vmware_guest module network config for Redhat Linux version 9.X

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Karthik

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May 28, 2024, 5:42:10 AMMay 28
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Hi,

I am using vmware_guest module to create a Redhat Linux 9.3 VM, so what happens is the VM is launched and is online, but the network configurations files are created under /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ which is the usual approach.

but if one can take a look at the readme file(provided below), the ifcfg
format is deprecated & the configs will have to be updated or stored in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/.

Can the vmware_guest module be tweaked to suit Linux v9 network configuration setup please.


# cd /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/
# ls -l

-rw-r--r--. 1 root root  366 May 10 16:44 ifcfg-ens192
-rw-r--r--. 1 root root 1244 Feb 21 12:51 readme-ifcfg-rh.txt

# cat readme-ifcfg-rh.txt
NetworkManager stores new network profiles in keyfile format in the
/etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/ directory.

Previously, NetworkManager stored network profiles in ifcfg format
in this directory (/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/). However, the ifcfg
format is deprecated. By default, NetworkManager no longer creates
new profiles in this format.

Connection profiles in keyfile format have many benefits. For example,
this format is INI file-based and can easily be parsed and generated.

Each section in NetworkManager keyfiles corresponds to a NetworkManager
setting name as described in the nm-settings(5) and nm-settings-keyfile(5)
man pages. Each key-value-pair in a section is one of the properties
listed in the settings specification of the man page.

If you still use network profiles in ifcfg format, consider migrating
them to keyfile format. To migrate all profiles at once, enter:

# nmcli connection migrate

This command migrates all profiles from ifcfg format to keyfile
format and stores them in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/.

Alternatively, to migrate only a specific profile, enter:

# nmcli connection migrate <profile_name|UUID|D-Bus_path>

For further details, see:
* nm-settings-keyfile(5)
* nmcli(1)

Regards,
Karthik
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