On Sat, 2008-07-12 at 15:56 -0400, Michael H. Warfield wrote: > Hello, > > On Fri, 2008-07-11 at 15:34 -0400, Matthew Saltzman wrote: > > On Fri, 2008-07-11 at 09:48 -0700, Rick Stevens wrote: > > > Michael H. Warfield wrote: > > > > > > > > I have a longer rant that I'm strongly tempted to send. > > > > > > I'd wouldn't necessarily post your rant here, as most of us here agree > > > that NM is a bad idea gone wrong. > > > Speak for yourself (unless you have hard data to back up your > > assertion). > > Which assertion? That NM is a bad idea gone wrong or that most of us > agree on it? I think I have some hard data on the former but not the > later. The former is strictly an opinion, and you are welcome to it. The latter is an assertion of fact that I don't think you could back up. > > > > You should, rather, post your rant as > > > a nice big, fat bugzilla report on the NM and/or Gnome bugzillas. > > > Better would be a handful of focused, reproducible error reports, so > > that the problems can be fixed and the tool improved. Rants aren't > > really helpful as Bugzilla reports. They are, however, great ways to > > generate traffic on mailing lists. > > > > > > > It'd also be nice if there was a decent how-to on the various aspects of > > > the configuraton of wpa_supplicant (what the various "key_mgmt", > > > "pairwise" and other parameters mean and how to find out what to use, > > > etc.) so normal non-geeks can sort it out. As far as I can see, people > > > submit to NM nastiness because they can't sort those out themselves. > > > I agree with the need for more and better documentation for > > wpa_supplicant and for NM. But I mostly "submit" to NM because it > > mostly works for me. > > There in lies the real problem. I agree with you 100%. NM "mostly > works" for me as well. I just got back from a conference in Vancouver > where it managed the WiFi connectivity issues beautifully. The problem > isn't when it works. The problem is when it doesn't. And it doesn't > all to often. It's not most of the time, just a minority of the time, > but way too often when you have to deal with a diverse changing set of > environments (which is what I THOUGHT it was suppose to be designed for) > as I do. > > When and where it doesn't work, "the gods that be" can not help you > solve it. It's a closed box which doesn't allow for tinkering and > tuning and scripting to fix things. Yeah, it "mostly works", but the > times it doesn't are an unfixable abomination and a plague upon > civilization. When it doesn't, the only solution is to drive a stake > through its heart. > > "Mostly works" doesn't work, when you close your system and don't allow > people to tune it and you refuse to acknowledge the parameters, and > hooks, and scripts which the users have specified (and that does NOT > mean forcing the user only through your myopic gui dialogs) and used > successfully in the past. I won't presume to speak for the developers, but my belief is that what we have is a system that is (a) pretty useful in many circumstances--useful enough to deploy, even though it's (b) unfinished and (c) undergoing rapid changes in order to improve it, and is (d) poorly documented as a result of that instability. That happens often enough in Linux and open-source development to be pretty frustrating, but I don't ascribe malicious motives to the developers (most of the time). Meanwhile, I use it when it works, and I when it doesn't, I try to troubleshoot it and file bugs or turn it off and use the individual tools that it tries to tie together. And I try very hard to be patient... -- Matthew Saltzman Clemson University Math Sciences mjs AT clemson DOT edu http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list