Date: Tue, 02 Jun 2009 10:39:59 -0700 From: Sam Leffler <sam@freebsd.org> To: Matthew Seaman <m.seaman@infracaninophile.co.uk> Cc: Brooks Davis <brooks@freebsd.org>, freebsd-rc@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Removal of deprecation for network_interfaces != AUTO Message-ID: <4A2563EF.4050502@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <4A2560CB.4030307@infracaninophile.co.uk> References: <4A21A4F6.5060709@dougbarton.us> <20090601212506.GA2351@lor.one-eyed-alien.net> <4A24B99B.9050703@infracaninophile.co.uk> <20090602155403.GF14685@lor.one-eyed-alien.net> <4A254EFB.2020001@freebsd.org> <4A2560CB.4030307@infracaninophile.co.uk>
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Matthew Seaman wrote: > Sam Leffler wrote: >> Brooks Davis wrote: >>> On Tue, Jun 02, 2009 at 06:33:15AM +0100, Matthew Seaman wrote: >>> >>>> Brooks Davis wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>> I've never seen a valid use case, just failures to understand the >>>>> current system. >>>>> >>>> My laptop has iwi0 and bge0 interfaces. At work, both of these obtain >>>> addresses and default routes by DHCP, but from two completely >>>> different DHCP >>>> servers. When I'm plugged into the wired network I want the bge0 >>>> interface to >>>> be the default route, but iwi0 comes first in the list of >>>> interfaces produced >>>> by ifconfig, so it gets configured first and sets the route. Of >>>> course, when >>>> I'm not plugged into the wired network I want iwi0 to have the >>>> default route, >>>> so I can't just use dhclient.conf to disregard routing information >>>> on that >>>> interface. >>>> >>>> All in all, setting network_interfaces="bge0 iwi0 lo0" does exactly >>>> what I >>>> want with minimal effort. >>>> >>> >>> This is an interesting use case. This is certainly the easiest way >>> to do this in 7. FYI, it won't work by default in 8.0 because we >>> only run dhclient from devd so there is no ordering unless you set >>> synchronous_dhclient="YES". What I've been thinking here is that we >>> should have a way to tell dhclient which interface(s) to prefer for a >>> default route. I've been meaning to fix that for a while, but since >>> I've been using a cardbus wireless device, I've not needed to scratch >>> that itch. >>> >> Some people prefer to use lagg's failover handling to handle the >> wired-wireless switchover. > > How does that work if the two interfaces are in entirely different > networks? > Can you trigger an arbitrary action (such as modifying the routing table) > when a lagg interface fails over? Sorry, didn't read your note well enough. I don't think lagg is applicable to your setup. Sam
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