- Removed sysvinit and made sure systemd and systemctl are the absolute defaults on installation and booting
- Removed several applications that had deprecated or were not needed (d-feet and tea)
- Updated to the latest version of ceni that solves the missing Hardware Interfaces
- Updated all applications to the latest SID levels
All files and torrents can be downloaded from the VSIDO Download page (http://vsido.org/template/index.html)
QuoteRemoved sysvinit and made sure systemd and systemctl are the absolute defaults on installation and booting
Removed several applications that had deprecated or were not needed (d-feet and tea)
Cool. Thanks for that. No more afterinstall "clean-up". ;D
I just booted into vsido live session.
Get an error about vmware client not starting because the kernel service - or something like that - isn't installed.
No network connectivity and wicd not working. Killed wicd and used ceni to get a wired connection. My ethernet interfaces are listed as enp2s0 and wlp3s0.
^ I was worried about that as an issue since the 'requirement change' happened regarding the need to have the VM client installed on every instance of the build... Was it a brief message and then cleared to boot?
thanks for the feedback Snap!
In all my VM tests WICD sees the network and the interfaces as enp0s2 and wlp0s3 and connects without issues.
A network interface issue from a different network setting from VWare?
The message last maybe 10 seconds after logging in then clears.
Wicd wasn't working at all. I logged in expecting wireless - as usual - and no connectivity. Plugged in a cable and rebooted - nothing, logged out and back in to see if it picked up wired - nothing.
The new version of Ceni found and configured both cards though.
Edit - wicd had the cards listed as wlan0 and enp3s0. I manually changed them to enp2s0 and wlp3s0 and have connectivity via wicd; wired and wireless
I appreciate that PackRat... In the settings for WICD, I have kept the defaults as the most basic in an attempt to match a majority of machines setups... If it were not for the ease of setting up wireless with WICD and the gui interface, I would shitcan it completely
Is the option to have no defaults for interfaces in the WICD settings realistic?
Something to think about
Edit - The settings you changed WICD to should have been the default... Let me see where the malfunction happened and correct that and get back to you
For anyone needing to know how to make sure your WICD settings are correct, first do this in a terminal:
ifconfig -a
Get your wireless and ethernet names and make sure they are the same within WICD / Preferences / Network Interfaces
Quote from: PackRat on June 29, 2015, 07:27:56 PM
Edit - wicd had the cards listed as wlan0 and enp3s0. I manually changed them to enp2s0 and wlp3s0 and have connectivity via wicd; wired and wireless
Can you verify that the names are enp0s2 and not enp2s0 please... If it is that much of a difference this can be a monster headache for standards
Live session defaults for my system -
(http://s10.postimg.org/hugfczorp/default_network.jpg) (http://postimg.org/image/hugfczorp/)
just change wicd to match and connectivity is good.
^ Thanks and yes I get that all one needs to do is change it, but there is no rhyme or reason for a 'default' anymore which means I am going to have to leave WICD preferences blank and have the users set it up following what we have outlined with ifconfig -a
This is troubling to me, why would your system have a naming convention of enp2s0 and mine be enp0s3? So close but miles apart?
We probably need to update the Ceni How To and add a WICD section to it and rename it as
Network Setup In VSIDO
I will get to work on that asap! 8)
Greetings vsidoians
Have any of you tried this "hack" ?
edit this -> /etc/udev/rules.d/10-network.rules
And add this :
SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", ATTR{address}=="aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff", NAME="net1"
SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", ATTR{address}=="ff:ee:dd:cc:bb:aa", NAME="net0"
Hey dizzie! Long time no see! Nice hack...
But...
Doesn't that bypass the built in security systemd provides when using the default net id's? I've actually had one come up as 'enp0s17'! As VSIDO is based on "SID", shouldn't users be able to do this anyway? I would think anyone using a "SID" based distro would have the knowledge level to handle this pretty easily. That being said, we have a "How To" on "Network Setup in VSIDO" for anyone having issues...
It can be found here, Network Setup in VSIDO (http://vsido.org/index.php?topic=185.msg2274#msg2274)!
Hey Jedi :)
This "hack" didn't work, and systemd doesn't care if udev is being a bitch or not.
Is there a udev replacement out there? :D Or.... should we all just man up and get used to this? I have in Arch and whatnot already. enp3s0 enp5s0 etc here :)
Quote<snip> .. should we all just man up and get used to this?
most likely this.
Quote from: PackRat on June 29, 2015, 07:27:56 PM
The message last maybe 10 seconds after logging in then clears.
Wicd wasn't working at all. I logged in expecting wireless - as usual - and no connectivity. Plugged in a cable and rebooted - nothing, logged out and back in to see if it picked up wired - nothing.
The new version of Ceni found and configured both cards though.
Edit - wicd had the cards listed as wlan0 and enp3s0. I manually changed them to enp2s0 and wlp3s0 and have connectivity via wicd; wired and wireless
Hi everyone,
I got the latest ISO a few hours ago and went through the install process like I am usually used to. I can confirm, I got the same message/behaviour as PackRat. Since there is already a thread with this ongoing discussion, I wanted to chime in. If you need, I'll check up on the names sometime later and let you know.
Ciao.