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So hi,
I've installed Arch on physical machines multiple times before and never encountered these problems. My VM (powered by Open Nebula) is refusing to connect to internet/ethernet.
First I tried iwctl and first command
iwd# device list
which displayed zero devices. So I tried to enable and start
networkd
and
resolved
according to another arch wiki page.
Nothing.
This stuff didn't connect to the internet, no matter what:
dhcpcd
lspci -k
ip link
modprobe (ethernet module)
Any other ideas?
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A VM is extremely unlikely to have a wireless device, so iwd makes no sense.
You started networkd and resoved, but did you configure them?
Did you still have them running when starting dhcpcd? What did the lspci and ip link commands show?
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ip link showed me two devices. The virtual one and another one.
lspci list of modules. Like storage and Ethernet
Yes I did have networks and resolved running while starting dhcpcd. But what I should put in the config file?
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I did. But it’s not working the way it should
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I did. But it’s not working the way it should
???
And? What steps did you try? Which succeeded? Which failed? What did you see?
You have to give us something to work with.
Last edited by dakota (2022-09-21 04:40:28)
"Before Enlightenment chop wood, carry water. After Enlightenment chop wood, carry water." -- Zen proverb
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Checking this stuff from the beginning of the article
1. Your network interface is listed and enabled. Otherwise, check the device driver – see /Ethernet#Device driver or /Wireless#Device driver.
2. You are connected to the network. The cable is plugged in or you are connected to the wireless LAN.
3. Your network interface has an IP address.
4. Your routing table is correctly set up.
5. You can ping a local IP address (e.g. your default gateway).
6. You can ping a public IP address
1. yes
2. apparently no
3. yes
4. hopefully, did try setting it up
5. yup
6. need internet for that
ping doesn't work at all to any address but mine. and when I ping mine, it's 100% package loss
I also managed to get the name of the device and the interface
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What, specifically, is the output of ip addr
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Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine. -- Alan Turing
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