On Sat, Aug 11, 2012 at 11:56 AM, Leonid Isaev <lisaev@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi, > > While building an Arch-based wireless router I ran into a problem of > persistent NIC naming. To differentiate which interfaces go to WAN and LAN, > I have created a simple udev rule like this > /etc/udev/rules.d/10-network.rules > # On-board NIC (Realtek, r8169) > SUBSYSTEM=="net", ATTR{address}==mac, NAME="wan" > # USB ethernet adapter (Asix) > SUBSYSTEM=="net", ATTR{address}==mac, NAME="elan0" > # PCI card (dlink dwa-552, ath9k) > SUBSYSTEM=="net", ATTR{address}==mac, NAME="wap" > > These work OK until hostapd starts. It creates a bridge br0=(wap) and also a > "mon.wap" interface. Both new interfaces share the same mac address as "wap" > which confuses udev, as it tries to rename them as well and fails. > Matching parent devices is not enough because "wap" and "mon.wap" have > the same parent. However, ATTR{flags} is different for the two (at the device > level). What does this attribute mean and is it a good idea to use it in a > ruleset? I think those are standard if flags as defined in /usr/include/linux/if.h. Probably not a good idea to use I think.