Rick Stevens wrote:
On 08/16/2012 04:09 PM, fred smith uttered this comment:
On Thu, Aug 16, 2012 at 02:40:49PM -0700, Rick Stevens wrote:
On 08/16/2012 02:18 PM, Steven Stern issued this missive::
On 08/16/2012 03:57 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
On 08/16/2012 01:52 PM, Jack Craig issued this missive::
Donning flame retardant cloak, I have a question for the network
experienced...
After doing a non-fedora install of a like OS (but more community
centric;)
, I find the network stack falls over if a user login on the console
logs out!
anyone ever seen seen such a weirdness?
I am not sure where to look for this and welcome any clues...
If you're talking of a GUI login on the console (e.g. KDE, Gnome, etc.)
AND the user runs the NetworkManager applet, of course it'll go away as
the user who set up the network is no longer at the machine. NM will
shut the network down until the (or another) user logs in again at the
console.
Unless NetworkManager is told to allow all users to use the network
profile (i.e., make it a system-wide profile).
Still wouldn't function unless someone's logged in. Personally, I never
use NM except on a laptop that's going to roam. I use the old, crusty
network scripts for machines that stay put.
Rick, if that were the case then I wouldn't be able to ssh into my
eeepc from my desktop when no one is otherwise logged into the eeepc.
But I CAN do that...
Possible. As others have stated, NM apparently will work if you set a
global profile and I suppose I have that enabled on the one machine
(laptop) I have NM enabled on since I, too, can ssh to it even if I've
not logged into its console. That being said, for machines that "stay
put" (servers and the like) I tend to use the old-school scripts.
Hmmm, it seems you can have multiple "global" profiles. How does it
decide which one to use by default if you have more than one? Has anyone
found official docs on NM? I haven't but I haven't looked recently.
There is lots of doc, unfortunately of various ages and reflecting things that
were (probably) correct for the version of NM and Fedora in use at the time they
were written. I have had minimal luck making NM work as a global access method,
to make it work at all seems to expose connection information, etc, to all users.
Let us know if you find current doc, the last time I looked the wiki was still
talking about GNOME2 and appeared to be fc14 vintage.
--
Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx>
"We have more to fear from the bungling of the incompetent than from
the machinations of the wicked." - from Slashdot
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