Oh, it's not hardware vendor you would need to detect: it's the individual 
hardware Model!  You should be able to get that sort of stuff with  dmidecode 
though.


http://linux.dell.com/files/whitepapers/consistent_network_device_naming_in_linux.pdf
 lists the models and also tells you how to turn it off, which will be helpful 
in the short term.



Is there a Thing like list-harddrives available yet to help kickstarters work 
out what their network card is called - or which is the Ethernet and which the 
Wireless?  Or any tips for people wanting to do it the New Way?



Moray.
"To err is human; to purr, feline."

From: Cole, Jim [mailto:jim.c...@mckesson.com]
Sent: 30 January 2012 16:46
To: Discussion list about Kickstart
Subject: RE: Keeping up with the changes

Is this applicable for all HW vendors with RHEL 6u2 or just Dell? If you work 
with a variety of vendors like I do..thats a concern. I don't want to try to 
deal with determining the vendor during the kickstart.

Thanks!
Jim Cole
Senior Technical Engineer
McKesson Provider Technologies
jim.c...@mckesson.com<mailto:jim.c...@mckesson.com>
Office: (515) 619-9820
Live Meeting URL:  
Here<https://www.livemeeting.com/cc/mckesson/join?id=MW4ZK6&role=attend&pw=MeetJim>
Conference #: (877) 684-9625 Participant code: 732158

From: kickstart-list-boun...@redhat.com 
[mailto:kickstart-list-boun...@redhat.com] On Behalf Of Kaj Niemi
Sent: Monday, January 30, 2012 10:27 AM
To: Discussion list about Kickstart
Subject: Re: Keeping up with the changes

I believe this is mentioned at least by:

- Dell in their release notes for each platform
- Dell PowerEdge blogs, Meaningful names for network devices in RHEL 6.1 on 
Dell systems 
...<http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=site:dell.com+redhat+em1&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CCIQFjAA&url=http://en.community.dell.com/techcenter/b/techcenter/archive/2011/05/26/meaningful-names-for-network-devices-in-rhel-6-sp1-on-dell-systems.aspx&ei=MsQmT_vzBeWL4gT21sz6DA&usg=AFQjCNGST4KB4s2ar2GSzlSTA_5_coEGzQ>
- Dell OS And Application notes, 
http://en.community.dell.com/techcenter/os-applications/w/wiki/red-hat.aspx
- Dell whitepapers, 
http://linux.dell.com/files/whitepapers/consistent_network_device_naming_in_linux.pdf
- RedHat in their technical notes for RHEL 6u1 and 6u2 (pages 7, 189)

etc.

>From my POV there wasn't much to change and now the name of the interface 
>(em1) corresponds to interface labeled Gb1 on the back of the server.




Kaj

On Jan 30, 2012, at 10:37, Moray Henderson wrote:

From: Kaj Niemi [mailto:kaj...@a51.org]<mailto:[mailto:kaj...@a51.org]>
Sent: 29 January 2012 01:40
You did not mention which rhel version you are using but interfaces on dells in 
rhel 6.1 will show up as em1, em2, etc. by default instead of eth0, eth1. Both 
dell and redhat mention it in their docs.

Pretty soon I'm going to have to start updating the software I develop and 
maintain for RHEL 6.  Apparently, I'm going to have to rewrite the entire set 
of perfectly-working network code because many (but not all) of my customers 
use Dells.  What's the best place to keep up with changes like this - to learn 
not just what they are, but the reasons for them and the lists of exactly what 
hardware combinations produce which responses in the OS?


Moray.
"To err is human; to purr, feline."
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