[Pkg-utopia-maintainers] Bug#508861: network-manager: /etc/resolv.conf is empty at boot
Drew Parsons
dparsons at debian.org
Tue Dec 16 02:13:17 UTC 2008
On Tue, 2008-12-16 at 02:15 +0100, Michael Biebl wrote:
> Drew Parsons wrote:
> > On Tue, 2008-12-16 at 01:39 +0100, Michael Biebl wrote:
> >> Could you please show me your /etc/network/interfaces?
> >>
> >
> > Attached. It's showing my static office address, since that's the nm
> > profile I've currently selected.
>
> Try to add the dns-* settings in /e/n/i, as I suggested, that should help.
>
Wouldn't that only be a temporary bandaid, since it would be lost the
next time I switch location in the Network tool?
>
> >
> >> Have you configured the static configuration vi /e/n/i or the
> >> nm-connection-editor, i.e. a keyfile connection.
> >>
> >
> > No, I did all the configuration using network-manager (i.e the Network
> > Settings tool). When I select my roaming (dhcp) profile in nm, for
> > instance, then the static configuration in /etc/network/interfaces
> > disappears.
> >
> > I may have had a look at nm-connection-editor (Gnome
> > System->Preferences->Network Configuration) but didn't see any useful
> > settings there (the new 0.7 version seems to have more but I only had a
> > brief glimpse without configuring settings), so I've been using
> > System->Administration->Network instead.
>
> These are two different tools, not related to each other.
>
> The Gnome Network tool will directly edit /etc/resolv.conf, but this information
> will be lost, as soon as you activate the connection.
>
OK, this might be the real problem. The Network admin tool I've been
using is /usr/bin/network-admin. I see know it's from the
gnome-network-admin package. I had thought it was a network-manager
tool so I apologise if I misfiled the bug report. Should we reassign
the bug, or is there a bug here in the interactions between
network-admin, network-manager and resolvconf that we should sort out
here?
Am I right in understanding then that this is a bug
in /usr/bin/network-admin, that it does not set up resolv.conf at boot?
It sounds like nm-connection-editor (package network-manager-gnome) is
the tool I'm really after. It truly is very confusing having two
separate Gnome tools like this. Does that mean I should completely
ignore network-admin altgoether? Previously I've just managed my
interfaces manually in /e/n/i, so I thought I should try the Gnome tools
on this new laptop, but it's more confusing than I expected.
> There are basically three ways, how to store a connection:
>
> 1.) As a user connection (stored in gconf)
> 2.) As a system connection (stored via keyfile plugin, see
> /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections)
> 3.) As a (read only) system connection (/etc/network/interfaces)
OK. So I've used 3) in the past (manually). Maybe 1) is what I want, so
long as the last interface still comes up at boot (so I can use it from
the virtual terminals without X).
I can't seem to let network-manager take control of eth0 though. I've
now deleted all mention of eth0 from /e/n/i, added a configuration in
nm-connection-editor, ran /etc/init.d/network-manager restart, but eth0
is ignored completely. nm-tool continues to declare "Device: eth0
State: unmanaged".
Thanks for your patience,
Drew
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