Hard to say at the moment. The machine is on 24/7 and is serving a
rather large company. I might be able to try to shut it down for
sometime late Friday. But can't promise anything. If I do should expect
the mainline kernel NOT to change the interfaces names ?
--
You received this bug notificatio
Additional bump - on kernel version 67 now and the issue still exists.
Every time a new kernel installs, after a reboot the network interface
names are changed (mostly digits inside the enP--->p5s3 mask in my case)
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kernel
Packages,
I am not sure anyone is actually looking into it. Updating to kernel version 64
resulted it system assigning yet another new name for the interfaces, which in
turn screwed up the networking. In my case, as I was ready for that, I just
listed what the system now called the interfaces, edited the
Sorry for a long time to answer and no logs. We've been testing the
problem on irc channel. It turns out that the new kernel assigns new
names to the network interfaces i.e. the original name (in kernel 62)
was enP3168p5s3 and the new kernel assigned the same card and the same
interface a new name
Public bug reported:
After upgrading to a new kernel (4.4.0-63-powerpc64-smp) completely lost
ethernet. Looks like the kernel doesn't load a module for my interface
(driver r8169). Rolling back to previous kernel version fixes
networking.
** Affects: linux (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
5 matches
Mail list logo