On 13/02/17 15:35, m.roth wrote:
My manager tells me a system in the datacenter is down. I go down there, and plug in a monitor-on-a-stick and keyboard. It's up, but no network. I try systemctl restart NetworkManager several times, and ip a shows *no* change.
Finally, I do an ifdown, followed by an ifup, and everything's wonderful.
My manager thinks that the NM daemon thinks everything's fine, and there've been no changes, so it does nothing. He suggests that it might have to be stopped, then started, rather than restarted.
This is completely unacceptable behavior, since it leave the system with no network connection. Pre-systemd, as we all know, restart *RESTARTED* the damn thing.
Is there some Magic (#insert "pixie-dust-sparkles") incantation, either restarting NetworkManager, or using nm-cli, to force it to perform the expected actions?
Btw, if this is supposed to be part of the "hide stuff, desktop Linux users don't need to know this stuff", this is a *much* worse result.
mark (and yes, my manager's truly aggravated about this, also)
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
there's a really good solution to this.
yum remove NetworkManager*
chkconfig network on
service network start
and yes thats all under fedora 25, and centos 7.
works like a charm.
sometimes removing NM leaves resolv.conf pointing to the networkmanager directory, and its best to check this, and replace your resolv.conf link with a file with the correct settings.
sorry if this upsets the people who maintain network mangler, but its inappropriate on a server.
regards peter