On 5/19/2015 12:54 PM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Excerpt I *still* see absolutely no use in an enterprise environment, where we're *all* wired, even the laptops when folks bring them in. This improves throughput and security, of course.
Great post. I am just in the process of building my first CentOS 7 host and was wondering whether to use NetworkManager. You've swayed me. I've always disabled it on CentOS 6. Your point about these new funky device names is really good. I will miss my simple eth0 and eth1 but tech moves on.
And that one drives me nuts. It breaks PXE boot kickstart builds. Maybe *you* have all same model systems from the same manufacturer; we've got boxen from...<thinking> at least five or six manufacturers, of varying ages, from the 10+ yr old Altix 3000 from SGI, to the current one from SGI, to my 5 yr old Dell workstation, to some old Penguins and several Suns (soon to set, the sooner the better...). How do you deal with everything from em1 to ens3f0, which comes up *only* after you start to install.... In what conceivable way is this better than having your scripts know that eth0 (or even em1) is always going to be how to talk to the world?
<snip>
mark "they sound like ham call letters"
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
We have licensed software, using flexlm, whifh chokes and pukes, unless it is able to communicate on eth0, so I have to jump through hoops to ensure the correct interface IS eth0.
Until they fix this issue, I have no choice.
-chuck