> On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 15:05:18 +0200, Robert Markula
> said:
> Two questions arose so far:
> 1. Is the 'UBUNTU' class intended to be complementing the 'DEBIAN' class
> or does it completely replace the DEBIAN class?
yes, it is complementing the Debian class.
> 2. Ubuntu
Personally - I like yaml and use it a lot for many things :)
I've never liked xml on the other hand!
Cheers,
Just
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 at 16:07, John G Heim wrote:
> It' may be worse than you know. Netplan uses something called yaml for
> it's config files. YAML is a newish config language, s
It' may be worse than you know. Netplan uses something called yaml for
it's config files. YAML is a newish config language, sort of a
replacement and/or competitor for XML. I am no fan of XML, believe me.
I'm blind, you sighted people think you have it hard editing XML config
files, try doing
We have quite a lot invested in ifupdown - we won't be using netplan for
servers on bionic.
I know that's not a helpful response, but if you decide not to use netplan
you won't be the only people :)
Cheers,
Just
On Wed, 17 Oct 2018 at 15:11, John G Heim wrote:
> Well, I pulled a Bart Simpson
Well, I pulled a Bart Simpson. I tried for about 10 minutes and gave up.
Bakc with Ubuntu 16.04, I tried modifying the old networking script
using the ifclass command. If the UBUNTU class was defined, it generated
a /etc/netplan/10-interfaces file. Otherwise, it ran the old code to
generate a
Hi,
I'm currently in the process of updating tried-and-trusted FAI 4.2.5 to
5.7.2 and completely reworking the config space in the process, starting
with the examples provided by fai-doc (which, btw, has been quite a
surprisingly pleasant experience so far, as fewer customization is
necessary in o