On Mar 22, 2019, at 4:30 PM, Gordon Messmer <gordon.messmer at gmail.com> wrote:> Is that different from the standard install? Does that one activate interfaces regardless?I don?t do unmanaged installs that often, but last I tried, if you boot off and install from a CD/DVD it doesn?t bring up the network by default. If you boot off the network (or use the virt-install -l URL method) it brings up a network, since it obviously is installing off the same network. -- Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org>
On 3/23/19 10:06 AM, Jonathan Billings wrote:> I don?t do unmanaged installs that often, but last I tried, if you > boot off and install from a CD/DVD it doesn?t bring up the network by > default.That sounds consistent with what I saw.? I don't think there's any reason to call out the Minimal ISO as being deficient or defective in any way (as mark did).
On 3/23/19 2:02 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:> On 3/23/19 10:06 AM, Jonathan Billings wrote: >> I don?t do unmanaged installs that often, but last I tried, if you >> boot off and install from a CD/DVD it doesn?t bring up the network by >> default. > > > That sounds consistent with what I saw.? I don't think there's any > reason to call out the Minimal ISO as being deficient or defective in > any way (as mark did).BTW .. if it were up to me, the default installs would turn on networking with DHCP by default .. but it's not up to me. We just use the defaults provided by anaconda to match what happens upstream. Thanks, Johnny Hughes -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20190325/6985336e/attachment-0002.sig>