*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 19775 ***
    https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/19775

** Description changed:

  Binary package hint: gnome-system-tools
  
  Note:  I have encountered these problems on each machine on which I've
  installed Hardy where I have a dual-NIC machine and I elect to use the
  eth1 as the only active NIC.
  
  These problems occur on a freshly installed Hardy box with two NICs:
  eth0 is onboard and unused, eth1 is a PCI-based NIC and is the one that
  is connected to the LAN.
  
  /etc/hosts immediately after the installation contains the following 
(ignoring the IPv6 stuff):
  127.0.0.1 localhost
  127.0.1.1 boxname
  
  I am assuming that "boxname" is under 127.0.1.1 because eth1 is the
  active NIC.  I am not sure about this.
  
  At this point in network-manager under Connections I add the appropriate
  static IP address to eth1.  This works as evidenced by changes made to
  /etc/network/interfaces and the output from ifconfig -a.
  
  Setting the domain name under the general tab in network-admin changes 
/etc/hosts to the following:
  127.0.0.1 localhost boxname.example.com
  127.0.1.1 boxname.example.com
  
  Any attempts at putting boxname in the hosts file using network-admin's
  host tab result in "boxname.example.com" being put in the file instead.
  Using network-admin, there is no way to add boxname as a non-FQDN name
  in /etc/hosts as an alias to either localhost (127.0.0.1) or
  boxname.example.com (127.0.1.1).  I consider appending the domain name
  wrong in this context, in that it only appends the domain name for
  boxname.  Any other host that I define an address for in this manner
  does not automatically have the domain name appended.
  
  Attempting a sudo at this point:
  sudo: unable to resolve host boxname
  
  Any gksudo attempt hangs indefinitely.
  
  Checking /etc/resolv.conf shows that it is correct:
  domain example.com
  nameserver 10.11.12.13
  
  "hostname" returns the non-FQDN hostname.
  
  pinging the non-FQDN hostname results in
  ping: unknown host boxname
  
  pinging boxname.example.com is successful, however.  So is pinging the
  static IP address I assigned to eth1.  I cannot ping any other machines
  by name or by IP address, however, even though ifconfig eth1 shows that
  the interface is up.
  
  /etc/nsswitch.conf indicates that the hosts file is to be used before
  DNS for hostname resolution.  This works only for hostnames not
  associated with the loopback addresses.  However, pings do not work to
  these non-local names, even though their addresses are resolved from the
  hosts file.
  
  Another interesting note:  eth0 is up, even though it's not configured
  in my case.  There's no way to switch it off (ifconfig down) with
  network-manager either.  Unchecking "roaming mode" requires some level
  of configuration be done to the interface, which I don't want/need to
  do.  I merely want it down.
  
  My observations are that there are several issues that could be resolved
  simply by two things:  First, assign the FQDN and it's non-FQDN both to
  the 127.0.0.1 loopback interface, not the 127.0.1.1.  Second, any
  network interface should be able to be disabled via network-manager.
  
  My fix in a previous instance for these problems was to disable the
  unused onboard NIC in the BIOS and fixing /etc/hosts and
  /etc/network/interfaces to reflect the now single-NIC (eth0)
  configuration.  I'd rather work through a configuration fix for this
  without the BIOS manipulation.  This would probably involve rebooting
  the machine into recovery mode, hand editing /etc/hosts with the non-
  FQDN name of the machine associated with 127.0.0.1 (not 127.0.1.1) and
  possibly hand editing /etc/network/interfaces to make sure that eth0 is
  down at boot.
+ 
+ --------
+ 
+ Just a hint to avoid manipulating BIOS:
+ For people suffering of not being able to sudo, you may follow this procedure:
+ In the network manager, General Tab, delete the Domain Name. Clicking on Tab 
Host saves the /etc/hosts, having the proper entry again. Open now a terminal 
and do "sudo bash", which opens a shell with root rights. Go back to Network 
Manager and put the proper domain name back, close it. 
+ Now in the new shell, edit the /etc/hosts and  delete the domain part from 
the 127.0.0.1 entry
+ 
+ Rainer

-- 
network-admin fails to correctly edit /etc/hosts, causes sudo to fail
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/234111
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