On 03/08/2017 05:43 AM, Giles Coochey wrote:


On 08/03/17 10:38, John Hodrien wrote:
On Wed, 8 Mar 2017, Giles Coochey wrote:

ifconfig enp0s25 192.168.0.1 netmask 255.255.255.0
route add default gw 192.168.0.254 enp0s25
echo nameserver 8.8.8.8 > /etc/resolv.conf
echo nameserver 8.8.4.4 >> /etc/resolv.conf

Oh okay, you really do want to back away from Redhat entirely. That's
entirely your choice.

What you end up with if you take this approach widely is effectively
your own
linux distribution.

Not really, Redhat/Centos has a lot to offer, but for me, networking is a one-time configuration, and the best way to configure it is using something that falls within this principle:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KISS_principle

I'm not flaming NetworkManager, I'm just stating that for many (perhaps most), it is over-engineered for a server orientated distribution. I can run with the script above on 30 server instances, and it doesn't, as yet, break any of the other features of Centos that I enjoy.

I do not agree with your conclusions about NetworkManager. First, I use it on several servers and firewalls that - theoretically at least - should never change. Some of the most tiresome problems I have had to fix were what happened due to renaming of NICs after replacing a bad one, or a 100Mb with a Gb NIC, or adding a new NIC to connect with a new network. NetworkManager keeps NIC naming consistent with no surprises. I am getting ready to install two new NICs in a firewall/router that already has two NICs and I am not dreading that change as I would have with the old network service.

I have had excellent results with NetworkManager and am very happy with it. I see it as a significant improvement over the old network service. If you are concerned about performance issues - don't worry - you won't have any. It works fine on my RaspberryPI forewall/router using CentOS 7 for ARM and on my ancient EeePC that runs a full installation of Fedora 25.

Don't try to fix something that isn't broken.

--


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