I just remembered:

> I vaguely recall that a system swapped eth0 and eth1 when replacing a
> 2.0.x kernel with a 2.2.x kernel (or 2.4 to 2.6, or something like
> that).  Which didn't surprise me much, and is why God made rc files
> editable.
> 
> And ifrename is cool.

I've encountered _zero_ instances of network interfaces changing their
device nodes on RHEL/CentOS, under any circumstances, for the simple
reason of DEVICE and HWADDR directives being used in the default
/etc/sysconfig/networking/devices/ifcfg-* files.

DEVICE=eth0
HWADDR=11:22:33:44:55:66

Which can optionally be used to assign devices names of your choosing
such as 'lan' and 'wan'.

I guess the 'network interfaces have come up in a different order' scenario
seems to be primarily a Debian/*buntu, etc. one (that has never arisen
in my use-cases), and mostly involves USB (and other equally flaky
hotplug hardware schemes).

Did I mention that ifrename is cool?  ;->

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