this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2024
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Small world thinking. Because you haven't seen the need for it doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Also, did you lose your CTRL, C, and V keys?
Yes, because everyone has need of this solution, and wants to have to copy and paste interface names every time they need to touch them, rather than having deterministic naming be an option to enable for those who actually need it...
You know Linux isn’t just used by nerdy kids cosplaying as Mr Robot, right?
You know Linux isn't just used by enterprise sysadmins, right?
And even speaking as an enterprise sysadmin myself, I've not had need or use for deterministic interface naming once in my career. I have no clue how common that is, but most of the servers, both physical and virtual, that I've worked on only had one Ethernet port connected.
I see the purpose of this, but don't see a reason why it should be the default, or why it couldn't have been implemented like HHD/SSD UUIDs where the old dev names were left intact for easy use outside of fstab and the like where consistency could become a problem
ETA: you also seemed to miss the part of my initial reply to you about it being something that can be enabled by those who need it... And if you're going to say that the enterprise professionals who need it shouldn't have to turn it on every time they spin up a system, I'll remind you that enterprise admins working at that level where they're setting up enough servers for that to be a hassle are probably using orchestration like Ansible, Chef, or Puppet, and can just add that into their configs once
TLDR
And I don't care, so whatever