Hi Holger, On Tue, May 18, 2021 at 09:00:55PM +0200, Holger Wansing wrote: > Control: reassign -1 lxde > > Andreas Tille <ti...@debian.org> wrote (Tue, 18 May 2021 10:37:12 +0200): > > I decided for the LXDE task (and unselected Gnome). This ends up with > > no network management on the rebootet system. My solution was wo > > plug-in the installation USB stick and install network-manager (+ > > network-manager-gnome) and all its dependencies manually. This problem > > is not only valid for this box. I have installed three laptops in a row > > and its always the same. My suggestion is to simply add network-manager > > to the LXDE task. > > The LXDE metapackage has a Recommends on > connman-gtk | network-manager-gnome > so connman-gtk should be installed, when choosing the LXDE task.
I admit I do not know connman-gtk. I'm generally not an LXDE user and may be an experienced user of this environment will expect connman-gtk to be installed. But any (LXDE) newcommer is wondering where to configure the network if there is no visible icon to do so. BTW, I just installed another laptop and for whatever reason I lost network connection after I added the Debian Mirror. The installation from USB stick continued smoothly without network. That's possibly the best solution since possibly connman-gtk was not on that stick and thus network-manager-gnome ended up in the installation which even remembered the configured network connection. ;-) > And I verified that it gets installed (here). > > I guess, your problem was, that connman-gtk is not being started automatically > when rebooting after installation, so you don't find anything related to > network configuration in the system tray (as you might be used to). > Starting connman-gtk from the menu works though (under 'LXDE menu' -> > Settings -> > Connman Settings). OK, fine for me. As I said I've found my way, but a newcomer might just stumble upon this. > So, as a possible way to get around this, LXDE people might want to think > about > adding connman-gtk into "Autostart" under 'LXDE menu' -> Settings -> Default > applications for LXSession, so that network management tool is automatically > started and accessible to the user (and user are aware of such tool)... Sounds like a very sensible solution to me. > Many people will most probably want to use network management tool on desktop > systems. +1 > Re-assigning to lxde people. Thanks a lot Andreas. -- http://fam-tille.de