On Tue, Jun 25, 2019 at 9:00 AM Dan Purgert <d...@djph.net> wrote:

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> The "problem" with them was that they apparently weren't consistent
> across boots if you had multiples of the same "type" -- although I can't
> remember that ever happenening, even on crazy frankenboxes that had 3
> and 4 PCI NICs in them (barring moving things around, but these
> "predictable names" change too).
>

I can't remember it ever happening either. The best "intel" I got on the
actual linux shortcoming was that NIC numbering depended
on the order in which the NICs came up and responded at power-on. Although
as you observe, I never actually saw a server come-up
out-of-order like that. Maybe PCI-mounted circuit boards are still
deterministic devices today :-) If you work in a datacenter, you are
configuring many servers at a time and machines are doing the work for you,
so you tie the MAC address to the NIC and that's done at
install time. If you were not doing that or other software you installed
relied on fixed or slowly-changing interface names, there could
be problems.


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