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Diffstat (limited to 'src/udev/net/naming-scheme.h')
-rw-r--r-- | src/udev/net/naming-scheme.h | 48 |
1 files changed, 48 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/udev/net/naming-scheme.h b/src/udev/net/naming-scheme.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0b3d9bf --- /dev/null +++ b/src/udev/net/naming-scheme.h @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1+ */ +#pragma once + +#include <stdbool.h> + +#include "macro.h" + +/* So here's the deal: net_id is supposed to be an excercise in providing stable names for network devices. However, we + * also want to keep updating the naming scheme used in future versions of net_id. These two goals of course are + * contradictory: on one hand we want things to not change and on the other hand we want them to improve. Our way out + * of this dilemma is to introduce the "naming scheme" concept: each time we improve the naming logic we define a new + * flag for it. Then, we keep a list of schemes, each identified by a name associated with the flags it implements. Via + * a kernel command line and environment variable we then allow the user to pick the scheme they want us to follow: + * installers could "freeze" the used scheme at the moment of installation this way. + * + * Developers: each time you tweak the naming logic here, define a new flag below, and condition the tweak with + * it. Each time we do a release we'll then add a new scheme entry and include all newly defined flags. + * + * Note that this is only half a solution to the problem though: not only udev/net_id gets updated all the time, the + * kernel gets too. And thus a kernel that previously didn't expose some sysfs attribute we look for might eventually + * do, and thus affect our naming scheme too. Thus, enforcing a naming scheme will make interfacing more stable across + * OS versions, but not fully stabilize them. */ +typedef enum NamingSchemeFlags { + /* First, the individual features */ + NAMING_SR_IOV_V = 1 << 0, /* Use "v" suffix for SR-IOV, see 609948c7043a40008b8299529c978ed8e11de8f6*/ + NAMING_NPAR_ARI = 1 << 1, /* Use NPAR "ARI", see 6bc04997b6eab35d1cb9fa73889892702c27be09 */ + NAMING_INFINIBAND = 1 << 2, /* Use "ib" prefix for infiniband, see 938d30aa98df887797c9e05074a562ddacdcdf5e */ + NAMING_ZERO_ACPI_INDEX = 1 << 3, /* Allow zero acpi_index field, see d81186ef4f6a888a70f20a1e73a812d6acb9e22f */ + NAMING_ALLOW_RERENAMES = 1 << 4, /* Allow re-renaming of devices, see #9006 */ + + /* And now the masks that combine the features above */ + NAMING_V238 = 0, + NAMING_V239 = NAMING_V238 | NAMING_SR_IOV_V | NAMING_NPAR_ARI, + NAMING_V240 = NAMING_V239 | NAMING_INFINIBAND | NAMING_ZERO_ACPI_INDEX | NAMING_ALLOW_RERENAMES, + + _NAMING_SCHEME_FLAGS_INVALID = -1, +} NamingSchemeFlags; + +typedef struct NamingScheme { + const char *name; + NamingSchemeFlags flags; +} NamingScheme; + +const NamingScheme* naming_scheme(void); + +static inline bool naming_scheme_has(NamingSchemeFlags flags) { + return FLAGS_SET(naming_scheme()->flags, flags); +} |