ifrename − rename network interfaces based on various static criteria
ifrename [-c
configfile] [-p] [-d] [-u] [-v] [-V] [-D] [-C]
ifrename [-c configfile] [-i interface] [-n newname]
Ifrename is a tool allowing you to assign a consistent name to each of your network interface.
By default, interface names are dynamic, and each network interface is assigned the first available name (eth0, eth1...). The order network interfaces are created may vary. For built-in interfaces, the kernel boot time enumeration may vary. For removable interface, the user may plug them in any order.
Ifrename allow the user to decide what name a network interface will have. Ifrename can use a variety of selectors to specify how interface names match the network interfaces on the system, the most common selector is the interface MAC address.
Ifrename must be run before interfaces are brought up, which is why it’s mostly useful in various scripts (init, hotplug) but is seldom used directly by the user. By default, ifrename renames all present system interfaces using mappings defined in /etc/iftab.
-c configfile
Set the configuration file to
be used (by default /etc/iftab). The configuration
file define the mapping between selectors and interface
names, and is described in iftab(5).
If configfile is "-", the configuration is
read from stdin.
-p |
Probe (load) kernel modules before renaming interfaces. By default ifrename only check interfaces already loaded, and doesn’t auto-load the required kernel modules. This option enables smooth integration with system not loading modules before calling ifrename. | ||
-d |
Enable various Debian specific hacks. Combined with -p, only modules for interfaces specified in /etc/network/interface are loaded. |
-i interface
Only rename the specified interface as opposed to all interfaces on the system. The new interface name is printed.
-n newname
When used with -i,
specify the new name of the interface. The list of mappings
from the configuration file is bypassed, the interface
specified with -i is renamed directly to
newname. The new name may be a wildcard containing a
single ’*’.
When used without -i, rename interfaces by using only
mappings that would rename them to newname. The new
name may not be a wildcard. This use of ifrename is
discouraged, because inefficient (-n without
-i). All the interfaces of the system need to be
processed at each invocation, therefore in most case it is
not faster than just letting ifrename renaming all of them
(without both -n and -i).
-t |
Enable name takeover support. This allow interface name swapping between two or more interfaces. |
Takeover enable an interface to
’steal’ the name of another interface. This
works only with kernel 2.6.X and if the other interface is
down. Consequently, this is not compatible with Hotplug. The
other interface is assigned a random name, but may be
renamed later with ’ifrename’.
The number of takeovers is limited to avoid circular loops,
and therefore some complex multi-way name swapping
situations may not be fully processed.
In any case, name swapping and the use of this feature is
discouraged, and you are invited to choose unique and
unambiguous names for your interfaces...
-u |
Enable udev output mode. This enables proper integration of ifrename in the udev framework, udevd(8) will use ifrename to assign interface names present in /etc/iftab. In this mode the output of ifrename can be parsed directly by udevd(8) as an IMPORT action. This requires udev version 107 or later. | ||
-D |
Dry-run mode. Ifrename won’t change any interface, it will only print new interface name, if applicable, and return. |
In dry-run mode, interface name
wildcards are not resolved. New interface name is printed,
even if it is the same as the old name.
Be also aware that some selectors can only be read by root,
for example those based on ethtool), and will fail
silently if run by a normal user. In other words, dry-run
mode under a standard user may not give the expected
result.
-V |
Verbose mode. Ifrename will display internal results of parsing its configuration file and querying the interfaces selectors. Combined with the dry-run option, this is a good way to debug complex configurations or trivial problems. | ||
-C |
Count matching interfaces. Display the number of interface matched, and return it as the exit status of ifrename. |
The number of interfaces matched is the number of interface on the system for which a mapping was found in the config file (which is different from the number of interface renamed).
Jean Tourrilhes − jt@hpl.hp.com
/etc/iftab
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