
delete routes and addresses when it quits. This causes those routes and addresses to stick around forever, since dhcpcd won't delete them when it runs next (even if it acquires a new lease on the same interface). This is bad; in particular the stale (default) routes can break networking. The downside to removing "persistent" is that you should never ever do "stop dhcpcd" on a remote machine configured by dhcpcd. svn path=/nixos/trunk/; revision=33388
*** NixOS *** NixOS is a Linux distribution based on the purely functional package management system Nix. More information can be found at http://nixos.org/nixos and in the manual in doc/manual.
Description
Languages
Nix
96.3%
Shell
1.8%
Python
0.7%
Perl
0.4%
C
0.3%
Other
0.1%