On Wed, Jul 12, 2017 at 11:47 AM, Michael Biebl <bi...@debian.org> wrote:

> Am 12.07.2017 um 17:35 schrieb Marc Haber:
> > My finger memory will still type tcpdump -i eth0 before the brain can
> > intervene ten years from now.
>
> thankfully tcpdump (and lots of other tools) have nice shell completion.
> tcpdump -i <TAB> works great her.
>
>
Agreed. However, I'd still rather deal with names like /dev/sda and eth0
than /dev/disk/by-id/ata-SanDisk_SSD_U100_252GB_122339300522 and en<blah>.

It is kind of like using people's first names as opposed to their Social
Security Number (in US) or other form of national identification. I know
when I can use the name Matt and I know who it refers to, even if another
Matt enters the room. I'm comfortable with eth0 being the name, even when
another interface appears.

I completely understand, and largely agree with, the need for persistent
naming - but I think we are selling ourselves and our users short by not
pressing harder for network interface aliases. It seems to be too useful of
a solution for this problem.

-m

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