On Tue, 2018-10-23 at 17:29 +0200, Thomas HUMMEL wrote:
> On 10/17/2018 10:38 AM, Thomas Haller wrote:
> > 3) if you do
> > 
> >    nmcli device disconnect eth0
> >    ip addr add 192.168.7.5/24 dev eth0
> > 
> > NM now creates an in-memory connection "eth0". This means that
> > NetworkManager*does not*  manage this device.
> 
> Among the things I forgot : I understand what you explained but I
> cannot 
> figure out a way to make nmcli confirm that the device is not
> managed.
> 
> For instance :
> 
> # nmcli -f GENERAL.STATE device show eth1
> GENERAL.STATE:                          100 (connected)
> 
> I guess the 'connected' hides the 10 (unmanaged) I can see in
> different 
> situations ?
> 
> # nmcli device show eth1 | grep -i managed
> # <nothing>

Hi,

An unmanaged device is in state "unmanaged". All other states (like
"100 (connected)") are not-unmanaged, which means they are "managed".

  $ nmcli -f GENERAL.DEVICE,GENERAL.STATE device show
  $ nmcli -f GENERAL.DEVICE,GENERAL.STATE device show "$DEVICE"


best,
Thomas

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part

_______________________________________________
networkmanager-list mailing list
networkmanager-list@gnome.org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list

Reply via email to