m.roth at 5-cent.us
2016-Mar-21 20:36 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7, systemd, nmcli, wifi, oh, my...
I've been googling, but haven't come up with a satisfactory answer to the question of how I permanently turn off wifi on a workstation or server (which are *all* hardwired). I see I can turn wifi off... but I don't know that it's permanent. mark
On 3/21/2016 1:36 PM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:> I've been googling, but haven't come up with a satisfactory answer to the > question of how I permanently turn off wifi on a workstation or server > (which are*all* hardwired). > > I see I can turn wifi off... but I don't know that it's permanent.wifi on a server?!? never ever seen such a thing. and any wifi on a desktop workstation that I've ever seen has been on a pci-e card. -- john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz
m.roth at 5-cent.us
2016-Mar-21 20:52 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7, systemd, nmcli, wifi, oh, my...
John R Pierce wrote:> On 3/21/2016 1:36 PM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> I've been googling, but haven't come up with a satisfactory answer to >> the question of how I permanently turn off wifi on a workstation or >> server (which are*all* hardwired). >> >> I see I can turn wifi off... but I don't know that it's permanent. > > wifi on a server?!? never ever seen such a thing. > > and any wifi on a desktop workstation that I've ever seen has been on a > pci-e card.No, not that *any* of them have it on, it's that NM is factory-set to try to bring it up. Which is obviously annoying. Having to turn off avahi-daemon is another of my annoyances. mark
On 03/21/2016 01:36 PM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:> I've been googling, but haven't come up with a satisfactory answer to the > question of how I permanently turn off wifi on a workstation or server > (which are*all* hardwired).I know you've brought this up before, though I can't find any instance where you've specifically included the wifi related log entries. However, on a quick look, I don't see any noise in any logs from CentOS 7 hosts. All of the hosts I've checked use NetworkManager, and NetworkManager-wifi is installed. Have you considered that the noise in your logs is there *because* you're removing NetworkManager components? Maybe set up a test host with a default configuration, make changes individually and slowly, and try to determine at what point the log noise starts.
On 03/21/2016 04:50 PM, John R Pierce wrote:> wifi on a server?!? never ever seen such a thing.I actually have, for a remote, solar-powered setup where there was no fiber or other infrastructure to the system. Server was a sensor platform. But networking is networking, regardless of the particular layer 1 in use.> > and any wifi on a desktop workstation that I've ever seen has been on > a pci-e card. >I'm running a few workstation setups with USB WiFi NICs. These are again due to some odd infrastructure restrictions where running cable (UTP/ScTP or fiber) was impractical or cost-prohibitive. Or in one case where cable simply could not be run at any price due to not being able to disturb properly encapsulated asbestos.
Am 23.03.2016 um 16:03 schrieb Lamar Owen <lowen at pari.edu>:> On 03/21/2016 04:50 PM, John R Pierce wrote: >> wifi on a server?!? never ever seen such a thing. > > I actually have, for a remote, solar-powered setup where there was no fiber or other infrastructure to the system. Server was a sensor platform. But networking is networking, regardless of the particular layer 1 in use. > >> >> and any wifi on a desktop workstation that I've ever seen has been on a pci-e card. >> > > I'm running a few workstation setups with USB WiFi NICs. > These are again due to some odd infrastructure restrictions where running cable (UTP/ScTP or fiber) was impractical or cost-prohibitive. Or in one case where cable simply could not be run at any price due to not being able to disturb properly encapsulated asbestos.may i ask what kind of NICs, just curious ...? -- LF