Ya well, its not something I'm particularly proud about ...
Stupid question for someone running Linux ... is this standard behaviour that I've been lucky never to hit before, or is this something that Linux deals with slightly more intelligently?
Well in linux you would do something like this:
ifconfig <dev>
If you want an alias it is:
ifconfig <dev>:<alias>
If you don't specify a parameter such as up it will just display the current config.
If there is no current config it just display the default.
So in short, no Linux will not do what you ran into. At least not in the same manner.
On any init.d based Linux system (gentoo, redhat, suse) the only thing I have found
really annoying is that it doesn't confirm for the following:
/etc/init.d/network stop
I have more than once, really late at night typed that command when meaning to be
/etc/init.d/sendmail stop
Sincerely,
Joshua D. Drake
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