similar to: centos 7, nm, wifi

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 100000 matches similar to: "centos 7, nm, wifi"

2016 Mar 21
5
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
2016 Mar 21
0
CentOS 7, systemd, nmcli, wifi, oh, my...
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
2015 May 18
3
Turning off wifi in CentOS 7
Someone else got the 7 pxe install going, and one thing that's annoying is that NetworkMangler appears to be regularly trying to fire up the wifi. On a workstation, in a wired environment. I just want to tell NM to knock it off....It's Monday, and my searching isn't going too well. Clues for the poor? mark
2015 May 18
0
Turning off wifi in CentOS 7
On 18 May 2015 at 20:10, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: > Someone else got the 7 pxe install going, and one thing that's annoying is > that NetworkMangler appears to be regularly trying to fire up the wifi. > > On a workstation, in a wired environment. I just want to tell NM to knock > it off....It's Monday, and my searching isn't going too well. Clues for > the
2015 May 19
2
Turning off wifi in CentOS 7
On Mon, 18 May 2015, James Hogarth wrote: > On 18 May 2015 at 20:10, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: >> Someone else got the 7 pxe install going, and one thing that's annoying is >> that NetworkMangler appears to be regularly trying to fire up the wifi. >> >> On a workstation, in a wired environment. I just want to tell NM to knock >> it off....It's
2015 Dec 10
7
wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
Warren Young wrote: > On Dec 9, 2015, at 11:55 AM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> Matthew Miller wrote: >>> On Wed, Dec 09, 2015 at 01:05:15PM -0500, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >>>>>> >>>> So, you're saying that end users need to go poke their noses into the >>>> development process >>> >>> If you want to go out of
2010 Feb 04
1
intel wifi and bridging - have u done it?
changed mode from router to switch on 2 Linux and 2 WinXP nodes. configured Linux bridging per the website and that worked for hardwired ethernet over cat5. For the wifi wireless xp clients, i didnt have any luck. Maybe i did something wrong, but it seems so easy to create a bridge in xp. highlight 2 or more nics, right click and choose bridge. Did it numerous tmes years ago, but not sure w
2015 May 19
1
Turning off wifi in CentOS 7
On 5/19/2015 10:54 AM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: > And that one drives me nuts. It breaks PXE boot kickstart builds. Maybe > *you* have all same model systems from the same manufacturer; we've got > boxen from...<thinking> at least five or six manufacturers, of varying > ages, from the 10+ yr old Altix 3000 from SGI, to the current one from > SGI, to my 5 yr old Dell
2015 Dec 07
1
wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
Matthew Miller wrote: > On Fri, Dec 04, 2015 at 09:03:50AM -0500, James B. Byrne wrote: >> On Thu, Dec 03, 2015 at 02:50:38PM -0500, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> > For laptops, great. For anything else, not so much. For example, >> > it's supposed to be an *ENTERPRISE* o/s... why does it >> > automatically, without ever asking, install anything wifi?
2015 May 20
1
Turning off wifi in CentOS 7
On 5/19/2015 12:54 PM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: > Excerpt I *still* see absolutely no use in an enterprise environment, where > we're *all* wired, even the laptops when folks bring them in. This improves > throughput and security, of course. >> Great post. I am just in the process of building my first CentOS 7 host >> and was wondering whether to use NetworkManager.
2015 Dec 07
1
wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
Matthew Miller wrote: > On Fri, Dec 04, 2015 at 09:03:50AM -0500, James B. Byrne wrote: >> On Thu, Dec 03, 2015 at 02:50:38PM -0500, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> > For laptops, great. For anything else, not so much. For example, >> > it's supposed to be an *ENTERPRISE* o/s... why does it >> > automatically, without ever asking, install anything wifi?
2017 Jul 12
4
CentOS 7, NM, and IPv6
On 07/12/17 12:09, Gordon Messmer wrote: > On 07/12/2017 07:13 AM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> 4. It appears to try, several times, and then give up - as our >> manager puts it, "I to renew the lease", "Here it is","Nope, >> don't like that, try again", and eventually, after 4 or 5 or >> so tries, gives up.
2017 Jul 12
3
CentOS 7, NM, and IPv6
Hi, folks, I and the other admin here have just been assigned a mission... here's what's happening: only very recently - the last week? our CentOS 7 boxes, or at least some of them, will lose their IPv6 addresses, and not get it back. 1. We're running dibbler on the same box that serves DHCP. 2. It's been working for many months. 3. The lease file remains in place.
2015 Dec 10
0
wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
On Dec 9, 2015, at 11:55 AM, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: > > Matthew Miller wrote: >> On Wed, Dec 09, 2015 at 01:05:15PM -0500, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >>>>> >>> So, you're saying that end users need to go poke their noses into the >>> development process >> >> If you want to go out of your way to read it that way, it's hard to
2015 Dec 10
4
wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
You think this is irritating, what about when you're trying to replicate the network configuration to failover hardware... There is a way around this, I haven't tried it on CentOS but on Ubuntu there are kernel command line parameters: net.ifnames=1 biosdevname=0 which will override this behavior. Again, on Ubuntu these are added in /etc/default/grub as parameters to
2016 Mar 23
0
CentOS 7, systemd, nmcli, wifi, oh, my...
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
2015 Dec 09
2
wifi on servers and fedora [was Re: 7.2 kernel panic on boot]
Matthew Miller wrote: > On Wed, Dec 09, 2015 at 01:05:15PM -0500, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> >> Why? Fedora is a development, rapid change distro. I just bugged one >> of >> > Because of the context of this conversation. We can't have user >> > feedback and involvement without user feedback and involvement. >> So, you're saying that end users
2015 Dec 10
1
CentOS 7, NetworkMangler, and ipv6
Yamaban wrote: > On Thu, 10 Dec 2015 16:00, m.roth at ... wrote: > >> We've started having a problem with a CentOS 7 server. It looses its >> IPv6 address, if I understand this issue correctly. We can get in, >> if we do ssh -4, though. >> >> In the logs, I'm seeing this about twice an hour: >> <warn> (pid 98466) unhandled DHCP event for
2013 Jul 23
5
What on Centos is wiping out my eth0 IP address every 5 minutes?
QUESTION: Why does my Centos 6.4 laptop keep wiping out my eth0 IP address? SUMMARY: a) I set the IP address of eth0 b) Everything works fine for 2 to 5 minutes c) Then, that eth0 IP address is (somehow?) wiped out I frustratingly repeat that abc process (over and over and over again) BACKGROUND: My home network has been working perfectly and there is no problem with my home network, nor my
2015 Dec 22
0
Network services start before network is up since migrating to 7.2
James Hogarth wrote: > On 22 December 2015 at 10:33, Sylvain CANOINE > <sylvain.canoine at tv5monde.org> wrote: >> > De: "Marcelo Ricardo Leitner" <marcelo.leitner at gmail.com> <snip> >> In short, "you don't need it, so don't use it". >> They said NM is more a desktop-oriented tool, already had privilege >> escalation