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Hi,
I am trying to understand the difference between dhcpcd and dhclient but I don't get it.
Also, I am confused a little bit with my i3wm status bar.
what's the difference between:
run_watch DHCP {
pidfile = "/var/run/dhclient*.pid"
}
and...
run_watch DHCP {
pidfile = "/var/run/dhcpcd*.pid"
}
Most of the repositories I saw on github have the first file but this one doesn't exist on my system.
If I do the second way I get DHCP: yes
Could someone make it clear to me?
Regards.
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This:
pacman -Ss dhcp client
should help.
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This:
pacman -Ss dhcp client
should help.
core/dhcpcd 6.5.0-1 (base) [installed]
RFC2131 compliant DHCP client daemon
extra/dhclient 4.3.1-1 [installed]
A standalone DHCP client from the dhcp package
extra/dhcp 4.3.1-1
A DHCP server, client, and relay agent
everything is installed.. but why "/var/run/dhclient*.pid" does not exit ?
Last edited by dsar (2014-10-15 00:21:06)
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Better question: why have you installed both of them?
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Better question: why have you installed both of them?
I had the first one from the base system
and then I installed the second one because I wanted to see if it will generate the file
So what's the main difference?
Last edited by dsar (2014-10-15 00:35:29)
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As I do not use dhcp I'm not sure, but I think they are conflicting. To my knowlage you can have only one dhcp utility.
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As I do not use dhcp I'm not sure, but I think they are conflicting. To my knowlage you can have only one dhcp utility.
Thank you for your response!
Both of them do exactly the same thing?
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Why does it matter? You already said dhcpcd works for you.
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The packages certainly don't conflict - no more than a chromium package conflicts with firefox. They are just two different tools to accomplish the same task. I'm sure there are various test out there that could and have rated the two - I've never heard any weight of evidence in favor of one over the other though.
"UNIX is simple and coherent..." - Dennis Ritchie, "GNU's Not UNIX" - Richard Stallman
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