| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Previously we had an xOPTS variable for each type of interface that could
be configured. I've replaced this with a generic IFOPTS option which can
be used to supply interface type specific options to 'ip'.
As the option is now generic, it can be applied to physical interfaces too;
so interfaces such as eth0 can have options applied just like a virtual
interface.
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Before, it was not possible to set bridge specific options when creating
a bridge. This option adds the ability to set options via a BROPTS
variable, which takes a pipe (|) delimited set of options as documented
in the ip-link(8) man page (search for "BRIDGE Type Support").
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This variable can be used to set custom options to configure the VLAN
interface. It does not need to be used in 'normal' operation with a VLAN.
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The bonding code introduces three new variables for use in rc.inet1.conf:
BONDNICS[x]=""
BONDMODE[x]=""
BONDOPTS[x]=""
The BONDNICS variable takes a list of interfaces which should be slaved to
the bond.
BONDMODE sets the mode of the bond. Useful options are 'balance-rr',
'active-backup' and '802.3ad'. A full list of options can be found in
/usr/src/linux/Documentation/networking/bonding.txt and README.bonding.
BONDOPTS are a pipe (|) separated list of options to apply to the bond after
the interfaces have been added. Useful options are 'primary' (which is
required when BONDMODE is 'active-backup', 'xmit_hash_policy' (which can be
used with 'balance-rr' to choose the hash policy, 'lacp_rate' (which should
be used with '802.3ad' mode), and 'miimon' (which should be used with all
modes) See the kernel source documentation or README.bonding for more info.
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It occurred to me that IPv6 addresses don't really need to have IP6ALIASES
since all IPs are just added to the interface itself. So I've changed the
syntax from using IP6ADDR + PREFIXLEN + IP6ALIASES to using just a single
IP6ADDRS array, which takes a list of IP addresses with a prefix length
in a space separated list. eg:
IP6ADDRS[0]="a:b:c:d::1/64 1:2:3::1/48"
If the prefix length is omitted a /64 length is assumed and a warning
emitted.
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Signed-off-by: Robby Workman <rworkman@slackware.com>
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* USE_AUTOCONF->USE_SLAAC to be more consistent with IPv6 terminology
* PREFIX6->PREFIXLEN to be more consistent with IPv6 terminology
Thanks to David Spencer (idlemoor) for the patch to the above
* AUTOCONF_TIMEOUT->SLAAC_TIMEOUT to be consistent with USE_SLAAC change
Since some options for IPv6 no longer end in '6', we can relax the naming
of others, so these make sense: IPADDR6->IP6ADDR ; IPALIASES6->IP6ALIASES
Update to rc.inet1.conf example file - thanks to David Spencer.
Signed-off-by: Robby Workman <rworkman@slackware.com>
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Signed-off-by: Robby Workman <rworkman@slackware.com>
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Signed-off-by: Robby Workman <rworkman@slackware.com>
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This is needed for container networking - the bridge for it
must be in promiscuous mode.
Signed-off-by: Robby Workman <rworkman@slackware.com>
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There is a built-in way of counting the number of elements in an array:
${#arrayname[@]}. Use this, and the fact that "for i in $(seq 0 -1)" will
not evaluate body of the loop even once, to simplify code and get rid of
virtif_determine().
While at it, add a note to rc.inet1.conf mentioning the necessity of
keeping array indexes monotonically increasing (from 0), otherwise the
code will fail (so would the original code).
Signed-off-by: Robby Workman <rworkman@slackware.com>
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This was accidentally changed from 15 seconds back to the
14.2 default of 10 seconds. Thanks to Eduard Rozenberg.
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This is accomplished with a new parameter in rc.inet1.conf:
IPALIASES[$index]="space separated list of addresses"
The aliases are added with a /32 mask and a label of
${interface}:{$number} to remain compatible with net-tools.
IP address aliases are supported for both statically configured
interfaces and dhcp-configured interfaces, although they'll only
be configured for dhcp if the dhcpcd call succeeds.
* note: I don't what happens if dhcpcd gets IPv4LL address
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If other files are needed, they can be added later
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