Reindl Harald schreef op 12-04-16 14:02:
> Am 12.04.2016 um 14:00 schrieb Xen: >> Martin Pitt schreef op 12-04-16 12:57: >>> Xen [2016-04-12 3:37 +0200]: >>>> The trick to turn it off on the website doesn't work: >>>> >>>> ln -s /dev/null /etc/udev/rules.d/80-net-setup-link.rules >>> >>> It does (at least on Debian, Ubuntu, and Fedora), but you need to >>> rebuild your initrd after doing this. >> >> Alright, thanks. That isn't listed on the website. Sorry > > the right way in doubt is to boot with following kernel params which i > mentioned for sure in that thread and so don't get why "how to disable" > ist still a topic (yes, they disable both of the 'predictable' pieces) > > net.ifnames=0 biosdevname=0 You don't have to be so nasty you know. There is no right way to do anything. I prefer not to touch my kernel (boot) configuration for whatever reason I might have for that. I'm not sure what happens if I could not depend on the current "grub" installation. Or what happens if I need to boot from some other place. I prefer for the system to be stable regardless of the boot loader. For instance, you can imagine (re)booting into the current system using kexec. I know I am making an ass of myself. But that is stuff I do. Or could want to do if it actually worked for me. Dependency on a boot loader that is in itself one of the most unreliable pieces of software I have ever come across, is not really my favourite thing I must say. I'm sorry if that sounds off. I just wanted an on-disk configuration that is based on the system and not on the bootloader, and it was possible before, and I didn't realize why it was not possible now. Editing /etc/default/grub is not really, you know. On one occasion I have had a system where I could not use update-grub because it didn't work, and I maintained a custom grub.cfg. Easy enough to edit that as well, but Grub is not my piece of cake. I'm sorry if that makes me sound like some idiot loser. I try to reduce dependencies in my systems on stuff I find to be unreliable. So if I can do this using some on-disk configuration file (or even a symlink) that's better for me. Yes and I KNOW /etc/default/grub is also on-disk. Don't mince words here, I mean, a regular config file. That ideally gets used immediately, but whatever. I just want to thank Martin Pitt for not being an ass about it (that I might be myself, I don't know). _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@lists.freedesktop.org https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel