On 2010-03-17 19:27, Carlos Mennens wrote:
I haven't been active in Debian for two years back when Lenny was
still in 'testing' and noticed that for some reason it is no longer
protocol to restart network services using the 'init.d' scripts. I
also noticed the same for Ubuntu (which I don't use or could care
about) and am trying to understand what is the correct way now for
Debian and what changed? I did a search on Google but didn't turn up
any results.
Is it no longer correct to run:
*CODE*
/etc/init.d/network restart
If you use GNOME *and* you've installed NetworkMangler, then the
init.d script is probably recommended.
(Note that it's possible to remove NetworkMangler even if you use
GNOME, and thus safely use /etc/init.d/network.)
Many of us don't use GNOME and thus rely on /etc/init.d/network.
(Another note: Fedora 13 will introduce a CLI interface to
NetworkMangler using D-Bus. Their goal is that the code in the
current script interface will turn into D-Bus calls just as the GUI
NetworkMangler currently is. An interesting project.)
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