Hello, In the Message; Subject : Re: Tumbleweed: using Ethernet (bridge) and a Wlan on the same PC simultaneously? Message-ID : <CAA91j0UnwMYxtEQDRT7y40sVtF07aRQg7+dUmviieUow-9FAbg@mail.gmail.com> Date & Time: Thu, 12 Dec 2024 10:13:47 +0300 [AB] == Andrei Borzenkov <arvidjaar@gmail.com> has written: AB> On Thu, Dec 12, 2024 at 8:13 AM Masaru Nomiya <nomiya@lake.dti.ne.jp> wrote: MN> > [main] ignore-carrier=no MN> > AB> This is the default. ? $ man 5 NetworkManager.conf says; ignore-carrier This setting is deprecated for the per-device setting ignore-carrier which overwrites this setting if specified (See ignore-carrier). Otherwise, it is a list of matches to specify for which device carrier should be ignored. See the section called “Device List Format” for the syntax how to specify a device. Note that controller types like bond, bridge, and team ignore carrier by default. You can however revert that default using the "except:" specifier (or better, use the per-device setting instead of the deprecated setting). and, ignore-carrier Specify devices for which NetworkManager will (partially) ignore the carrier state. Normally, for device types that support carrier-detect, such as Ethernet and InfiniBand, NetworkManager will only allow a connection to be activated on the device if carrier is present (ie, a cable is plugged in), and it will deactivate the device if carrier drops for more than a few seconds. A device with carrier ignored will allow activating connections on that device even when it does not have carrier, provided that the connection uses only statically-configured IP addresses. Additionally, it will allow any active connection (whether static or dynamic) to remain active on the device when carrier is lost. Note that the "carrier" property of NMDevices and device D-Bus interfaces will still reflect the actual device state; it's just that NetworkManager will not make use of that information. Master types like bond, bridge and team ignore carrier by default, This setting overwrites the deprecated main.ignore-carrier setting above. Am I misunderstanding? Best Regards. --- ┏━━┓彡 Masaru Nomiya mail-to: nomiya @ lake.dti.ne.jp ┃\/彡 ┗━━┛ " Reading widely about things that don't seem immediately or practically useful, in the hope that what you learn now may prove meaningful later—that's pretty much the definition of a liberal- arts education. Who knew that one of its best defenders would turn out to be a computer scientist? " -- "What Does It Really Mean to Learn?" THE NEW YORKER --