Normally these devices come up in the same order each time.
It is not gauranteed, unfortunately, because device bring up can
race against other devices. I've seen it be non-deterministic.
me, too. especially, if you plug in another nic on pci between 2
other nics. this is really confusing
[EMAIL PROTECTED]@mgEDV.net wrote:
me, too. especially, if you plug in another nic on pci between 2
other nics. this is really confusing the box. also take care for
your bios interrupt settings - if you have a lot of traffic, it
sometimes can be smart to put all the nics on the same interrupt.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]@mgEDV.net wrote:
[you edited out discussion of *USB* devices]
Normally these devices come up in the same order each time.
It is not gauranteed, unfortunately, because device bring up can
race against other devices. I've seen it be non-deterministic.
me, too. especially,
Greetings,
I've been running a Debian based firewall for a number of years and have
a need to update the hardware, so have decided to change the OS over to
OpenBSD at the same time.
The box has 4 NICs(identical make/model) and by using 'ifrename' I'm
able to specify which NICs are assigned
On Tue, 09 May 2006 19:52:10 -0400 Dave Crawford [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
or another viable solution.
There's no solution because there's no problem. OpenBSD doesn't randomly
reorder interfaces for no reason.
Adam
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 08:14:06PM -0400, Adam wrote:
On Tue, 09 May 2006 19:52:10 -0400 Dave Crawford [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
or another viable solution.
There's no solution because there's no problem. OpenBSD doesn't randomly
reorder interfaces for no reason.
So the order in which
I've been running a Debian based firewall for a number of years and have
a need to update the hardware, so have decided to change the OS over to
OpenBSD at the same time.
The box has 4 NICs(identical make/model) and by using 'ifrename' I'm
able to specify which NICs are assigned each
There's no solution because there's no problem. OpenBSD doesn't randomly
reorder interfaces for no reason.
So the order in which the cards are detected is deterministic and never
changes? I'm not being a smartass, I really want to know.
We have worked very hard at this. On a particular
Darrin Chandler wrote:
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 08:14:06PM -0400, Adam wrote:
On Tue, 09 May 2006 19:52:10 -0400 Dave Crawford
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
or another viable solution.
There's no solution because there's no problem. OpenBSD
doesn't randomly
reorder interfaces for
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 08:03:41PM -0500, Tony Abernethy wrote:
Darrin Chandler wrote:
So the order in which the cards are detected is deterministic and never
changes? I'm not being a smartass, I really want to know.
Me, I just lurk here, but the impression I get is that
1) anywhere else
On Tue, May 09, 2006 at 06:46:54PM -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
So the order in which the cards are detected is deterministic and never
changes? I'm not being a smartass, I really want to know.
We have worked very hard at this. On a particular machine, yes, it should
be deterministic. On
There may be a race in usb for how devices respond, but I bet it is small
and not really that worrying. One day maybe someone can look at it.
Is there something to look for there? My limited experience with usb on
OpenBSD leads me to think every thing comes in with the same order by
On 5/9/06, Dave Crawford [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Greetings,
I've been running a Debian based firewall for a number of years and have
a need to update the hardware, so have decided to change the OS over to
OpenBSD at the same time.
The box has 4 NICs(identical make/model) and by using
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