On 04/26/2015 08:25 PM, Robert Nichols wrote: > On 04/26/2015 06:31 PM, Peter Larsen wrote: >> On 04/26/2015 07:26 PM, Robert Nichols wrote: >>> How can I block network setup (via NetworkManager) from changing >>> the machine's hostname whenever the network configuration changes? >> >> Make it a system connection instead of a user connection. Or give the >> host a static name on install and don't allow dhcp to override it. > If you move networks and you are slaving your hostname to the DHCP offered name, then yes. But why do that? In /etc/dhcp/dhclient.conf you can configure exactly what you want and don't want from the server. There's a lot of options (man dhclient.conf is very helpful) but here's an example: send dhcp-client-identifier = hardware; request subnet-mask, broadcast-address, time-offset, routers, domain-search, domain-name, domain-name-servers, host-name; Just take out the host-name and you won't get (a new) one. You should however make sure that all your servers have a hostname configured before you do that. /etc/sysconfig/network is where you do that on CentOS6. > Making my wireless connection a system connection increases the > exposure of my WPA key and doesn't solve the problem of the network > configuration changing, perhaps because I connected or disconnected > an ethernet cable or the machine went to sleep on one WLAN and woke > up on another. So your key isn't visible and only root can change a system device. A system device gets activated before the desktop. So you're not depending on having access to gconf etc. https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Deployment_Guide/sec-User_and_System_Connections.html > > Do you know of a place I can set a static name that NetworkManager > won't override? That would be ideal. I just doesn't make sense > that the machine's internal relationships would depend on its > external connections. > See above. It's standard dhclient options. -- Regards Peter Larsen _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos