Subject: Re: Why is ifconfig.ae0 better than hostname.ae0?
To: eric richard haszlakiewicz <haszlaki@students.uiuc.edu>
From: Jonathan Stone <jonathan@DSG.Stanford.EDU>
List: tech-userlevel
Date: 04/13/1997 23:59:02
>> Netstart.conf? Why not rc.conf? And why is it "complicated" to
>> do something like:
>>
>> ifconfig_le0_1=inet 192.5.5.213 netmask 255.255.255.240 media UTP
>> ifconfig_le0_2=inet alias 128.45.1.17 netmask 255.255.255.0
>> ifconfig_le0_3=atalk <whatever>
> This seems like a fairly workable idea. However, I think there is
>something to be said for separating the configuration into several files.
Heck, yes. I want to rdist /etc/rc.conf. In a cluster of `identical'
machines that seems a perfectly reasonable thing to do, and I think
allowing for rdist'ing /etc/rc.conf should be a design goal for
NetBSD's startup configuration system.
That means providing a mechanism that lets ifconfig state *not* be in
/etc/rc.conf. Do we really need two mechanisms for providing ifconfig
and default-route state?
>For one it makes it a lot easier to manage it: you can see at a glance
>what you've got configured. It seems to make sense, if not to keep the
>ifconfig.* files, to at least have a separate conf file for each script
>that is run. i.e. rc.conf configures stuff for the rc script, rc.local.conf
>for rc.local, netstart.conf for netstart.
I genuinely don't understand this. The various /etc/ifconfig.<ifN>
files *are* the configuration files for /etc/netstart, so we already
have separate config files for netstart. The information in each of
those files is both host- and interface-specific; glomming them
together into one file doesn't seem to make much sense.
Perhaps the problem is that /etc/netstart is badly named. IMHSO,
/etc/netstart should be renamed /etc/rc.if: it doesn't start the
network, it just configures interfaces up, and I'm crusty enough to
think those are different things.
I think a pretty good case could be made that the current /etc/rc.conf
should be renamed (or split into) /etc/net.conf or /etc/inet.conf; I
count five non-``network'' config flags -- savecore_flags, lkm_init,
ipfilter, update_flags, syslogd_flags -- and about 30 network-daemon flags.
(the exact numbers depend on how you count things like sendmail.)
When atalk (and IPX) arrive, I personally would much rather keep their
config info out of /etc/rc.conf, and put in a file of its own.
I think a consistent *naming* scheme for the config files is more
important than having One Monster Config File for everything under the
sun: if 'grep <foobar> /etc/rc*.conf' always lets you find the config
info for <foobar>, it doesn't matter much if it's in one humungous
file or in half a dozen.
Chac,un a` son gou^t, though.