MESSAGE
DATE | 2021-09-01 |
FROM | Colin S
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SUBJECT | Re: [Hangout - NYLXS] [artix-general] New udev creates eth0,
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I encountered exactly the same problem as Epektasis as a result of this recent upgrade to udev.
This new version no longer has the following rule as part of its default ruleset in /usr/lib/udev/rules.d
$ cat 80-net-name-slot.rules # do not edit this file, it will be overwritten on update
ACTION!="add", GOTO="net_name_slot_end" SUBSYSTEM!="net", GOTO="net_name_slot_end" NAME!="", GOTO="net_name_slot_end"
IMPORT{cmdline}="net.ifnames" ENV{net.ifnames}=="0", GOTO="net_name_slot_end"
NAME=="", ENV{ID_NET_NAME_ONBOARD}!="", NAME="$env{ID_NET_NAME_ONBOARD}" NAME=="", ENV{ID_NET_NAME_SLOT}!="", NAME="$env{ID_NET_NAME_SLOT}" NAME=="", ENV{ID_NET_NAME_PATH}!="", NAME="$env{ID_NET_NAME_PATH}"
LABEL="net_name_slot_end"
Adding this rule back to /etc/udev/rules.d restores the previous behaviour.
However I speculate that the Artix package maintainer may have removed it because the persistent interface naming scheme that it implemented is a construct devised (and imposed) by the systemd developers rather than the default kernel behaviour. The whole point of Artix is after all to expunge such idiosyncrasies.
So I concluded that it was probably better/simpler just to accept the change and go back to having eth0 and wlan0, which is actually entirely sufficient for most normal use.
Colin
On 01/09/2021 22:15, Javier wrote: > On 9/1/21 14:34, epektasis wrote: >> Greetings. Since the surprise "upgrade" to udev (now 249.4-1), the >> ethernet >> interface is now named eth0 and an error is displayed at boot-up: >> interface >> enp1s0 does not exist and net.enp1s0 failed to start. But eth0 starts >> and >> runs fine, even though conf.d/net specifices config_enp1s0="dhcp" and >> there >> are no active references to eth0 in that file. I added net.ifnames=1 and >> biosdevname=1 to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX in /etc/default/grub, ran >> grub-mkconfig >> and rebooted, but the same error recurs. Perhaps there is some other >> file >> accessed instead of /etc/conf.d/net that udev uses? If anyone can >> point me to >> that file or its documentation, I will be grateful. >> e. > > What I've been using for my choice of persistent NIC names is udev rules > [1], for quite a while, which kept working fine: > > % cat /etc/udev/rules.d/80-net-setup-link-persistent.rules > SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", ATTR{address}=="", > NAME="" > SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", > ATTR{address}=="", NAME="" > > That makes the NIC interfaces names more or less independent and > persistent... BTW, I didn't notice any errors while booting, after the > change... Perhaps the error is HW dependent, :( On dmesg one can > notice how the NICs get renamed, if at all. > > If you're using specific NIC names for daemons, like dhcpcd or network > manager, perhaps you should consider using persistent custom names? > > -- artix-general mailing list artix-general-at-artixlinux.org https://lists.artixlinux.org/listinfo/artix-general _______________________________________________ Hangout mailing list Hangout-at-nylxs.com http://lists.mrbrklyn.com/mailman/listinfo/hangout
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