Simon Geard wrote: > On Mon, 2013-11-25 at 20:18 -0600, Bruce Dubbs wrote: >> I know the answer to that one. To ensure that really big iron with many >> ethernet devices will not have ethx assigned in random order due to race >> conditions. It probably comes up more frequently when using systemd >> which launches processes during boot up in parallel. >> >> In other words, a solution for the 1% that need it forced on the 99% who >> don't. > > But really, what's wrong with it? All the melodrama, talking about > "abominations" and complaining about Lennart breaking things - but > what's actually wrong with it, that makes that 1% solution a problem for > you?
It's more complex. It's changing something for everybody that was working for 99% of users. I suppose for most users that install a mainstream distro it doesn't make any difference, but for most of us that build from source, it is an unneeded change to the default that we have to work around. I wouldn't have minded the change if the new behavior wasn't made the default. > Because it's not something I'd even notice - I've no idea what the > network device on this machine is called, because I've never needed to > know it, other than when I first set it up an age ago. What do you do > differently, that the new naming convention can annoy you so much? In LFS, the /etc/sysconfig/ifconfog.* files need to know the name of the interface. Usually the init-net-rules.sh script takes care of it, but in this thread there was a difference between what Fedora comes up with and what a current udev names the interface. It was painful for Alan to get things straight. -- Bruce -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page