A package building reproducibly enables third parties to verify that the source matches the distributed binaries. It has been identified that this source package produced different results, failed to build or had other issues in a test environment.

network management framework (GNOME frontend) dep: adwaita-icon-theme default icon theme of GNOME (small subset) dep: dbus-x11 simple interprocess messaging system (X11 deps) Other Packages Related to network-manager-pptp. depends; recommends; suggests; enhances; dep: libc6 (>= 2.17) [arm64, ppc64el] GNU C Library: Shared libraries also a virtual package provided by libc6-udeb Package: network-manager / 0.9.10.0-7 Metadata. Package debian specific tweaks for networkmanager systemd service file This patch is needed to avoid a dependency So what you can do is visit Ubuntu Packages, from a machine that has Internet connectivity (friend's, work, etc.) go down to the bottom of the page, and download Network Manager that corresponds to your Ubuntu version and architecture (32, or 64 bit), (in my case its for 13.04 Raring) and once downloaded, take it over to your system, and

NetworkManager is a system network service that manages your network devices and connections, attempting to keep active network connectivity when available. It manages ethernet, WiFi, mobile broadband (WWAN), and PPPoE devices, and provides VPN integration with a variety of different VPN services. This package provides the userspace daemons and a command line interface to interact with NetworkManager.

[2020-07-13] Accepted network-manager 1.26.0-1 (source) into unstable (Michael Biebl) [2020-07-13] network-manager 1.25.91-2 MIGRATED to testing (Debian testing watch)

A package building reproducibly enables third parties to verify that the source matches the distributed binaries. It has been identified that this source package produced different results, failed to build or had other issues in a test environment.

An IP address is a number used to identify a network interface on a computer on a local network or the Internet. In the currently most widespread version of IP (IPv4), this number is encoded in 32 bits, and is usually represented as 4 numbers separated by periods (e.g. 192.168.0.1), each number being between 0 and 255 (inclusive, which corresponds to 8 bits of data).