I think many newer environments are switching from NIS to
ActiveDirectory (in Windows deployments) or LDAP, for both user account
info as well as things like automount.

I've never used a setup like that so I can't say whether it works better
or not with networkmanager.

Certainly it's ridiculous that this has been broken for years in Ubuntu.
I've never worked at a company that DIDN'T use this model for mapping
directories, and not just home directories but all sorts of standard
shared directories.  It works so nicely with Red Hat: you just bring up
a system, tell it to use DHCP and what its hostname is, and voila!  All
is perfect: you have your DNS servers configured, NIS service
configured, NTP service configured, hostname entered into DNS, etc.  No
effort required.

On Ubuntu, many of these things don't work and require manual tweaking,
for no reason that I can see except that no one has felt it was a
priority to fix the problems.

Pity.

-- 
Autofs fails to start with maps from NIS
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/213574
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