On Dec 2, 2014, at 2:34 PM, Les Mikesell <lesmikes...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Tue, Dec 2, 2014 at 3:17 PM, Warren Young <w...@etr-usa.com> wrote:
>> On Dec 2, 2014, at 2:10 PM, Les Mikesell <lesmikes...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>>>> Think 'laptop'.
>>> 
>>> Why would you need a static IP to stick to a laptop?   Or have
>>> multiple NICs on one?
>> 
>> Wired and WiFi.
>> 
>> If you configure a static IP with the wired Ethernet plugged in, you 
>> probably want that static IP to continue being used when you unplug the 
>> Ethernet cable and NM switches you over automatically to WiFi.  NM does this.
> 
> 
> Really?  That's insane.  Our wired jacks are not on the same subnets
> as our access points.   I'm not sure that's even possible with the
> Cisco units that have separate controllers.

In such a network, you won’t run static IP configuration on such boxes.  You’ll 
use DHCP.

On my home LAN, this automatic static IP migration is *exactly* what I want on 
my laptop.

The current NetworkManager design isn’t unequivocally wrong.  It’s a sensible 
default for Fedora.  It’s just not the right choice for enterprise Linux 
servers.

If you want to go and argue that Fedora shouldn’t be driving CentOS, it’s not 
an impossible position to take, but you have to fill in the blank spot it 
leaves.  What would drive CentOS instead?

>> This is why I want a checkbox in the NM GUI: “This is a 4U server, dummy, 
>> not a laptop.”
> 
> How about just 'don't be stupid’ ?

More like “Don’t be clever, NetworkManager, I’m better at it.”
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