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* net interface renaming issue (+fix?)
@ 2006-04-09 17:21 Thomas de Grenier de Latour
  2006-04-09 17:56 ` Sergey Vlasov
                   ` (7 more replies)
  0 siblings, 8 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Thomas de Grenier de Latour @ 2006-04-09 17:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-hotplug

Hi,

I'm running Gentoo Linux, a 2.6.16-ck kernel, and udev-0.89-r2, and 
have had hard time with network interfaces renaming through udev 
rules. The first thing i've tried were rules like this one:

SUBSYSTEM="net", KERNEL="eth*", SYSFS{address}="00:0d:60:12:75:0a", NAME="lan"

Plus this one from the standard early rules:

ACTION="add", SUBSYSTEM="net", WAIT_FOR_SYSFS="address"

It doesn't work when i "modprobe e1000" (my ethernet driver):
...
udevd[21612]: udev_event_run: seq 956 forked, pid [21816], 'add' 'net', 0 seconds old
udevd-event[21816]: wait_for_sysfs: file '/sys/class/net/eth0/address' appeared after 0 loops
udevd-event[21816]: udev_rules_get_name: no node name set, will use kernel name 'eth0'
...
But if i later do a "echo add > /sys/class/net/eth0/uevent", then 
interface is properly renamed. It also works fine if i start with
the module initialy not loaded, and then trigger the uevent on the
corresponding pci device (will load the module, etc.)


Then i've tried replacing the address match by DRIVER="e1000", with
no more success.  But i've  noticed something interesting in debug 
output, when the rule matcher walks up in parent devices to check 
the driver:
% grep -i driver /var/tmp/udev-net-debug.log
...
udevd-event[18411]: match_key: key DRIVER value='e1000'
udevd-event[18411]: match_key: match DRIVER 'e1000' <-> ''
udevd-event[18411]: match_key: DRIVER is false
udevd-event[18411]: sysfs_device_get: add to cache 'devpath=/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1e.0/0000:02:01.0', subsystem='pci', driver=''
udevd-event[18411]: match_key: key DRIVER value='e1000' 
udevd-event[18411]: match_key: match DRIVER 'e1000' <-> '' 
udevd-event[18411]: match_key: DRIVER is false
...
This is weird, because if i latter look in /sys, the "driver" links
are here. Which made me think it was a race, so i've added this rule:

ACTION="add", SUBSYSTEM="net", WAIT_FOR_SYSFS="device/driver"

And it fixed the problem:
...
udevd[21612]: udev_event_run: seq 950 forked, pid [21790], 'add' 'net', 0 seconds old
udevd-event[21790]: wait_for_sysfs: file '/sys/class/net/eth0/address' appeared after 0 loops
udevd-event[21790]: wait_for_sysfs: wait for '/sys/class/net/eth0/device/driver' for 20 mseconds
udevd-event[21790]: wait_for_sysfs: file '/sys/class/net/eth0/device/driver' appeared after 1 loops
udevd-event[21790]: udev_rules_get_name: rule applied, 'eth0' becomes 'lan'
udevd-event[21790]: rename_net_if: changing net interface name from 'eth0' to 'lan'
udevd-event[21790]: udev_add_device: renamed netif to 'lan'
...

It also fixes the problem with using a SYSFS{address} match btw.
With no such wait, i can see in debug that "address" is found in sysfs,
but with no value:
...
udevd-event[21977]: sysfs_attr_get_value: open '/class/net/eth0'/'address'
udevd-event[21977]: sysfs_attr_get_value: new uncached attribute '/sys/class/net/eth0/address'
udevd-event[21977]: sysfs_attr_get_value: add to cache '/sys/class/net/eth0/address'
udevd-event[21977]: sysfs_attr_get_value: open '/class/net/eth0'/'address'
...
Whereas with the wait-for-driver trick, i can see it read with a 
useful value:
...
udevd-event[21954]: sysfs_attr_get_value: open '/class/net/eth0'/'address'
udevd-event[21954]: sysfs_attr_get_value: new uncached attribute '/sys/class/net/eth0/address'
udevd-event[21954]: sysfs_attr_get_value: add to cache '/sys/class/net/eth0/address'
udevd-event[21954]: sysfs_attr_get_value: cache '/sys/class/net/eth0/address' with value '00:0d:60:12:75:0a'
...

So i wonder, maybe such a rule should be added to the standard early
ones? It should maybe use more checks though, to be sure there is
actually a driver to wait. Something like ENV{PHYSDEVPATH}="?*" 
and/or ENV{PHYSDEVDRIVER}="?*".

Btw, using ENV{PHYSDEVDRIVER}="e1000" in my renaming rule was working
fine, with no trick (this variables are correctly set, like 'udevmonitor 
--env' shows).


So, what do you think, does such a rule makes sense?
Or is "address" being added to sysfs with no useful value yet the real
issue, and my rule only an ugly workround?


Thanks,

-- 
TGL.


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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2006-04-13 11:10 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2006-04-09 17:21 net interface renaming issue (+fix?) Thomas de Grenier de Latour
2006-04-09 17:56 ` Sergey Vlasov
2006-04-09 18:00 ` Andrey Borzenkov
2006-04-09 19:28 ` Thomas de Grenier de Latour
2006-04-13  8:39 ` Marco d'Itri
2006-04-13  9:06 ` Thomas de Grenier de Latour
2006-04-13 10:29 ` Kay Sievers
2006-04-13 10:36 ` Marco d'Itri
2006-04-13 11:10 ` Kay Sievers

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