CentOS 8+ and Fedora 30+ no longer have the alias "nfs" for "nfs-server"
systemd service.
This shouldn't break backward compatibility, since "nfs-server" service
is available on all supported redhat systems that have systemctl binary.
Fixes#10838
Extra options are extracted from the machine configuration for the
network being configured to allow for customized network manager
behavior. The network entries must be filtered to remove non-network
entries (like port forwards) before accessing by index.
Fixes#9546
Update capability to use guest inspection module for determining
correct actions to execute. When systemd is in use restart the
correct active service, either NetworkManager or networkd. Default
to using the original service restart when systemd service is not
found.
Reduce the total number of commands run to configure interfaces. If
a service reload/restart is required, only execute it once instead
of once per device. When nm is managing a device, the explicit up
is not required.
Properly detects NetworkManager on guest as well as devices controlled
by NetworkManager. Provides configuration option to enable/disbale
NetworkManager control on devices.
`/etc/init.d/network restart` already restart NM and shutdown interfaces.
In start() :
```
if [ "$(LANG=C nmcli -t --fields running general status 2>/dev/null)" = "running" ]; then
nmcli connection reload
fi
```
In stop() :
```
for i in $vpninterfaces $xdslinterfaces $bridgeinterfaces $vlaninterfaces $remaining; do
unset DEVICE TYPE
(. ./ifcfg-$i
if [ -z "$DEVICE" ] ; then DEVICE="$i"; fi
if ! check_device_down $DEVICE; then
action $"Shutting down interface $i: " ./ifdown $i boot
[ $? -ne 0 ] && rc=1
fi
)
done
```
Where $remaining include all "others" interfaces including eth*
This reverts commit 166d10d4e1.
RHEL-7 / Current Fedora versions tend to use NetworkManager for
configuring the networks, and `service network restart` might fail.
If the `NetworkManager` service is running, we should restart it,
otherwise we try restarting `network`.
When configuring network devices force NetworkManager to reload new
configuration files as they appear. This prevents NetworkManager from
attempting to continue managing devices on initial start up.
Previously this was very complicated trying to flip between Ruby and
bash. This commit uses a single bash command that decides between yum
and dnf in the script itself.
This fixes a fairly large tempfile leak. Vagrant uses a template
renderer to write network configuration files locally to disk. Then,
that temporarily file is uploaded to the remote host and moved into
place. Since Vagrant is such a short-lived process, GC never came along
and cleaned up those tempfiles, resulting in many temporary files being
created through regular Vagrant usage.
The Util::Tempfile class uses a block to ensure the temporary file is
deleted when the block finishes. This API required small tweaks to the
usage, but provides more safety to ensure the files are deleted.
the previous fix for #4465 assumed that the NetworkManager takes care of updating /etc/hosts with
the new hostname, but testing shows it doesn't. This change ensures that the change is always added
to /etc/hosts when the name changes.