On Fri, 01 Oct 2010 09:13:41 +0800, Bill Kenworthy wrote:
> Gentoo networking is a bit on the wild side - it doesnt seem to work
> nicely with third party tools without a lot of work.
Nor should it - you either let baselayout manage the networking
interfaces or another program. Letting two system
On Thu, Sep 30, 2010 at 11:22 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> Dump NetworkManager.
> Use wicd.
> All these issues just GoAway(tm) with wicd
Thanks Alan, I've just realized that. Wish I could get the last 10
hours back though :)
D
--
--
Support the mob or mysteriously disappear...
I'm on flickr: http
Dump NetworkManager.
Use wicd.
All these issues just GoAway(tm) with wicd
> Hello all,
>
> Getting very frustrated here. Trying to put the finishing touches on a
> new laptop install. I have verified using the CLI that both wired and
> wireless networking works fine when I configure manually. As wi
On Thu, Sep 30, 2010 at 8:16 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 30, 2010 at 7:37 PM, Darren Kirby wrote:
> [...]
>> I am wondering if I should just uninstall KNetworkManager, and try
>> nm-applet? Will that even work on a KDE desktop? Will it require
>> installing boatloads of gnome cra
No I am saying create a unique /etc/conf./net, hosts file, bind files,
firewall files (shorewall in my
case), /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf and anything else that
has a unique setup per site and put them together in another directory.
I have tried putting everything in the net file in th
On Thu, Sep 30, 2010 at 7:37 PM, Darren Kirby wrote:
[...]
> I am wondering if I should just uninstall KNetworkManager, and try
> nm-applet? Will that even work on a KDE desktop? Will it require
> installing boatloads of gnome crap I don't want? Should I chuck the
> whole works and use Wicd?
I do
Hey Bill,
On Thu, Sep 30, 2010 at 7:13 PM, Bill Kenworthy wrote:
> Gentoo networking is a bit on the wild side - it doesnt seem to work
> nicely with third party tools without a lot of work.
>
> My fix was to manually configure each location (and a couple of general
> ones such as wifi hotspot, a
Gentoo networking is a bit on the wild side - it doesnt seem to work
nicely with third party tools without a lot of work.
My fix was to manually configure each location (and a couple of general
ones such as wifi hotspot, and basic wired dhcp) as I came across them
and copy the resulting config fil
Hello all,
Getting very frustrated here. Trying to put the finishing touches on a
new laptop install. I have verified using the CLI that both wired and
wireless networking works fine when I configure manually. As with most
laptops, I would imagine, I will be switching locations often, and
switchin
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