Date: Fri, 24 Aug 2018 12:43:17 +0200 From: Kajetan Staszkiewicz <vegeta@tuxpowered.net> To: "Patrick M. Hausen" <hausen@punkt.de> Cc: net@freebsd.org Subject: Re: sysctl for carp and pfsync on boot Message-ID: <6093770.EXnXsF7aq0@energia> In-Reply-To: <D3C98FAD-EFE4-4708-B9E0-BAE04828555E@punkt.de> References: <34887302.jQ4kTzBLMc@energia> <D3C98FAD-EFE4-4708-B9E0-BAE04828555E@punkt.de>
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--nextPart2374728.ioGsrrtHUN Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7Bit Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" On Wednesday, 22 August 2018 17:11:59 CEST Patrick M. Hausen wrote: > Hi all, > > > Am 22.08.2018 um 17:00 schrieb Kajetan Staszkiewicz > > <vegeta@tuxpowered.net>: Is there a preferred way to configure sysctls > > for modules loaded from kld_list? > > We found the same problem in our setup making extensive use of if_bridge. > > Now we simply load that module early via loader.conf - all sysctls available > right away. I'm pretty sure this did not work for me, not for pfsync module at least. Where did you put your sysctls? /boot/loader.conf? Maybe order of modules being loaded matters? Like pfsync loaded before carp maybe. Nevertheless this looks like a bug for me. Hackery with bootloader does not seem like a real solution. There might be good reasons to not load modules at boot. -- | pozdrawiam / greetings | powered by Debian, FreeBSD and CentOS | | Kajetan Staszkiewicz | jabber,email: vegeta()tuxpowered net | | Vegeta | www: http://vegeta.tuxpowered.net | `------------------------^---------------------------------------' --nextPart2374728.ioGsrrtHUN Content-Type: application/pgp-signature; name="signature.asc" Content-Description: This is a digitally signed message part. Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7Bit -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iF0EABECAB0WIQSOEQZObv2B8mf0JbnjtFCvbXs6FAUCW3/hRQAKCRDjtFCvbXs6 FBJBAJ9tGjpLSeU6w0EKglvEyLBxT+6WFACgt2RnZ0bte+OF/dBoCNo8MErVJ9w= =F9Nt -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --nextPart2374728.ioGsrrtHUN--
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