Around about 06/01/09 20:55, Phil Meyer typed ...
Network manager will then have the network available whenever a user is
logged in, even in run mode 3. (like when you want to do a major update)
If you need to start network services after an interface is up, use the
scripts in:
/etc/NetworkManager/dispatcher.d
If you need network services available all the time, then that is a
server, by definition, and by all means its fair to turn off
NetworkManager.
Would that cover sshd? If so, remote admin couldn't ever log in unless a
user was also logged in starting NM?
When F9 introduced this for boot up, we hit here the problem of user a/cs
being auth'd via LDAP; there was no user, so no network, so no LDAP, so no
login, so no user, ...
Has this catch-22 been resolved? (maybe the ONBOOT jobby only applies to
NM< and you can now start I/Fs at bootup with NM?)
--
[n...@fnx ~]# rm -f .signature
[n...@fnx ~]# ls -l .signature
ls: .signature: No such file or directory
[n...@fnx ~]# exit
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