Hi Brian, Felix and Charlie, > Persistant name generation is enabled by default since udev 220-7 and > will be used on new installations or with new hardware. Existing > installations and hardware which get upgraded to udev 220-7 are covered > by the old 75-persistent-net-generator.rules and will keep their > interface names thanks for the fast response. However, it does not explain, why both machines are different.
Both machines were installed by DVD and both got the same settings and package versions. Both machines were installed by the same DVD and then of course upgraded by the internet. And both are running debian/testing. The only thing, which IMO would explain it, that the EEEPC is newer than the other one. But then the hardware must talk to the operation system and give more information to udev or systemd. Does this do such things? There was something mentioned in the doku, but I did not quite understand, what the doku meant. And if enps10 is the "new" kind of naming network devices, is it then recommended to edit all configurations and change the entries from eth0 to enp1s0? This would also mean, I guess, either 70-persistent-net-rules must also be edited or should be deleted. But all this makes not clear to me, what makes the decision, when enp1s0 or when eth0 is going to be created on a system at boot. Thanks for reading. Best Hans