On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 4:54 PM, Josh Boyer <jwboyer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 10:44 AM, drago01 <drago01@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 4:33 PM, Josh Boyer <jwboyer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 10:12 AM, Michael Catanzaro >>> <mcatanzaro@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> I would personally strongly recommend to keep the firewall >>>>> configuration >>>>> utility in Fedora Workstation to allow server application developers >>>>> and >>>>> also others to have an easy way to configure their firewall settings >>>>> according to their needs. >>>> >>>> I don't think firewall-config is even remotely close to an easy way to >>>> configure firewall settings. It's obviously a tool intended for advanced >>>> users only, which is why we suggest removing it -- we're trying really >>>> hard to get rid of anything that requires technical expertise to use. >>>> But it's possible that we may want to make an exception for >>>> firewall-config. >>>> >>>> I'm not sure how to make firewall configuration easy, and I suspect it >>>> may not be possible, but you'd have to start with removing all mention >>>> of ports ("my computer only has six ports!") and services ("why is http >>>> not checked, that must by why my Internet is broken") ("AMANDA! What is >>>> this amanda-client you're running on my network!"). I guess an easy >>>> firewall configuration tool would be a list of applications with an on >>>> or off switch to configure whether that application should be allowed to >>>> access the network. That's the sort of firewall configuration I would be >>>> more enthusiastic to install by default, but that would not be useful at >>>> all for developers. >>> >>> Slightly orthogonal, but the original discussion wasn't about specific >>> ports/apps but more about what to do when a user switches from one >>> network to another. firewalld-config has the concept of zones for >>> this, but the UI isn't immediately clear. I thought someone was >>> looking at making changes in GNOME and/or NetworkManager to prompt for >>> a "security level" etc. What happened to that work? >> >> https://wiki.gnome.org/ThreePointThirteen/Features/SharingNetworkAwareness > > Thanks, that is the feature/bug I was remembering. So it's in 3.14 > already under the Sharing settings. > > What is unclear to me is if a dialog pops up when a network change is > detected, or if there is no dialog does it default to off for a new > network? (Apologies, I don't have a separate network to test at the > moment). I have not tested it either ... Bastien? -- desktop mailing list desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop