On 08.07.2014 09:12, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote: > On 07/08/2014 03:41 AM, Always Learning wrote: >> >> On Mon, 2014-07-07 at 21:34 -0400, Scott Robbins wrote: >> >>> No systemd in FreeBSD. It isn't Linux, and like any O/S, has its own >>> oddities. >>> >>> It would take more adjustment, IMHO, to go from CentOS 6.x to FreeBSD than >>> to go to 7.x. (I'm saying this as someone who uses both FreeBSD and >>> Fedora which has given a hint of what we'll see in CentOS 7.) >> >> Thanks. I've deployed C 5.10 and C 6.5. Thought I'll play with C 7. >> >> I notice, from http://wiki.centos.org/Manuals/ReleaseNotes/CentOS7, the >> apparent replacement of IPtables by firewalld >> >> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FirewallD >> >> > > Check "Static_Firewall" Chapter: > https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FirewallD#Static_Firewall_.28system-config-firewall.2Flokkit.29 > > and one below it. You can have iptables rules and also rules from > system-config-firewall > If you want to avoid firewalld for now you can uninstall it and instead install the iptables-services package. This replaces the old init scripts and provides an "iptables" systemd unit file that starts and stops iptables and if you require the old "service iptables save" command you can reach that using "/usr/libexec/iptables/iptables.init". Also if you want to keep NetworkManager on a Server you can install the NetworkManager-config-server package. This only contains a config chunk with two settings: no-auto-default=* ignore-carrier=* With this package installed you get a more traditional handling of the network. Interfaces don't get shutdown when the cable is pulled, no automatic configuration of unconfigured interfaces and no automatic reload of configuration files (the last one doesn't require the package and is now the NetworkManager default behaviour). Regards, Dennis _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos