On Wed, Nov 25, 2020 at 10:33 AM Imobach González Sosa <igonzalezsosa@suse.com> wrote:
Hi all,
If you are into systems management, you most likely have heard about Cockpit[1]. In a nutshell, it offers a good looking web-based interface to perform system tasks, like inspecting the logs, applying system updates, configuring the network, managing services, and so on.
Recently, the YaST team got informed that MicroOS developers wanted to offer Cockpit as an option for system management tasks. Unfortunately, Cockpit does not have support for Wicked[2], a network configuration framework included in SUSE-based distributions. So we were given the task of solving that problem.
Today we are announcing the first public release of such a module[3]. You can read the full announcement in our blog[4].
Bear in mind that it is still a work in progress (actually, there is a silly UI bug with routes handling that we are fixing now), but some basic use cases are already supported and we would love to get from feedback from you.
Is there a reason that the built-in network module using NetworkManager wouldn't work? There seems to be a fair bit of work in upstream projects (Cockpit, nmstate, netplan, etc.) in integrating around NetworkManager. -- 真実はいつも一つ!/ Always, there's only one truth!