Andreas Benzler
2017-Mar-08 06:56 UTC
[CentOS] From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
Hello Guys, update my post, because of a route from ipv6 on same networkcard, with only ipv4 enabled Sincerely Andy
James Hogarth
2017-Mar-08 09:44 UTC
[CentOS] From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
On 8 March 2017 at 06:56, Andreas Benzler <andreas at benzlerweb.de> wrote:> Hello Guys, > > update my post, because of a route from ipv6 on same networkcard, > with only ipv4 enabled > > Sincerely > > Andy > >Please accept this as honest constructive criticism from someone who also likes to blog. On EL7 this is really bad advice:> systemctl stop NetworkManager; systemctl disable NetworkManager; systemctl mask NetworkManagerYou may be interested in this article of mine: https://www.hogarthuk.com/?q=node/8 The recommended configuration for EL7 is to use NetworkManager unless you have a very specific edge case preventing you from doing so: https://access.redhat.com/solutions/783533 The legacy network service is in effect deprecated, like net-tools was, as no new features are being released for it and no RFE's are being accepted. All future work is on NetworkManager. Note as well this article was last updated in 2014 - NetworkManager has been updated to handle more use cases than back then. As always it's best to check with the upstream documentation: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/7/html/Networking_Guide/index.html Finally there was nothing to do with IPv6 in your article. That address was an IPv4 address and the zeroconf stuff configures the 169.254.0.0/16 network as a 'local link' network on that interface. If it was IPv6 it would have an address like fe80::33bb:5a14:be57:1690/64 ... which is an IPv6 link local address. Regards, James
Giles Coochey
2017-Mar-08 09:57 UTC
[CentOS] From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
> The recommended configuration for EL7 is to use NetworkManager unless > you have a very specific edge case preventing you from doing so: >The truth is a lot of us run servers that don't need to have their network "managed" by Networkmanager. We just need to set an IP address, subnet mask, gateway, and DNS servers and we will never be changing that configuration ever again for the entire life of the server. Any 3-4 line script that does the job is sufficient, servers don't need gimmicks, they're not going to be hotspotting on wireless networks, the cable goes in, the server enters production and that's it! -- Regards, Giles Coochey +44 (0) 7584 634 135 +44 (0) 1803 529 451 giles at coochey.net
Andreas Benzler
2017-Mar-08 11:59 UTC
[CentOS] From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
Hello James, your right in that position. I will correct it. Sincerely Andy
Andreas Benzler
2017-Mar-08 12:09 UTC
[CentOS] From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
Certain application doesn't like the NetworkManager for example take a look here. https://www.rdoproject.org/install/quickstart/ And on server stage it's better to run without any complicate configuration tools. Tools can make life harder in some cases. Got many other distros run before centos, why not. I personally like it slim and easy. Sincerely Andy
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- From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
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- From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
- From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
- From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files