[the short story: if you use whereami or laptop-net for detection and configuration of your environment, please reply privately with pros and cons of either package. i will send a summary to the list. thanks.]
given that i now vagabond between 11 different networks and that my numerical memory for IPs, subnet masks, gateways, DNS, lpd, and SMTP servers is maxed out, I finally want to get a network environment detection and configuration automatism in place. I've looked at switchconf, whereami, netenv, guessnet, intuitively, divine, laptop-net, and laptop-netconf (are there any others). only two made it to the final rounds: whereami and laptop-net. i've listed the reasons why the others failed below. but between whereami and laptop-net, i am undecided. they both seem to provide similar functionality, laptop-net detects the cable detected or not -- something whereami can't do. but otherwise they do very similar stuff. i am not too fond of the first impression of the configuration paradigm of laptop-net, but whereami is also not rocking my boat. i'd try both, but i think it takes time to be able to judge one better than the other, and that time i don't have. so i am looking for someone who's looked at those and made a decision, and for users of either to give me their good and bad impressions. please try to reply in private mail, i will summarize the pros and cons when i am ready to make a selection. here are the ones i ruled out: - switchconf: interesting and simplistic, but has no automation. it will probably still remain on my system as it's great for changing a set of files according to profiles. - netenv: interactive. i don't want that. - guessnet: the best approach and philosophy! but i couldn't get it working, it would always report eth0-none. if i get around to it, i will file bugs and help find the error. - intuitively: i could not get it to do dhcp - divine: seems like a hack, and the author says it's insecure. it's also meant to be run at boottime. my laptop has an uptime of 112 days ;^> - laptop-netconf: i don't like the single script philosophy. this one i didn't look at closely though. it seems basic (== good) thanks. -- .''`. martin f. krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : :' : proud Debian developer, admin, and user `. `'` `- Debian - when you have better things to do than to fix a system
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