On Mon, 2016-10-24 at 17:35 +0200, Viktor S. Wold Eide wrote: > Hi, > > I have several wwan usb modems connected to a single PC. Currently, > the PC > is running Ubuntu 16.10 which comes with network-manager-1.2.4. I > would > like to have a network interface configuration where all modems get > up and > running at all times, each with an IP address and a default route. > Each > wwan modem has a sim card, which requires specific apn and pin > settings. > > What is the recommended way to configure these wwan modems in a > persistent > way? > > > In contrast to other network interfaces, such as wired Ethernet and > wlan, > NetworkManager reports the cdc-wdmX device (cdc-wdm0, cdc-wdm1, cdc- > wdm2, > etc.), that is the control port for each wwan modem. The cdc device > is > dynamically associated to the modems, so that depending on which > modem is > plugged into the computer and in which order, cdc-wdm0 for example > can > refer to any of the modems. > > I have looked at the different settings available via "nmcli > connection > edit ...". The setting "connection.interface-name" seems to work only > when > the cdc device interface is specified, but as already mentioned that > may > change and hence can not be used directly. > > I have made a NetworkManager connection configuration for each wwan > modem > and been able to associate each specific connection to a specific > wwan > modem by using the setting "gsm.deivce-id", but I was wondering if > this is > the recommended way or if there are any better alternatives?
This is the recommended way. The Device ID is meant to be a unique device identifier using information reported by the WWAN device firmware including the IMEI. As you've discovered, the kernel does not assign persistent device names (for various legitimate reasons) and many manufacturers don't assign unique USB serial numbers to devices, so you can't use udev rules to assign a specific name to the device either. But Device ID is what you want, since it is computed after discovering and talking to the modem to get the information needed to ensure uniqueness. There's also the SIM identifier property (based on a hash of the IMSI) that you can use if don't care what device the SIM is in, but still want to tie a connection to a specific SIM/provider. Dan > I could not see that this has been answered earlier, but I might have > overlooked something. > > > Best regards > Viktor S. Wold Eide > _______________________________________________ > networkmanager-list mailing list > [email protected] > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list _______________________________________________ networkmanager-list mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
