I'm trying to set up a Compaq laptop as a Debian 2.2 workstation on my work network. The laptop has a docking station with a network card in it, and a PCMCIA network card. I want to set things up so that if the machine is docked, I can use the docking station card, whereas if it is undocked, I can use the PCMCIA card. The machine has a static IP address allocated, which I want to use regardless of which card is in use (obviously, I will never connect both interfaces at once). I can set up the interfaces manually, with a little fiddling. I have edited /etc/pcmcia/network.opts (for the PCMCIA card) to reflect my network settings, and I have added an entry for eth0 to /etc/network/interfaces (for the docking station card). If I boot normally, with the PCMCIA card connected, everything is fine and I see the network. If I then do the following cardctl eject [ switch the cable from the PCMCIA card to the docking station ] modprobe ne io=0x300 # The docking station card's module ifup eth0 # The interface allocated to the D.S. card everything is fine on the new card. But if I leave the PCMCIA card inserted when I modprobe, the docking station gets eth1, and the ifup leaves things locked - presumably related to the fact that I have two cards with the same IP address allocated, even though only one is active. Is there any way I can get this lot to work? I also have problems if I put the ne card in /etc/modules - the PCMCIA card locks up, which is an IO address conflict according to the PCMCIA HOWTO. I can exclude address ranges to get things working, but as I still have duplicated IP addresses, I don't think that will work too well. The best solution I can think of so far is to add a new script to /etc/init.d which does the following 1. modprobe for the ne card 2. If it's not there, leave the PCMCIA card as the network, else 2a. remove the module again 2b. eject the PCMCIA network card 2c. re-probe the ne card 2d. ifup eth0 (the ne card is now on eth0) But that's HORRIBLY messy. Surely there is a better way? Any help would be VERY gratefully received. Paul Moore. PS Some points - hardware changes aren't possible, this is an old machine rescued for use as a Unix terminal, with no support from the hardware infrastructure people. Also, using DHCP isn't an option, as that causes nasty name resolution problems with our network :-( -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]