Difference between revisions of "Consistent Network Device Naming"
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RHCSA & RHCE Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7: Training and Exam Preparation Guide (EX200 and EX300), Third Edition Paperback – 27 Mar 2015
by Asghar Ghori
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
* <code>ens#</code> | * <code>ens#</code> | ||
+ | * [[eth]] | ||
Examples: | Examples: |
Revision as of 06:42, 17 August 2020
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consistent_Network_Device_Naming
ens#
- eth
Examples:
ens3f0
ens3f1
Device naming rules
- Onboard interfaces at firmware index numbers eno[1-N]
- Interfaces at PCI Express hotplug slot numbers ens[1-N]
- Adapters in the specified PCI slot, with slot index number on the adapter <templatestyles src="Mono/styles.css" />enp<PCI slot>s<card index no>
- If firmware information is invalid or rules are disabled, use traditional <templatestyles src="Mono/styles.css" />eth[0-N][1]
Related terms
See also
- KVM networking, virsh net, MacVTap, Macvtap logs, virtio,
trustGuestRxFilters
- Linux Kernel: namespaces, Cgroups, OOM, proc, Linux Kernel changelog,
sysctl, userfaultfd
, Grub, ENOSPC, ENOMEM, DKMS, syscall, Transparent huge pages, smatch, sysfs, vm.swappiness, CFS, Runlevel, Jens Axboe, Consistent Network Device Naming, Initial ramdisk (initrd),modprobe
, MTD, Linux Kernel vulnerabilities,/sys/kernel/
, KernelCare,unix://
, Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK)
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