On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 3:43 PM, Grant <[email protected]> wrote: >>> I'm on Gentoo and when the system tries to start my network interfaces >>> at boot, I get: >>> >>> Cannot find device "enp0s20u2u1" >>> * ERROR: interface enp0s20u2u1 does not exist >>> * Ensure that you have loaded the correct kernel module for your hardware >>> * ERROR: net.enp0s20u2u1 failed to start >>> * Bringing up interface enp0s20u2u2 >>> Cannot find device "enp0s20u2u2" >>> * ERROR: interface enp0s20u2u2 does not exist >>> * Ensure that you have loaded the correct kernel module for your hardware >>> * ERROR: net.enp0s20u2u2 failed to start >>> >>> It seems udev is taking too long to rename my USB ethernet interfaces >>> from eth0 and eth1 to the above names. Once the system is booted, I >>> can start the interfaces just fine. I do like the renaming >>> functionality so I can plug any USB ethernet adapter into a particular >>> USB port and it will work without changes so I'd rather not disable >>> that. Everything is built into the kernel, I'm not loading any >>> modules. I have 5 Dell XPS 13 systems and only one is exhibiting this >>> problem. >> >> Is your network configuration system waiting at all for network devices >> to show up? If not, it's not really compatible who modern network >> devices work, in particularly USB devices. >> >> It needs to wait with libudev until the network devices it is interested >> in have been reported initialized by udev. > > > Thank you Tom and Lennart. I'm not sure what to call my network > configuration system. It's default Gentoo stuff, just initscrips in > runlevels. To confirm, I should file a Gentoo bug?
Sounds like it. If nothing else, they should at least be able to tell you where to go next. Cheers, Tom _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel
