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path: root/etc/os-net-config/samples/mapping.yaml
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2015-02-24Add a persist_mapping option to the mapping fileSteven Hardy1-0/+4
This adds the option to permanently rewrite the configuration so the aliases are used instead of the system name. This is useful where you have a variety of hardware and you want to have consistent device naming accross all platforms - this allows you to essentially rename the interfaces permanently so they match the abstracted nicN names. Note, this needs to be run with --cleanup or the old (now conflicting) configs will still be in place, and it may require a reboot before the changes are fully applied. Change-Id: I5af146e764b72c4beaa41c549fabff0af8802152
2015-02-24Add mapping option to influence nicN mapping orderSteven Hardy1-0/+8
Currently there's a fixed mapping between abstracted interface names (nic1, nic2 etc) and the underlying biosdevname for the device. In many cases, this mapping based on system enumeration is sufficient, but in some cases, particularly when you perform detailed pre-deployment discovery of interfaces, you may wish to alter the mapping independently of the config (e.g if the config is in a heat template, and the discovery data is provided at runtime). So this adds a -m option to os-net-config, which enables a mapping file to be provided, such that specific interfaces may be mapped to their abstract names based on knowledge of the devices or the networks they are connected to. The mapping file has the following format, where em1 and em2 are device names as detected by the OS (e.g biosdevname): interface_mapping: nic1: em2 nic2: em1 Or you can use the device MAC instead: interface_mapping: nic1: 12:34:56:78:9a:bc nic2: 12:34:56:de:f0:12 Change-Id: I93e6d3ed733244834bb3c2126c91db705b4d9167