
On Tue, 30 Jul 2013 16:40:16 +0200 Vincent Van der Kussrn <vincent@vanderkussen.org> wrote: I hadn't looked at the history below which already explains it. you can also add a .reconfigure file in your root that allows you to provide a new root pwd on boot. - Vincent
You need to delete the udev created files under /etc/udev.d
I believe persistent-net-70-* or something (can't check).
And then create your template
Vincent
Connected by Motorola
"Sven M. Geschke" <ovirt@nebulaone.com> wrote:
Hi
AFAIK This is more a CentOS- than an oVirt-issue. CentOS behaves identically on vSphere.
If I remember correctly, this is due to the fact that the MAC-address of the virtual NIC has to change, when you create a VM from a template. CentOS however keeps the MAC address of the template and just adds the new MAC, which then of course becomes eth1.
--SMG
----- Original Message -----
From: "gregoire leroy" <gregoire.leroy@retenodus.net> To: users@ovirt.org Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2013 7:59:35 AM Subject: [Users] Nic names : always start by eth0
Hello,
I have an ovirt cluster which runs CentOS VM. I have a template to create VM. On this template, there are two interfaces, eth0 and eth1. When I create a VM using this template, the new interfaces are named eth2 and eth3. It can be pretty annoying and I would like to know if it would be possible to always start by eth0 ?
If I remember the discussion on IRC, it would be necessary to clean old udev rules (in centos it seems to be /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules)
Thanks, Regards, Grégoire _______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@ovirt.org http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
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