Re: [Bug 1718227] Re: replacement of ifupdown with netplan needs integration for /etc/network/if{up, down}.d scripts

2019-12-15 Thread Simon Déziel
On 2019-12-11 12:33 p.m., Rafael David Tinoco wrote: > For openvpn + systemd-resolve: > > With "up / down" openvpn config file commands you can wrap "systemd- > resolve --set-dns=XXX" and update the given DNS servers. There's a package for that: openvpn-systemd-resolved -- You received this

Re: [Bug 1718227] Re: replacement of ifupdown with netplan needs integration for /etc/network/if{up, down}.d scripts

2019-12-15 Thread Simon Déziel
On 2019-12-11 12:33 p.m., Rafael David Tinoco wrote: > For openvpn + systemd-resolve: > > With "up / down" openvpn config file commands you can wrap "systemd- > resolve --set-dns=XXX" and update the given DNS servers. There's a package for that: openvpn-systemd-resolved -- You received this

Re: [Bug 1718227] Re: replacement of ifupdown with netplan needs integration for /etc/network/if{up, down}.d scripts

2018-04-02 Thread Steve Langasek
On Thu, Mar 29, 2018 at 06:27:18PM -, Alkis Georgopoulos wrote: > For the maintainers of the affected packages to be able to help in this > issue, addressing the main question already stated above would be most > helpful: > To support netplan, do we have to implement netlink events listeners

Re: [Bug 1718227] Re: replacement of ifupdown with netplan needs integration for /etc/network/if{up, down}.d scripts

2018-02-14 Thread Steve Langasek
On Thu, Feb 15, 2018 at 12:06:04AM -, Crashbit wrote: > I have a problem with tinc and netplan. > I've using Ubuntu 17.10 server. When I try to start tincd daemon with > systemd, it doesn't start. > When start tinc daemon without systemd, it runs correct. Then that doesn't sound related

Re: [Bug 1718227] Re: replacement of ifupdown with netplan needs integration for /etc/network/if{up, down}.d scripts

2018-01-31 Thread Steve Langasek
On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 06:27:35PM -, Vagrant Cascadian wrote: > This doesn't sound like the sort of thing to replace ifupdown... some > more information about what this actually refers to would be helpful. The package name is 'nplan' due to conflict with pre-existing (and scarcely relevant)