Carlos E. R. wrote:
I have tried this, and it does not seem to work.
The script would need to run as root, to be able to start services. Does NetworkManager run as root? :-?
I don't know, but it's simple enough to use sudo to run a script, as I have done for other functions. Also, I just started up this computer and here's the ntpd log: 29 Oct 11:09:45 ntpd[2367]: host name not found: time.nrc.ca 29 Oct 11:09:45 ntpd[2367]: couldn't resolve `time.nrc.ca', giving up on it 29 Oct 11:12:54 ntpd[2364]: synchronized to LOCAL(0), stratum 10 29 Oct 11:12:54 ntpd[2364]: time slew +0.000000 s 29 Oct 11:12:55 ntpd[3174]: Deleting interface #2 lo, ::1#123, interface stats: received=0, sent=0, dropped=0, active_time=1 secs 29 Oct 11:12:55 ntpd[3174]: Deleting interface #3 WiFi, fe80::20e:35ff:fe4c:dfb8#123, interface stats: received=0, sent=0, dropped=0, active_time=1 secs 29 Oct 11:16:10 ntpd[3174]: synchronized to LOCAL(0), stratum 10 29 Oct 11:16:10 ntpd[3174]: kernel time sync status change 0001 29 Oct 11:17:15 ntpd[3174]: synchronized to 132.246.168.164, stratum 2 I booted the computer around 11:09 and logged in at 11:12 and 5 minutes after doing so, ntpd was talking to the server via WiFi. At 11:09, I hadn't yet logged in and the WiFi link not yet established. At that time, ntpd could not find the server, as expected. Based on this, it appears ntpd works fine with NetworkManager, at least on this computer. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org