On 21.04.2015 16:46, Johnny Hughes wrote: > On 04/21/2015 08:54 AM, Jonathan Billings wrote: >> On Tue, Apr 21, 2015 at 03:46:52PM +0200, Dennis Jacobfeuerborn wrote: >>> Networking isn't really controlled by systemd but by NetworkManager. I >>> usually just yum remove NetworkManager* and then everything works just >>> as it did in CentOS 6. >> >> Note: NetworkManager is in CentOS6 too, and is part of the default >> workstation install. The NM in CentOS7 is a bit more polished than >> the NM in CentOS6, but it is configured in the same way, using files >> in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ (using the ifcfg-rh NetworkManager >> plugin). In both cases, you can remove NM and use the 'network' >> service instead. >> > > You can disable NetworkManager for now in CentOS-7 and use the network > service .. but in reality I am not sure how long that is going to be > 100% true. In fact, things like dnsmsq and even libvirt/qemu are > becoming much harder to configure to work via the network service and > are pre-configured to work with NetworkManager. (Don't yell at me, not > my decision :D) > > I have decided it is likely better to bite the bullet and learn how to > use and configure Network Manager if you are going to do anything other > than very simple things with your network .. at least on CentOS-7 or > higher (ie, Fedora > 18, etc.). > > Again, one CAN still use the network service .. but most documentation > available now assumes instead that Network Manager is being used. systemd-networkd is becoming increasingly capable and popular though so NetworkManager might not actually stay around for too long. Regards, Dennis _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos