Yes, specially if you could name a device (via whatever means) by say... --device=eth0 --macaddr=... I can understand for most that this is not a very useful feature, but in our setup, all eth0 are the first onboard and are the public interface, all eth1s are the second onboard interface and are private. Unfortunately insering a network card pre-build changes those ones to eth2 and eth3. Nima On 9/11/06 2:55 AM, "Jeremy Katz" <katzj@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, 2006-11-08 at 15:28 +1100, Nima Talebi wrote: >> I needed to make this change, and perhapse other will too at some stage... >> I'd like to refer to a device via its MAC address, and not the device name >> (eg eth0, eth1) that the OS gives it. This is specially useful where adding >> a new network card pre-build results in the would-be eth0 and eth1 to become >> eth2 and eth3, and the added in card to take over eth0 and eth1. > > For kickstart? If so, it's probably cleaner to add network --macaddr > support. > > Jeremy > > _______________________________________________ > Anaconda-devel-list mailing list > Anaconda-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/anaconda-devel-list ********************************************************************** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. **********************************************************************