Public bug reported:
For several reasons, we are not able to use netplan nor systemd-networkd
due to legacy applications that expect ifupdown's pre-up and post-up
script mechanism. The documentation around 18.04's (premature, I feel)
wholesale adoption of netplan claims that one can revert to old
behaviour by merely installing ifupdown (amongst assertions that netplan
will never offer a mechanism for configuring pre-up and post-up actions
even for network managers that support them).
However when ifupdown is installed, systemd-networkd still tries to
manage interfaces. If you 'systemctl disable systemd-networkd', upon
next reboot it is automatically re-enabled. We tried disabling any
systemd units even remotely related to networking and yet systemd-
networkd still runs. If it hasn't been configured, it tries to DHCP.
On networks that don't provide DHCP this results in a stupendously long
stall during boot. Currently it appears to be impossible to tell
systemd-networkd not to run in a clean manner that won't get reverted on
package upgrades.
I sincerely hope this is is a bug/oversight and not intentional. We
need to be able to disable systemd-networkd properly.
Thanks
** Affects: ubuntu
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
** Summary changed:
- forced use of systemd-networkd interferes with ifupdown
+ forced use of systemd-networkd interferes with ifupdown in 18.04
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1771236
Title:
forced use of systemd-networkd interferes with ifupdown in 18.04
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