Currently, this is the state of the PCI ID database file in Ubuntu:
$ rmadison pci.ids
pci.ids | 0.0~2020.03.20-1 | focal | source, all
pci.ids | 0.0~2021.08.22-1 | impish | source, all
pci.ids | 0.0~2022.01.22-1 | jammy | source, all
Because of this, focal installations cannot identify PCI devices that were added to the IDs file after March 20, 2020.
As this is just a text file, pci.ids should always be updated with the latest info regardless of release.
This has an effect on MAAS in which any hardware commissioned in MAAS uses a 2 year old version of hte PCIID database and thus cannot identify newer hardware such as the nVidia A100 GPU.
The 2020 version of the file does not contain id's for this while the 2022 version in Jammy does:
Currently, this is the state of the PCI ID database file in Ubuntu:
$ rmadison pci.ids
pci.ids | 0.0~2020.03.20-1 | focal | source, all
pci.ids | 0.0~2021.08.22-1 | impish | source, all
pci.ids | 0.0~2022.01.22-1 | jammy | source, all
Because of this, focal installations cannot identify PCI devices that were added to the IDs file after March 20, 2020.
As this is just a text file, pci.ids should always be updated with the latest info regardless of release.
This has an effect on MAAS in which any hardware commissioned in MAAS uses a 2 year old version of hte PCIID database and thus cannot identify newer hardware such as the nVidia A100 GPU.
The 2020 version of the file does not contain id's for this while the 2022 version in Jammy does:
12393 20f1 GA100 [A100 PCIe 40GB]