Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-09 Thread Kamil Paral
 Yet several times after F20 alpha live installs I've had to go manually turn
 on the wired network, and the Connect Automatically option was unchecked.
 I suppose it could be a transient or imaginary problem. If I get something
 consistent I'll file a bug against network manager.

I haven't seen it. If you find out when this happens, please do notify us (it 
might even be a blocker, with the new GNOME top bar style). Thanks!
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-09 Thread Andre Robatino
John Morris jmorris at beau.org writes:

 Screen space is valuable so removing an icon that is 'always' there and
 isn't typically displaying useful information is sensible enough.

Possibly a dumb question, but doesn't space have to always be available for
the icon, whether it's displayed always or just some of the time? I mean, if
there was no available space to display a wired connection icon, and the
connection goes down, it would be impossible to show the disconnected icon
either. This looks to me like it's being done just as part of the whole
GNOME philosophy of minimizing the used screen space, even if it's already
90% unused, and it requires additional logic to identify when a GUI item
does or doesn't need to be displayed. (For example, display Log out if and
only if there is more than one user, OR more than one installed desktop, OR
the dconf setting says to always display it.)



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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-09 Thread John Morris
On Wed, 2013-10-09 at 11:46 +, Andre Robatino wrote:
 John Morris jmorris at beau.org writes:
  Screen space is valuable so removing an icon that is 'always' there and
  isn't typically displaying useful information is sensible enough.
 
 Possibly a dumb question, but doesn't space have to always be available for
 the icon, whether it's displayed always or just some of the time? I mean, if
 there was no available space to display a wired connection icon, and the
 connection goes down, it would be impossible to show the disconnected icon
 either. 

Nah, there are a lot of notifications icons that COULD appear, most
don't unless they have something interesting to say.  For example (not
sure if the GNOMEs have defeatured it but it is there on 2 because it
happened to me) if a drive is failing a SMART monitor tool will pop an
icon into the system tray.  Having it always there to say your drive is
ok would not be useful.

I have my power icon set to only appear if power is coming or going from
the battery, same for the UPS's system tray icon.  And there is always
the icon that appears daily to let ya know you need to run update
again.  :)

Really haven't though about what would happen if the system tray
overflowed.  Would it do like Windows and resort to a popup with more
icons or like Android and slide?


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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-09 Thread Chris Murphy

On Oct 9, 2013, at 5:23 PM, John Morris jmor...@beau.org wrote:

 On Wed, 2013-10-09 at 11:46 +, Andre Robatino wrote:
 John Morris jmorris at beau.org writes:
 Screen space is valuable so removing an icon that is 'always' there and
 isn't typically displaying useful information is sensible enough.
 
 Possibly a dumb question, but doesn't space have to always be available for
 the icon, whether it's displayed always or just some of the time? I mean, if
 there was no available space to display a wired connection icon, and the
 connection goes down, it would be impossible to show the disconnected icon
 either. 
 
 Nah, there are a lot of notifications icons that COULD appear, most
 don't unless they have something interesting to say.

At least with lives, I'm intermittently getting and not getting a wired 
connection. I only get an icon on the menu bar in the latter case.


Chris Murphy
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-07 Thread Kamil Paral
 https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708966 is the upstream bug
 ... if you have anything useful (i.e no flamebait) to add ad it there.

Provided. Thanks.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-07 Thread Adam Williamson
On Fri, 2013-10-04 at 09:04 -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:

 A wired state icon in the menu bar is not needed if it's available upon 
 making a physical connection, by default, for all users. For Gnome 3.8, I 
 regularly encountered no network connection upon successful install, despite 
 a working wire in the singular ethernet port, because by default Connect 
 Automatically is not enabled for wired connections.
 
 So if I have to give the system A Captain Obvious Clue, yes I really do need 
 an otherwise useless wired network state icon in the menubar. But better 
 would be no wired network icon, but any user by default has access to the 
 network connection automatically if the wired is in the port. (As a Mac user 
 the idea that a network isn't connected to automatically by default upon 
 physical access to both computer and wire is not merely surprising, it is 
 considered broken.)

Doesn't match my experience at all. We've brought up wired network
connections by defaults for several releases, now, though it used to
default to off in non-network installs back around F16 or something.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-07 Thread Chris Murphy

On Oct 7, 2013, at 1:19 PM, Adam Williamson awill...@redhat.com wrote:

 On Fri, 2013-10-04 at 09:04 -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:
 
 A wired state icon in the menu bar is not needed if it's available upon 
 making a physical connection, by default, for all users. For Gnome 3.8, I 
 regularly encountered no network connection upon successful install, despite 
 a working wire in the singular ethernet port, because by default Connect 
 Automatically is not enabled for wired connections.
 
 So if I have to give the system A Captain Obvious Clue, yes I really do need 
 an otherwise useless wired network state icon in the menubar. But better 
 would be no wired network icon, but any user by default has access to the 
 network connection automatically if the wired is in the port. (As a Mac user 
 the idea that a network isn't connected to automatically by default upon 
 physical access to both computer and wire is not merely surprising, it is 
 considered broken.)
 
 Doesn't match my experience at all. We've brought up wired network
 connections by defaults for several releases, now, though it used to
 default to off in non-network installs back around F16 or something.

Yet several times after F20 alpha live installs I've had to go manually turn on 
the wired network, and the Connect Automatically option was unchecked. I 
suppose it could be a transient or imaginary problem. If I get something 
consistent I'll file a bug against network manager.


Chris Murphy
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-07 Thread Adam Williamson
On Mon, 2013-10-07 at 13:41 -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:
 On Oct 7, 2013, at 1:19 PM, Adam Williamson awill...@redhat.com wrote:
 
  On Fri, 2013-10-04 at 09:04 -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:
  
  A wired state icon in the menu bar is not needed if it's available upon 
  making a physical connection, by default, for all users. For Gnome 3.8, I 
  regularly encountered no network connection upon successful install, 
  despite a working wire in the singular ethernet port, because by default 
  Connect Automatically is not enabled for wired connections.
  
  So if I have to give the system A Captain Obvious Clue, yes I really do 
  need an otherwise useless wired network state icon in the menubar. But 
  better would be no wired network icon, but any user by default has access 
  to the network connection automatically if the wired is in the port. (As a 
  Mac user the idea that a network isn't connected to automatically by 
  default upon physical access to both computer and wire is not merely 
  surprising, it is considered broken.)
  
  Doesn't match my experience at all. We've brought up wired network
  connections by defaults for several releases, now, though it used to
  default to off in non-network installs back around F16 or something.
 
 Yet several times after F20 alpha live installs I've had to go manually turn 
 on the wired network, and the Connect Automatically option was unchecked. I 
 suppose it could be a transient or imaginary problem. If I get something 
 consistent I'll file a bug against network manager.

Well, I haven't run many F20 installs, since I've been traveling. If
it's really happening, it's definitely not intentional, AFAIK.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread Sandro Mani


On 04.10.2013 07:54, moshe nahmias wrote:
I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an 
option. I use a cellular modem on my laptop and the easiest way to 
connect with it to the net is by clicking that icon...
I guess that it's possible to connect from other places, but it won't 
be as easy.



Also when ohne has multiple wired-networking profiles configured, you 
have to go to the system settings in order to switch between them. I 
think users would expect to be able to do that from the system status area.
And my opinion: I find this to be unnecessarily confusing. The system 
status area should show in what state the computer/device is, and in my 
opinion the ethernet cable status should definitely be part of the state 
(unless the device has no LAN adapter).


Sandro




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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread Adam Williamson
On Fri, 2013-10-04 at 07:54 +0200, moshe nahmias wrote:
 I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an
 option. I use a cellular modem on my laptop and the easiest way to
 connect with it to the net is by clicking that icon...
 
 I guess that it's possible to connect from other places, but it won't
 be as easy.

GNOME 3.10 has a combined system tray. Your cellular connection will be
visible in it. (In other words, don't worry, it will work exactly how
you expect it to). The change we're discussing applies only to boring
plain wired ethernet connections.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread Chuck Anderson
On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 01:54:17PM +0100, Adam Williamson wrote:
 On Fri, 2013-10-04 at 07:54 +0200, moshe nahmias wrote:
  I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an
  option. I use a cellular modem on my laptop and the easiest way to
  connect with it to the net is by clicking that icon...
  
  I guess that it's possible to connect from other places, but it won't
  be as easy.
 
 GNOME 3.10 has a combined system tray. Your cellular connection will be
 visible in it. (In other words, don't worry, it will work exactly how
 you expect it to). The change we're discussing applies only to boring
 plain wired ethernet connections.

Use Case #1 for having the wired connection icon show at all times is
to know when your network connection isn't working locally, as opposed
to some remote problem.  If you are connected to your LAN, the icon
would show connected, but if your WAN/Internet connection is down,
google.com will fail to connect.  This is the first question any tech
support person would ask the end user--does your computer show that it
is connected (do you have a link light on the NIC)?  We should be
making this determination easier, not harder.

Use Case #2 is for switching between different wired network
configuration profiles and turning multiple NICs on or off.

Why are we adding more and more functionality to NetworkManager, just
to take it away from the user interface?

I guess we'll need yet another GNOME Shell extension to fix this too.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread drago01
On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 3:05 PM, Chuck Anderson c...@wpi.edu wrote:
 On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 01:54:17PM +0100, Adam Williamson wrote:
 On Fri, 2013-10-04 at 07:54 +0200, moshe nahmias wrote:
  I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an
  option. I use a cellular modem on my laptop and the easiest way to
  connect with it to the net is by clicking that icon...
 
  I guess that it's possible to connect from other places, but it won't
  be as easy.

 GNOME 3.10 has a combined system tray. Your cellular connection will be
 visible in it. (In other words, don't worry, it will work exactly how
 you expect it to). The change we're discussing applies only to boring
 plain wired ethernet connections.

 Use Case #1 for having the wired connection icon show at all times is
 to know when your network connection isn't working locally, as opposed
 to some remote problem.  If you are connected to your LAN, the icon
 would show connected, but if your WAN/Internet connection is down,
 google.com will fail to connect.  This is the first question any tech
 support person would ask the end user--does your computer show that it
 is connected (do you have a link light on the NIC)?  We should be
 making this determination easier, not harder.

 Use Case #2 is for switching between different wired network
 configuration profiles and turning multiple NICs on or off.

 Why are we adding more and more functionality to NetworkManager, just
 to take it away from the user interface?

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708966 is the upstream bug
... if you have anything useful (i.e no flamebait) to add ad it there.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread Chuck Anderson
On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 03:17:03PM +0200, drago01 wrote:
 On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 3:05 PM, Chuck Anderson c...@wpi.edu wrote:
  On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 01:54:17PM +0100, Adam Williamson wrote:
  On Fri, 2013-10-04 at 07:54 +0200, moshe nahmias wrote:
   I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an
   option. I use a cellular modem on my laptop and the easiest way to
   connect with it to the net is by clicking that icon...
  
   I guess that it's possible to connect from other places, but it won't
   be as easy.
 
  GNOME 3.10 has a combined system tray. Your cellular connection will be
  visible in it. (In other words, don't worry, it will work exactly how
  you expect it to). The change we're discussing applies only to boring
  plain wired ethernet connections.
 
  Use Case #1 for having the wired connection icon show at all times is
  to know when your network connection isn't working locally, as opposed
  to some remote problem.  If you are connected to your LAN, the icon
  would show connected, but if your WAN/Internet connection is down,
  google.com will fail to connect.  This is the first question any tech
  support person would ask the end user--does your computer show that it
  is connected (do you have a link light on the NIC)?  We should be
  making this determination easier, not harder.
 
  Use Case #2 is for switching between different wired network
  configuration profiles and turning multiple NICs on or off.
 
  Why are we adding more and more functionality to NetworkManager, just
  to take it away from the user interface?
 
 https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708966 is the upstream bug
 ... if you have anything useful (i.e no flamebait) to add ad it there.

Thanks, done.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread Matthew Miller
On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 07:54:54AM +0200, moshe nahmias wrote:
 I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an option. I

This seems like a very useful place for a Gnome Shell Extension.



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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread Sandro Mani


On 04.10.2013 16:38, Matthew Miller wrote:

On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 07:54:54AM +0200, moshe nahmias wrote:

I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an option. I

This seems like a very useful place for a Gnome Shell Extension.

Or rather a gsettings option accessible via tweak tool. Having 
extensions for every small detail is a bit excessive IMO.


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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-04 Thread Chris Murphy

On Oct 3, 2013, at 11:48 PM, John Morris jmor...@beau.org wrote:

 On Thu, 2013-10-03 at 20:59 +0200, drago01 wrote:
 You should get an icon indicating failure just no success one. Which
 is even very unixy ;)
 
 Well GNU is Not Unix and these days Fedora isn't even following that
 star.  How does Apple do it?

OS X does not have a wired network icon for the persistent menu bar at all. Not 
by default or as an option. User needs to go to the Network panel to see the 
state which is one of three: not connected (red), connected but no IP (yellow), 
connect with IP (green).

OS X does have a wireless network icon on the menu bar. It can optionally be 
removed. It's completely gray when there is no connection, otherwise it 
indicates signal strength. An X is never used to indicate state.  If the signal 
weakens or vanishes, the menu bar icon simply goes gray. No dialog, no text. A 
dialog appears with a connection failure only when actively connecting to a 
discrete access point and the connection attempt fails (wrong login or 
password, or error establishing connection).

 
 Screen space is valuable so removing an icon that is 'always' there and
 isn't typically displaying useful information is sensible enough.  But
 as the bug commenters noted, some people DO move between wired
 connections and such so an option to put it back really needs a bit of
 thought.

A wired state icon in the menu bar is not needed if it's available upon making 
a physical connection, by default, for all users. For Gnome 3.8, I regularly 
encountered no network connection upon successful install, despite a working 
wire in the singular ethernet port, because by default Connect Automatically 
is not enabled for wired connections.

So if I have to give the system A Captain Obvious Clue, yes I really do need an 
otherwise useless wired network state icon in the menubar. But better would be 
no wired network icon, but any user by default has access to the network 
connection automatically if the wired is in the port. (As a Mac user the idea 
that a network isn't connected to automatically by default upon physical access 
to both computer and wire is not merely surprising, it is considered broken.)


Chris Murphy

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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-03 Thread Adam Williamson
On Thu, 2013-10-03 at 14:03 +0200, Sandro Mani wrote:
 Hi,
 
 Running Gnome 3.10 in a virtual machine, I notice that the networking UI 
 in the system status area is missing (happens both in classic mode as 
 well as standard mode). This happens both with a continuously updated 
 rawhide installation as well as with the latest F20 nightly. Anyone else 
 seeing this, maybe also on physical machines?

This is intentional. See
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1005719 (not the original
bug, but the later comments).
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-03 Thread Sandro Mani


On 03.10.2013 14:29, Adam Williamson wrote:

On Thu, 2013-10-03 at 14:03 +0200, Sandro Mani wrote:

Hi,

Running Gnome 3.10 in a virtual machine, I notice that the networking UI
in the system status area is missing (happens both in classic mode as
well as standard mode). This happens both with a continuously updated
rawhide installation as well as with the latest F20 nightly. Anyone else
seeing this, maybe also on physical machines?

This is intentional. See
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1005719 (not the original
bug, but the later comments).

I see, thanks.

Sandro
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-03 Thread Richard Ryniker
Well, a statically configured network interface might be expected to
just work.

With dynamic configuration, there must be successful contact with a DHCP
server, and the server must be willing to assign an IP address and
possibly provide other information (gateway, nameserver, host name) to
the client host.  In this case, a visible indicator of successful network
configuration might be useful.
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-03 Thread Adam Williamson
On Thu, 2013-10-03 at 14:31 -0400, Richard Ryniker wrote:
 Well, a statically configured network interface might be expected to
 just work.
 
 With dynamic configuration, there must be successful contact with a DHCP
 server, and the server must be willing to assign an IP address and
 possibly provide other information (gateway, nameserver, host name) to
 the client host.  In this case, a visible indicator of successful network
 configuration might be useful.

Sure. Open firefox, type 'www.google.com'. If you see Google, your
network is working. If you see an error, your network is not. :P

(the point is that...you pretty much know whether your network is
working. it's obvious when it isn't. there isn't actually much practical
use in a little icon that tells you what you already know.)
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-03 Thread drago01
On Thu, Oct 3, 2013 at 8:31 PM, Richard Ryniker ryni...@alum.mit.edu wrote:
 Well, a statically configured network interface might be expected to
 just work.

 With dynamic configuration, there must be successful contact with a DHCP
 server, and the server must be willing to assign an IP address and
 possibly provide other information (gateway, nameserver, host name) to
 the client host.  In this case, a visible indicator of successful network
 configuration might be useful.

You should get an icon indicating failure just no success one. Which
is even very unixy ;)
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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-03 Thread John Morris
On Thu, 2013-10-03 at 20:59 +0200, drago01 wrote:
 You should get an icon indicating failure just no success one. Which
 is even very unixy ;)

Well GNU is Not Unix and these days Fedora isn't even following that
star.  How does Apple do it?

Screen space is valuable so removing an icon that is 'always' there and
isn't typically displaying useful information is sensible enough.  But
as the bug commenters noted, some people DO move between wired
connections and such so an option to put it back really needs a bit of
thought.  And your idea that if anything goes wrong, loss of link,
failure to acquire a lease, etc. it should put up a no-net icon is very
good since these days no-network is the odd case, probably an error
state and almost always something the user wants to know about.  Better
still of course if it has a tooltip with useful information.

Any move to remove it with zero option should be a position that needs
defending first, not something one person imposes from on high.  If for
no other reason than it is going to surprise people so some awareness
building is probably a good idea.


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Re: Gnome 3.10: Network UI missing from new system status area

2013-10-03 Thread moshe nahmias
I think that it must be possible to make the icon visible as an option. I
use a cellular modem on my laptop and the easiest way to connect with it to
the net is by clicking that icon...
I guess that it's possible to connect from other places, but it won't be as
easy.


On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 8:48 AM, John Morris jmor...@beau.org wrote:

 On Thu, 2013-10-03 at 20:59 +0200, drago01 wrote:
  You should get an icon indicating failure just no success one. Which
  is even very unixy ;)

 Well GNU is Not Unix and these days Fedora isn't even following that
 star.  How does Apple do it?

 Screen space is valuable so removing an icon that is 'always' there and
 isn't typically displaying useful information is sensible enough.  But
 as the bug commenters noted, some people DO move between wired
 connections and such so an option to put it back really needs a bit of
 thought.  And your idea that if anything goes wrong, loss of link,
 failure to acquire a lease, etc. it should put up a no-net icon is very
 good since these days no-network is the odd case, probably an error
 state and almost always something the user wants to know about.  Better
 still of course if it has a tooltip with useful information.

 Any move to remove it with zero option should be a position that needs
 defending first, not something one person imposes from on high.  If for
 no other reason than it is going to surprise people so some awareness
 building is probably a good idea.

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