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misc/39376: /etc/rc.d/network chokes on network interfaces with dots in their names, such as xvifN.M in Xen
>Number: 39376
>Category: misc
>Synopsis: /etc/rc.d/network chokes on network interfaces with dots in
>their names, such as xvifN.M in Xen
>Confidential: no
>Severity: serious
>Priority: medium
>Responsible: misc-bug-people
>State: open
>Class: sw-bug
>Submitter-Id: net
>Arrival-Date: Mon Aug 18 16:30:00 +0000 2008
>Originator: Taylor R Campbell <campbell%mumble.net@localhost>
>Release: NetBSD 4.0_STABLE
>Organization:
>Environment:
System: NetBSD smalltalk.localdomain 4.0_STABLE NetBSD 4.0_STABLE
(RIAXEN3_DOM0) #2: Fri Jul 18 23:32:56 UTC 2008
riastradh@smalltalk:/home/riastradh/netbsd/4/obj/sys/arch/i386/compile/RIAXEN3_DOM0
i386
Architecture: i386
Machine: i386
>Description:
In /etc/rc.d/network, for each network interface `int' to be
configured, the script checks for a variable `ifconfig_$int'
for a list of arguments to pass to ifconfig, using
eval args=\$ifconfig_$int
if [ -n "$args" ]; then ... fi
If `int' contains a dot, such as xvifN.M, then whatever the
value of `ifconfig_xvifN', `args' will have the string `.M'
appended, since a dot is a delimiter for an environment
variable in sh. Either way, `args' is always non-empty, so
that the script tries to invoke `ifconfig' with a trailing `.M'
on the last argument, or as the only command if
`ifconfig_xvifN' was unset.
This may just as well be considered a Xen bug for using
interface names with dots in them. Whatever the problem is, it
shouldn't cause rc scripts to spit out error messages.
>How-To-Repeat:
Set auto_ifconfig=YES in /etc/rc.conf. In a Xen dom0 with a
domU running and its Xen virtual interface xvifN.M up, run
`/etc/rc.d/network restart'. ifconfig will report an error:
`.M bad value' (where M is the number of the
`xvifN.' interface).
>Fix:
Any solution to this problem would require a policy about the
names of rc.conf variables for interfaces whose names contain
dots, or other funny characters. One simple possibility would
be to translate all dots into underscores, but then someone
else might come along and use another funny character and
require further specal cases.
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