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Message-ID: <20090324174514.GA22700@auslistsprd01.us.dell.com>
Date: Tue, 24 Mar 2009 12:45:14 -0500
From: Matt Domsch <Matt_Domsch@...l.com>
To: "Karl O. Pinc" <kop@...e.com>
Cc: netdev@...r.kernel.org, linux-hotplug@...r.kernel.org,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Network Device Naming mechanism and policy
On Tue, Mar 24, 2009 at 11:42:57AM -0500, Karl O. Pinc wrote:
> My thoughts on the subject; from someone who is not
> particularly qualified to have opinions.
>
> Reading over your post, I searched for a single sentence describing
> the problem you're trying to solve. What I came up with was
> this:
>
> On 03/24/2009 10:46:17 AM, Matt Domsch wrote:
>
> > Users continue to have to figure out, for each system type
> >and
> >potentially for each boot, which NIC is connected to which name. This
> >has been the #1 customer complaint about Linux on Dell servers for
> >several years. I'd prefer not to keep it this way.
yeah, that's pretty much it.
> Perhaps a little magic in the udev rule that creates the
> z70_persistent-net-rules file would solve the basic problem.
> It could sort the nics by mac address when creating the
> names. It need only run when the z70 file does not exist.
> I presume this would produce consistent results in most cases
> and it feels technically feasible; although I am not
> fully qualified to make that judgment.
>
> Rather that put the onus on udev to make the above
> change Dell could just run a little program at first
> boot that mungs the z70 file as desired. (It could then
> force a reboot; I forget if this would be needed.)
> I imagine Dell boots the boxes once at the factory,
nearly all dell systems running linux in the world were not
factory-installed with that os. this isn't something i can simply
patch in our factories. it needs to be fixed as far upstream as
possible.
> but if not then the user has to suffer with a longer
> boot process at first boot. because this is driven
> by dell, dell would know exactly what nic has what
> name. and dell knows what nics are on the mobo and
> what are not, and so can control the mac address sort
> order as desired.
well, there is no "mac address sort" anywhere. (nor is that really a
good algorithm to use).
> The other solution that screams out at me is to ditch
> those legacy BIOSes and go to something like LinuxBIOS.
> Again, I'm not really qualified, but it sure feels like
> there's an answer in this approach.
It's not a BIOS problem. BIOS can inform the OS of what it thinks
about hardware location, names, etc. And our PowerEdge (9G and newer)
servers do - using SMBIOS 2.6 standard features we added (types 9, 10,
and 41) to the specification - exactly to allow such. Now something
needs to use that information. That something today is biosdevname,
which could be more cleanly integrated with udev.
> The other point that struck me was that sometimes, it seems,
> users want persistence in the naming of their network devices
> and sometimes they want device names based on bus position.
indeed
> The sucky thing is that symlinks and nics don't mix well
> and so it seems impossible to satisfy both the above
> requirements at the same time. This is an area that
> IMHO could be better addressed by the Linux community.
correct.
--
Matt Domsch
Linux Technology Strategist, Dell Office of the CTO
linux.dell.com & www.dell.com/linux
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