Rick Stevens wrote:
On Tue, 2007-11-13 at 11:37 -0800, Mike Wright wrote:
Frank Cox wrote:
On Tue, 13 Nov 2007 10:59:55 -0800
Mike Wright <mike.wright@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Based on that I'd have to say BOOTPROTO=none is correct.
I did a scratch install of F8 on this computer and told it to use a static
address when it asked during the installation.
I just checked and /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 contains
"BOOTPROTO=static".
I didn't put that there myself so the installer must have done it that way.
Hi Frank,
Please prove me wrong but I know of no protocol known as static.
In my original post I did say I saw it misused frequently and you have
just pointed out one more place.
The only reason that the network scripts are NOT breaking is because
they test for the presence of "dhcp" and "bootp" and if those are not
found "none" is assumed.
Sorta true. "dhcp" or "bootp" indicates that dynamic configuration is
to be done. Anything OTHER than those two indicate a static
configuration. By convention, the installer and system-config-network
set "BOOTPROTO=static". No, it's not documented anywhere. However,
when you think about it, "static" is pretty damned descriptive as to
what it is you want done.
Hi Rick,
At the risk of sounding pedantic:
Descriptive? Absolutely. Protocol? No way. Undocumented? It is
documented and it is documented as "none".
I feel that if we are going to document things it would behoove us to
follow the docs. If the docs are in error they should be corrected.
The basic user is going to use the documentation. Parsing bash scripts
shouldn't be expected of them.
Mike :m)
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