On Sun, 14 Aug 2005 17:19:29 +0200, you wrote:
[I *do* read the list, therefore additional private mail is unnecessary and unwanted]
Michael W Cocke <cocke@catherders.com> [13 Aug 2005 11:35:28 -0400]:
That's a matter of opinion - I call it a bug, and a huge one.
Where is the bug? It has always been so that the kernel assigns network device names in the order that the devices appear. Before we used hotplugging for network devices, you could influence that by loading the drivers in a fixed order, but that didn't help you if you had multiple network cards of the same type.
Just because it's always been possible to screw it up doesn't mean it's not a bug. Interface #1 should always be interface #1. Just for example, allowing the internal and external network interfaces to exchange places randomly on a firewall is either a major security hole or a networking failure looking for a place to happen - depending on your point of view. And pointing out how easy it is to work around just shows that it would have been very simple to correct the bug. Mike- -- Mornings: Evolution in action. Only the grumpy will survive. -- Please note - Due to the intense volume of spam, we have installed site-wide spam filters at catherders.com. If email from you bounces, try non-HTML, non-encoded, non-attachments.