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On Tue, May 6, 2008 at 3:51 AM, Jan Seeger <jan.seeger@(protected):
> At Tue, 06 May 2008 13:48:46 +0800,
>
> William Kenworthy wrote:
> >
> > On Tue, 2008-05-06 at 01:42 -0300, Daniel da Veiga wrote:
> > > On Mon, May 5, 2008 at 7:12 PM, deface <deface@(protected):
> <snipped the frustration>
>
> > been there, done that ... and gave up.
> >
> > Write your own scripts and shortcut the frustration.
> >
> > Keep a directory with a subdirectory for each site. Have all config
> > files needed properly configured and stored there. Lastly, a simple
> > script just copies in the required files over the top of the last lot
> > and restarts the services. I have a desktop icon and a GUI (using
> > gtkdialog) so I can easily select the correct site.
> >
> > Ive tried a few like network manager, and also tried to get gentoo's
> > networking to do it semi-automaticly to help, but all I ended up with
> > was a frustratingly fragile mess.
>
> I have a laptop too, and I always found that the gentoo networking
> scripts where fully sufficient for keeeping me on-line. Okay, the
> wireless is a bit flaky, but only when connecting. Note: I do not use
> network manager.
>
> What exactly are your problems?
>
Gentoo networking configuration is OK. It works for the most part, but
you just need something were you can quickly type a password for a
protected WPA network and it connects. Yes, you CAN edit the files by
hand and provide the information, but that just makes your net
configuration file a mess. I ended up with a pretty mess of over a
dozen networks, most of them I used only once.
I'm all for the console and editing configuration files, but a laptop
or notebook is meant to be a fast tool to be connected everywhere,
isnt it?
Right now I'm switching to XFCE and I'll try more stuff, like
pynetworkmanager...
--
Daniel da Veiga
--
gentoo-user@(protected)