr -d '[:blank:]')
wsdd -v -w $SMB_GROUP
(Read the source for more details)
For each specified (or all) network interfaces, except for the loopback, an UDP multicast socket for message reception, two UDP sockets for replying using unicast as well as sending multicast traffic, and a listening TCP socket are created. This is done for both the IPv4 and the IPv6 address family if not configured otherwise by the command line arguments (see above). Upon startup a Hello message is sent. When wsdd terminates due to a SIGTERM signal or keyboard interrupt, a graceful shutdown is performed by sending a Bye message. I/O multiplexing is used to handle network traffic of the different sockets within a single process.
wsdd does not implement any security feature, e.g. by using TLS for the http service. This is because wsdd's intended usage is within private, i.e. home, LANs. The Hello message contains the host's transport address, i.e. the IP address, which speeds up discovery (avoids Resolve message).
In order to increase the security, use the capabilities of the init system or
consider the -u and -c options to drop privileges and chroot.
Do not use wssd on interfaces that are affected by NAT. According to the
standard, the ResolveMatch messages emitted by wsdd contain the IP address
("transport address" in standard parlance) of the interface(s) the application
has been bound to. When such messages are retrieved by a client (Windows
hosts, e.g.) they are unlikely to be able to connect to the provided address
which has been subject to NAT. To avoid this issue, use the -i/--interface
option to bind wsdd to interfaces not affected by NAT.
If tunnel/bridge interfaces like those created by OpenVPN or Docker exist, they may interfere with wsdd if executed without providing an interface that it should bind to (so it binds to all). In such cases, the wsdd hosts appears after wsdd has been started but it disappears when an update of the Network view in Windows Explorer is forced, either by refreshing the view or by a reboot of the Windows machine. To solve this issue, the interface that is connected to the network on whi