Novell LINUX ENTERPRISE SERVER 10 SP2 - INSTALLATION AND ADMINISTRATION Installation Manual page 606

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getcfg. The output of getcfg delivers all information that can be used for describing
a device. Details regarding the specification of configuration names are available in the
manual page of getcfg.
With the described method, a network interface is configured with the correct configu-
ration even if the network devices are not always initialized in the same order. However,
the name of the interface still depends on the initialization sequence. There are two
ways to ensure reliable access to the interface of a certain network card:
• getcfg-interface configuration name returns the name of the asso-
ciated network interface. Therefore, the configuration name, such as firewall, dhcpd,
routing, or various virtual network interfaces (tunnels), can be entered in some
configuration files instead of the interface name, which is not persistent.
• Persistent interface names are assigned to each interface automatically. You may
adjust them to suit your needs. When creating interface names, proceed as outlined
in /etc/udev/rules.d/30-net_persistent_names.rules. However,
the persistent name pname should not be the same as the name that would automat-
ically be assigned by the kernel. Therefore, eth*, tr*, wlan*, qeth*, iucv*,
and so on are not permitted. Instead, use net* or descriptive names like
external, internal, or dmz. Make sure that the same interface name is not
used twice. Allowed characters in interface names are restricted to [a-zA-Z0-9].
A persistent name can only be assigned to an interface immediately after its regis-
tration, which means that the driver of the network card must be reloaded or
hwup device description must be executed. The command rcnetwork
restart is not sufficient for this purpose.
IMPORTANT: Using Persistent Interface Names
The use of persistent interface names has not been tested in all areas.
Therefore, some applications may not be able to handle freely selected
interface names.
ifup requires an existing interface, because it does not initialize the hardware. The
initialization of the hardware is handled by the command hwup (executed by hotplug
or coldplug). When a device is initialized, ifup is automatically executed for the
new interface via hotplug and the interface is set up if the start mode is onboot,
hotplug, or auto and the network service was started. Formerly, the command
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Installation and Administration

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