Hi On 10 Jan 2014 01:45, "Dan Williams" <d...@redhat.com> wrote: > > On Thu, 2014-01-09 at 15:52 +1300, Simon Geard wrote: > > On Tue, 2014-01-07 at 09:52 -0600, Dan Williams wrote: > > > In addition to what Pavel said, the GNOME Control Center makes some > > > choices about the UI design and what to include and what to leave out > > > that are quite appropriate for the GNOME design and target audience. > > > Same for KDE. nm-connection-editor exists to expose most options (but > > > not necessarily all of them) in a more complicated form, and is intended > > > to be either a parallel tool to each desktop's preferred settings > > > panels, or a standalone one for desktops that don't have any other > > > settings editor. > > > > One thing I noted the other day is that the Gnome UI doesn't support > > setting up connection sharing (i.e configuring the machine as a gateway, > > running a DHCP server, etc. Had to resort to nm-connection-editor for > > that. > > It does for creation of a WiFi Hotspot, which will then have access to > your upstream ISP (whether over ethernet, WWAN, etc). But it doesn't > AFAIK support connection sharing between arbitrary connections. > > Dan >
I believe, this currently limited to ad hoc. - ritz
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