Just wanted to chime in and say that this thread was very helpful to
me. I had the same issue with a mysterious eth0 entry showing up in
NetworkManager a minute or two every time after I woke up my laptop and
ruining connectivity. Very glad to have that working now!
--
Devrin Talen
On Sun, Aug 24, 2014 at 6:00 PM, Stephen Powell zlinux...@wowway.com wrote:
On Sun, 24 Aug 2014 15:44:26 -0400 (EDT), David Baron wrote:
On Sunday 24 August 2014 11:45:40 Stephen Powell wrote:
I have a static route command in my /etc/rc.local file to define
a route to another network. I
On Sun, 24 Aug 2014 15:44:26 -0400 (EDT), David Baron wrote:
On Sunday 24 August 2014 11:45:40 Stephen Powell wrote:
...
Here is how I enabled it. (The following commands are
executed as root.)
cd /lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants
ln -s ../rc-local.service rc-local.service
Stephen Powell zlinux...@wowway.com wrote:
I hate network-manager! Is there anything I can do to make it leave
eth0 totally in the control of ifupdown and to not touch it at all,
and to not create a stupid extra connection, and to leave my static
routes, that it did not create, alone?
On Sun, 24 Aug 2014 18:00:52 -0400 (EDT) Stephen Powell sent:
snip
The default installation of Debian for a
desktop system (XFCE in my case) installs both ifupdown and
network-manager. It allows ifupdown to manage only the local
loopback interface (lo) and allows network-manager to manage
On Sun, 24 Aug 2014 18:00:52 -0400 (EDT)
Stephen Powell zlinux...@wowway.com wrote:
network-manager! Is there anything I can do to make
it leave eth0 totally in the control of ifupdown and to not
touch it at all
The settings in /etc/network/interfaces are automatically used instead of
Am 25.08.2014 00:00, schrieb Stephen Powell:
simply eth0. (I have managed=true in the [ifupdown] section
of /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf.) I then select
If you set managed=true, you actually tell NetworkManager to manage the
interface.
So I'm not sure why you are surprised that it
On Sun, 24 Aug 2014 19:05:52 -0400 (EDT), Michael Biebl wrote:
If you set managed=true, you actually tell NetworkManager to manage the
interface. So I'm not sure why you are surprised that it does.
In a previous release of network-manager, if I didn't set managed=true
in the [ifupdown]
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