π ~1 min read
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
Interface remains unmanaged, breaking dynamic network control and automated reconfiguration workflows.
Environment & Reproduction
Observed on Debian 13 after migrating from ifupdown static definitions to NetworkManager profiles.
Root Cause Analysis
Legacy interface declarations and unmanaged-device rules conflict with active NetworkManager ownership.
Quick Triage
Check nmcli device status and unmanaged rules before restarting networking services.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
Audit /etc/NetworkManager and /etc/network/interfaces to find ownership conflicts.

Solution – Primary Fix
Remove conflicting legacy config, mark device managed, and restart NetworkManager cleanly.
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Solution – Alternative Approaches
Keep ifupdown as the primary stack and disable NetworkManager on dedicated server roles.
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
nmcli reports managed state and interface reconnects with expected address and route settings.
Rollback Plan
Restore previous network config files and service enablement order from backups.
Prevention & Hardening
Standardize on one network management stack per host role and validate config drift automatically.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Related patterns include duplicate default routes and DHCP lease churn on dual-stack hosts.
Related tutorial: View the step-by-step tutorial for Debian 13.
View all Debian 13 tutorials on the Tutorials Hub β
Browse all common problems & solutions on the Tutorials Hub.
References & Further Reading
Debian networking best practices for NetworkManager and ifupdown coexistence boundaries.
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