> You are being extremely rude and unfair to a developer community > which > most people would consider extremely helpful. I believe helping > users > is the whole philosophy behind NM, and this is reflected by the > developers attracted to NM.
Yes, we are hard trying to make NetworkManager actually usable by both coding and helping out the users. But I'm probably *not* spending time with anyone just because he is trying to be loud enough. > Now, it's quite possible to disagree about technical details, but > this > does not seem to be your problem. Instead, you seem to have a > problem > structuring and presenting your case in a form which will help you > solve > whatever task you are interested in solving. I had to put it that > way, > because it isn't even clear to me what you are trying to achieve. > You > seem to be switching randomly between different configurations > because > it's "not working". That is futile. You will never get anything > working that way. > > Now, do you want to be helped? This is going to be completely off > topic > on this list, so please don't ask any followup questions. Take it to > the Debian user support lists. Making wpa_supplicant roaming work > without using NM in Debian testing is as simple as creating a > /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf with the networks you want to > roam between, and putting this in /etc/network/interfaces: > > allow-hotplug wlan0 > iface wlan0 inet manual > wpa-roam /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf > > > This is all well documented in > /usr/share/doc/wpasupplicant/README.Debian.gz > If you cannot make it work, then you are doing something wrong. +1 This is not NetworkManager question at all and as NetworkManager uses wpa_suppicant for all of this, if it doesn't work in wpa_supplicant, it won't work in NM and NM can't be blamed for that. > The same goes for NM. It just works by default. If it doesn't work > for you, then you are doing something wrong. But you cannot expect > anyone to pinpoint your errors when you don't describe what you do. > So > just don't ask. Yes. When things seem to be broken in the lower level, it must be described carefully. If it's a configuration mistake or something, the configuration should be fixed by the user. If the user wants friendly help, he definitely MUST behave in a friendly manner. Even then it's nobody's obligation to provide it. Pavel > Thanks. > > > Bjørn (not a NM developer, and therefore not very user friendly :-) > _______________________________________________ > networkmanager-list mailing list > [email protected] > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list > _______________________________________________ networkmanager-list mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
