Jarry wrote: > On 06-Apr-13 19:10, Alan Mackenzie wrote: >> >>> STOP SPREADING THIS FUD >> >>> It did not happen to pretty much everybody. It happened to people who >>> blindly updated thignsd and walked away, who did not read the news >>> announcement, who did not read the CLEARLY WORDED wiki article at >>> freedesktop.org or alternatively went into mod-induced panic and started >>> making shit up in their heads. >> >> Steady on, old chap! By "it" I was meaning the general inconvenience >> all round occasioned by the changes between udev-{197,200}. Not >> everybody encountered this. For example Dale, and Walt D. didn't have >> to do anything. But pretty much everybody else did. > > The problem is, news item is not correct! I followed it > and yet finished with server having old network name (eth0). > Problem was the point 4. in news item, which is not quite clear: > > ----- > 4. predictable network interface names: > If /etc/udev/rules.d/80-net-name-slot.rules is an empty file > or a symlink to /dev/null, the new names will be disabled and > the kernel will do all the interface naming... > ----- > > Well, in my case 80-net-names-slot.rules was neither empty, > nor symlink to dev null, but FULL OF COMMENTS AND NOTING ELSE, > which basically did the same thing as empty file: disabled > new network names. Unfortunatelly, I found it just after > screwed reboot. But I did everything I found in news item: > checked and verified that file was not symlink to /dev/null > and that it was not empty (1667 bytes does not seem to me > to be empty file). > > As I wrote previously, I am pretty sure I never created this > file manually so it must have been created by som previous > udev-version. So I finished up with similar problem as OP: > after rebooting I did not find interface I expected. The > only difference is I expected already interface with new > name, and OP is probably the old one...
You're not alone, this happened for me on all my 4 machines. > > So I must add my point to complaining about news item > not beeing quite clear. And this happens quite often... - Jörg