Package: installation-reports
Boot method: network Image version: mini.iso with files within of Nov 30 09:49 2020 Date: sometime in Dec 2020 Machine: various Processor: various Memory: 8gb Partitions: basically 2 ext4 parts, / + /home Base System Installation Checklist: [O] = OK, [E] = Error (please elaborate below), [ ] = didn't try it Initial boot: [O] Detect network card: [O] Configure network: [O] Detect CD: [ ] Load installer modules: [O] Detect hard drives: [O] Partition hard drives: [O] Install base system: [O] Clock/timezone setup: [O] User/password setup: [O] Install tasks: [O] Install boot loader: [O] Overall install: [O] Comments/Problems: After complete and successful installation, the following files have these proxy config lines stored in them to be used with apt(titude) and every application reacting to those environment variables. Installation network setup was auto-configured while the system was in a network with proxy-auto-config active. Expectation: when choosing auto-configure-network during installation, the resulting system should be operative in every foreign environment. (think of notebook in roaming use) Result: applications strictly following those hardwired configs can't operate outside the original installation network, where the given proxy exists, but nowhere else. PAC results during installation shouldn't be 'hardwired' into the system to last when moving to another network. I tried to reproduce with WPAD or PAC in dhcp at home, but my knowledge of those technologies didn't suffice to set it up properly. If more info/details of the original network environment is required, then I must ask for permission to reproduce, can take time (school in lockdown). If the result is intentional for 'local use only', then this is no defect but feature-request to add another option to choose between 'automatic config for local use' and '... roaming use'. This is the result of 'fgrep -r proxy-IP /etc'. ------ QUOTE BEGIN ------ /etc/apt/apt.conf:Acquire::http::Proxy "http://10.x.x.x:8080"; /etc/apt/apt.conf:Acquire::ftp::Proxy "http://10.x.x.x:8080"; /etc/environment:http_proxy=http://10.x.x.x:8080 /etc/environment:ftp_proxy=http://10.x.x.x:8080 /etc/environment:https_proxy=http://10.x.x.x:8080 ------- QUOTE END -------