After spending total amount of several dozens hours of fighting with the infamous udev arbitrary device name assignment, I’ve finally won. Device name assignment is absolutely underdocumented and I was able to get it work only thanks to the kind people sharing their experience and knowledge on the net. For the record, after a lot of googling and experiments I ended up with the following setup of the multiple network and sound cards on my Debian system:
- In module configuration:
options snd-... index=0 options snd-... index=1 options snd-... index=2
This ensures ALSA devices are assigned to the defined positions.
- In /etc/udev/udev.rules:
KERNEL=="eth*", SYSFS{address}=="00:11:22:33:44:55", NAME="wan" KERNEL=="eth*", SYSFS{address}=="ff:ee:dd:cc:bb:aa", NAME="lan"
Note:
- Matchers have two equal signs, assignments only one.
- Hexadecimal digits of the MAC address in ‘SYSFS{address}’ must be written in lower case. Stupid, stupid, stupid.
Then the network devices are accessible under the names ‘lan’ and ‘wan’ and you should use them in ‘/etc/network/interfaces’ instead of ‘eth0’ etc.
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