source: chapter07/network.xml@ 8eb4b13

6.2
Last change on this file since 8eb4b13 was 8eb4b13, checked in by Bruce Dubbs <bdubbs@…>, 18 years ago

Update discussion of network driver rules

git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/branches/6.2/BOOK@7711 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../general.ent">
5 %general-entities;
6]>
7
8<sect1 id="ch-scripts-network">
9 <?dbhtml filename="network.html"?>
10
11 <title>Configuring the network Script</title>
12
13 <indexterm zone="ch-scripts-network">
14 <primary sortas="d-network">network</primary>
15 <secondary>configuring</secondary></indexterm>
16
17 <para>This section only applies if a network card is to be
18 configured.</para>
19
20 <para>If a network card will not be used, there is likely no need to
21 create any configuration files relating to network cards. If that is
22 the case, remove the <filename class="symlink">network</filename>
23 symlinks from all run-level directories (<filename
24 class="directory">/etc/rc.d/rc*.d</filename>).</para>
25
26 <sect2>
27 <title>Creating stable names for network interfaces</title>
28
29 <para>Instructions in this section are optional if you have only one
30 network card.</para>
31
32 <para>With Udev and modular network drivers, the network interface numbering
33 is not persistent across reboots by default, because the drivers are loaded
34 in parallel and, thus, in random order. For example, on a computer having
35 two network cards made by Intel and Realtek, the network card manufactured
36 by Intel may become <filename class="devicefile">eth0</filename> and the
37 Realtek card becomes <filename class="devicefile">eth1</filename>. In some
38 cases, after a reboot the cards get renumbered the other way around. To
39 avoid this, create Udev rules that assign stable names to network cards
40 based on their MAC addresses or bus positions.</para>
41
42 <para>If you are going to use MAC addresses to identify your network
43 cards, find the addresses with the following command:</para>
44
45<screen role="nodump"><userinput>grep -H . /sys/class/net/*/address</userinput></screen>
46
47 <para>For each network card (but not for the loopback interface),
48 invent a descriptive name, such as <quote>realtek</quote>, and create
49 Udev rules similar to the following:</para>
50
51<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/udev/rules.d/26-network.rules &lt;&lt; "EOF"
52<literal>ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="net", SYSFS{address}=="<replaceable>00:e0:4c:12:34:56</replaceable>", NAME="<replaceable>realtek</replaceable>"
53ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="net", SYSFS{address}=="<replaceable>00:a0:c9:78:9a:bc</replaceable>", NAME="<replaceable>intel</replaceable>"</literal>
54EOF</userinput></screen>
55
56<!-- Yes, I know that VLANs are beyond BLFS. This is not the reason to get them
57 incorrect by default when every distro does this right. -->
58
59 <para>If you are going to use the bus position as a key, create
60 Udev rules similar to the following:</para>
61
62<screen role="nodump"><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/udev/rules.d/26-network.rules &lt;&lt; "EOF"
63<literal>ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="net", BUS=="<replaceable>pci</replaceable>", ID=="<replaceable>0000:00:0c.0</replaceable>", NAME="<replaceable>realtek</replaceable>"
64ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="net", BUS=="<replaceable>pci</replaceable>", ID=="<replaceable>0000:00:0d.0</replaceable>", NAME="<replaceable>intel</replaceable>"</literal>
65EOF</userinput></screen>
66
67 <para>These rules will always rename the network cards to
68 <quote>realtek</quote> and <quote>intel</quote>, independently
69 of the original numbering provided by the kernel (i.e.: the original
70 <quote>eth0</quote> and <quote>eth1</quote> interfaces will no longer
71 exist, unless you put such <quote>descriptive</quote> names in the NAME
72 key). Use the descriptive names from the Udev rules instead
73 of <quote>eth0</quote> in the network interface configuration files
74 below.</para>
75
76 <para>Note that the rules above don't work for every setup. For example,
77 MAC-based rules break when bridges or VLANs are used, because bridges and
78 VLANs have the same MAC address as the network card. One wants to rename
79 only the network card interface, not the bridge or VLAN interface, but the
80 example rule matches both. If you use such virtual interfaces, you have two
81 potential solutions. One is to add the DRIVER=="?*" key after
82 SUBSYSTEM=="net" in MAC-based rules which will stop matching the virtual
83 interfaces. This is known to fail with some older Ethernet cards because
84 they don't have the DRIVER variable in the uevent and thus the rule does
85 not match with such cards. Another solution is to switch to rules that use
86 the bus position as a key.</para>
87
88 <para>The second known non-working case is with wireless cards using the
89 MadWifi or HostAP drivers, because they create at least two interfaces
90 with the same MAC address and bus position. For example, the Madwifi driver
91 creates both an athX and a wifiX interface where X is a digit. To
92 disambiguate these cases, add SYSFS{type}=="zzz" after SUBSYSTEM=="net" for
93 each interface that is handled by that driver, where zzz is the output of
94 <userinput>cat /sys/class/net/&lt;interface_name&gt;/type</userinput>.</para>
95
96 <para>There may be other cases where the rules above don't work. Currently,
97 bugs on this topic are still being reported to Linux distributions, and no
98 solution that covers every case is available.</para>
99
100 </sect2>
101
102 <sect2>
103 <title>Creating Network Interface Configuration Files</title>
104
105 <para>Which interfaces are brought up and down by the network script
106 depends on the files and directories in the <filename
107 class="directory">/etc/sysconfig/network-devices</filename> hierarchy.
108 This directory should contain a sub-directory for each interface to be
109 configured, such as <filename>ifconfig.xyz</filename>, where
110 <quote>xyz</quote> is a network interface name. Inside this directory
111 would be files defining the attributes to this interface, such as its IP
112 address(es), subnet masks, and so forth.</para>
113
114 <para>The following command creates a sample <filename>ipv4</filename>
115 file for the <emphasis>eth0</emphasis> device:</para>
116
117<screen><userinput>cd /etc/sysconfig/network-devices &amp;&amp;
118mkdir -v ifconfig.eth0 &amp;&amp;
119cat &gt; ifconfig.eth0/ipv4 &lt;&lt; "EOF"
120<literal>ONBOOT=yes
121SERVICE=ipv4-static
122IP=192.168.1.1
123GATEWAY=192.168.1.2
124PREFIX=24
125BROADCAST=192.168.1.255</literal>
126EOF</userinput></screen>
127
128 <para>The values of these variables must be changed in every file to match
129 the proper setup. If the <envar>ONBOOT</envar> variable is set to
130 <quote>yes</quote> the network script will bring up the Network Interface
131 Card (NIC) during booting of the system. If set to anything but
132 <quote>yes</quote> the NIC will be ignored by the network script and not
133 be brought up.</para>
134
135 <para>The <envar>SERVICE</envar> variable defines the method used for
136 obtaining the IP address. The LFS-Bootscripts package has a modular IP
137 assignment format, and creating additional files in the <filename
138 class="directory">/etc/sysconfig/network-devices/services</filename>
139 directory allows other IP assignment methods. This is commonly used for
140 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), which is addressed in the
141 BLFS book.</para>
142
143 <para>The <envar>GATEWAY</envar> variable should contain the default
144 gateway IP address, if one is present. If not, then comment out the
145 variable entirely.</para>
146
147 <para>The <envar>PREFIX</envar> variable needs to contain the number of
148 bits used in the subnet. Each octet in an IP address is 8 bits. If the
149 subnet's netmask is 255.255.255.0, then it is using the first three octets
150 (24 bits) to specify the network number. If the netmask is 255.255.255.240,
151 it would be using the first 28 bits. Prefixes longer than 24 bits are
152 commonly used by DSL and cable-based Internet Service Providers (ISPs).
153 In this example (PREFIX=24), the netmask is 255.255.255.0. Adjust the
154 <envar>PREFIX</envar> variable according to your specific subnet.</para>
155
156 </sect2>
157
158 <sect2 id="resolv.conf">
159 <title>Creating the /etc/resolv.conf File</title>
160
161 <indexterm zone="resolv.conf">
162 <primary sortas="e-/etc/resolv.conf">/etc/resolv.conf</primary>
163 </indexterm>
164
165 <para>If the system is going to be connected to the Internet, it will
166 need some means of Domain Name Service (DNS) name resolution to
167 resolve Internet domain names to IP addresses, and vice versa. This is
168 best achieved by placing the IP address of the DNS server, available
169 from the ISP or network administrator, into
170 <filename>/etc/resolv.conf</filename>. Create the file by running the
171 following:</para>
172
173<screen><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/resolv.conf &lt;&lt; "EOF"
174<literal># Begin /etc/resolv.conf
175
176domain {<replaceable>&lt;Your Domain Name&gt;</replaceable>}
177nameserver <replaceable>&lt;IP address of your primary nameserver&gt;</replaceable>
178nameserver <replaceable>&lt;IP address of your secondary nameserver&gt;</replaceable>
179
180# End /etc/resolv.conf</literal>
181EOF</userinput></screen>
182
183 <para>Replace <replaceable>&lt;IP address of the nameserver&gt;</replaceable>
184 with the IP address of the DNS most appropriate for the setup. There will
185 often be more than one entry (requirements demand secondary servers for
186 fallback capability). If you only need or want one DNS server, remove the
187 second <emphasis>nameserver</emphasis> line from the file. The IP address
188 may also be a router on the local network.</para>
189
190 </sect2>
191
192</sect1>
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