Files
NetworkManager/data/85-nm-unmanaged.rules
Michael Biebl 1e03758262 Split out the bits which determine ID_NET_DRIVER or DRIVERS into separate udev rules file
Those are not required with systemd-udevd v210 or newer. This way
distros which have a new enough version of udev can skip installing
84-nm-drivers.rules. While at it, don't use absolute paths for sed and
ethtool.
2015-08-31 22:41:17 +02:00

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# Do not modify this file, it will get overwritten on updates.
# To override or extend the rules place a file in /etc/udev/rules.d
SUBSYSTEM!="net", GOTO="nm_unmanaged_end"
ACTION!="add|change", GOTO="nm_unmanaged_end"
# VirtualBox host networking. Out-of-tree driver that looks like an ordinary
# Ethernet. No parent device (lives in /virtual/), no support for ethtool
# to identify the driver, MAC address defaults to 08:00:27:, but can be
# changed. Interface name will have to do, it's always vboxnet*.
ENV{INTERFACE}=="vboxnet[0-9]*", ENV{NM_UNMANAGED}="1"
# VMWare host networking. Out-of-tree driver that looks like an ordinary
# Ethernet. No parent device (lives in /virtual/), no support for
# ethtool to identify the driver. They have their own MAC prefix that
# can not be changed.
ATTR{address}=="00:50:56:*", ENV{INTERFACE}=="vmnet[0-9]*", ENV{NM_UNMANAGED}="1"
# Parallels Workstation host networking. Out-of-tree driver that looks like
# an ordinary Ethernet. No parent device (lives in /virtual/), no support for
# ethtool to identify the driver and the interface name is too generic.
# However, they have their own MAC prefix that can not be changed.
ATTR{address}=="00:1c:42:*", ENV{INTERFACE}=="vnic[0-9]*", ENV{NM_UNMANAGED}="1"
# Virtual Ethernet device pair. Often used to communicate with a peer interface
# in another net namespace and managed by libvirt, Docker or the like.
ENV{ID_NET_DRIVER}=="veth", ENV{NM_UNMANAGED}="1"
LABEL="nm_unmanaged_end"