Dave Feustel wrote:
On Tue, Oct 21, 2008 at 04:08:19PM -0700, Rick Stevens wrote:
> Dave Feustel wrote:
>> On Tue, Oct 21, 2008 at 03:01:29PM -0700, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>> Dave Feustel wrote:
>>>>>>> Are you using Network Manager, and if so is NM managing your
interface?
>>>>> 1. Is there a nm-applet in the upper panel on the left?
>>>>> 2. Check what:chkconfig --list |grep NetworkManager returns
>>>> I don't understand either point 1 or point 2; I do almost everything
via
>>>> the command line in xterm. Could you elaborate?
>>> If you have a /var/run/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.pid file, then
>>> NetworkManager is running. That's probably the most reliable way.
>>>
>>> If you're in a GUI, look around in the taskbars and see if there's
an
>>> icon that looks like two computers, one in front of the other. Right
>>> click on it and select "About" from the drop-down menu.
>>>
>>> If the About box says "NetworkManager Applet", then NetworkManager
is
>>> running. If it says "Network Monitor" then NetworkManager is NOT
>>> running. The problem is that the icon for the NetworkManager applet and
>>> the one for Network Monitor are damned near identical. It's caught me
>>> by surprise before.
>> Thanks for this. I actually understand it!
> Good! :-)
>
>> There is an icon on the upper panel next to the date which, when I put
>> the mouse cursor over it, displays the message "no network
connection".
>> As I mentioned in a previous post, the system stopped connecting at
>> boot, and I got internet connectivity by executing dhclient. Obviously,
>> that command by itself does not properly set network connectivity and
>> I have not figured out yet how to fix the broken step in bootup.
> Well, we still don't know if it's NetworkManager (NM for short) or if
> you're using ye ol' network stuff. My guess is it's NM (the
"About"
> will tell you).
Clicking 'about' generates a popup identifying NM as Applet 0.7.0.
Well, that settles that! :-)
> If it's NM, then make sure "Enable Networking" is
checkmarked (right
> click on icon). If it isn't then NM won't try to manage the network and
> that may be where you're having issues. If it's not checked, right
> click on the NM applet icon and left-click on the "Enable Networking"
> option. Then wait a few seconds to see if it fires up.
Clicking on enable networking produced an immediate 'Network
disconnected' message. Then left-clicking produced a bunch of
lines that listed a series of network devices (5) that had been
disconnected. All the text is greyed out.
Ok, so right click on the icon and select "Edit Connections". Select
the "Wired" tab (I'm assuming this is a wired connection) and click
"Add". Another window should pop up where you can enter the appropriate
data.
If the window doesn't pop up, then edit the file called
"/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0". Make sure there's a line
in there that says:
NM_CONTROLLED=yes
If not, add it (or edit an existing line) and try a reboot. See if the
network comes up this time. If not, then you should be able do the
above stuff about editing connections, since NM is now controlling this
interface.
I rarely use NM myself as it has some, uhm, issues if you have a complex
network configuration as I do.
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- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer ricks(a)nerd.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2 ICQ: 22643734 Yahoo: origrps2 -
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- If one is what one eats, then I am fast, cheap and greasy! -
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