On Wed, Nov 11, 2015 at 09:47:25AM +0100, Bennett Piater wrote:
> Hello!
> I installed Arch on my new Thinkpad T450s over the weekend.
> Everything works well, but I have a question:
>
> I use systemd-networkd to manage my network interfaces and netctl for
> the connections. I set everything up ac
> On Wed, Nov 11, 2015 at 10:21 AM, Javier Vasquez
> wrote:
> ...
>
> In case more information is required, well besides bein using Arch for
> x86-64, up to date, with fluxbox version 1.3.7-1, attached go some
> outputs from strace, gdb, and coredump. I actually can't make much
> sense out of th
On Wed, Nov 11, 2015 at 16:06:18 +0100, Bennett Piater wrote:
> They have different metrics as per the example from the wiki.
>
> However, no wiki article or manpage that I encountered explained what
> exactly the metric does. Could you explain that to me?
>
> Cheers,
> Bennett
>
> > If there ar
ip route get 8.8.8.8
ip route get 7.7.7.7
will show the routes for those ip addresses. you can check several to
see where they go (in case the 2 default routes have the same metric)
On 11 November 2015 at 14:38, Andrew Von Stein <16vo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Expanding on the ip route command, you
> On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 5:15 PM, Javier Vasquez
> wrote:
> ...
>
> I've been using plain fluxbox, rather than any DE, for several years
> now. I use dunst for libnotify server BTW...
>
> However now a days there's an application "hpmyroom" [1], based on QT
> for linux, which dies any time ther
Expanding on the ip route command, you can you see what interface is used
to reach the Internet by looking at the default route. The entry that has
the destination as 0.0.0.0 and the subnet mask as 0.0.0.0 is the default
route. If your LAN is shown above your wifi interface I'm going to assume
that
> I don't use netctl, but you can usually see what default route it uses with
>
> ip route
Thanks for that, I didn't know that command.
The LAN is shown above WIFI, which (I assume) means that it takes
precedence.
>
> I have made the experience that newly configured interfaces "steal" the
On Wed, Nov 11, 2015 at 09:35:05 +, Ben Oliver wrote:
> On 11 November 2015 at 09:18, Ludwig Zins wrote:
>
> > On 11/11/15 09:47, Bennett Piater wrote:
> > > Hello!
> > > I installed Arch on my new Thinkpad T450s over the weekend.
> > > Everything works well, but I have a question:
> > >
> >
On 11 November 2015 at 09:18, Ludwig Zins wrote:
> On 11/11/15 09:47, Bennett Piater wrote:
> > Hello!
> > I installed Arch on my new Thinkpad T450s over the weekend.
> > Everything works well, but I have a question:
> >
> > I use systemd-networkd to manage my network interfaces and netctl for
>
On 11/11/15 09:47, Bennett Piater wrote:
> Hello!
> I installed Arch on my new Thinkpad T450s over the weekend.
> Everything works well, but I have a question:
>
> I use systemd-networkd to manage my network interfaces and netctl for
> the connections. I set everything up according to (this)[0] an
Hello!
I installed Arch on my new Thinkpad T450s over the weekend.
Everything works well, but I have a question:
I use systemd-networkd to manage my network interfaces and netctl for
the connections. I set everything up according to (this)[0] and
(this)[1] to get automatic activation of wifi via n
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