On Tue, Jun 21, 2005 at 05:32:01PM -0700, Xeno Campanoli wrote: | I got a real whacky one. This old machine I've got has two NICs, and during | install I assign eth1 to be the one used, and it gets the ip address from | DHCP. Well, after the reboot, that same IP address is assigned to eth0, and | I get no network. I've solved this by switching the cable over and rebooting, | but it sounds like a bug, so I thought I'd mention it. The machine I'm running | is an old thing with 92 meg of memory, but presumably it's not the memory that | is confusing DHCP, but just the two NICS. Perhaps nobody has two NICs anymore?
I have two NICs in several machines. The only time I've seen anything similar is when the system doesn't detect the cards in the same order each time it boots and so the cards are assigned the labels 'eth0' and 'eth1' different. In that case, the solution is simple: install the 'ifrename' package, read the documentation, and create a suitable /etc/iftab file. Using this approach you can assign the NICs meaningful names (ie 'lan' or 'wan' or whatever) based on the MAC address (or base I/O for ISA cards). This ensures that the cards are identified properly, regardless of how many you have and which one(s) are available at boot time and what order the kernel loads the driver(s) for them. Then you use this meaningful name in all your configuration files and can be assured the correct NIC will be used. HTH, -D -- \begin{humor} Disclaimer: If I receive a message from you, you are agreeing that: 1. I am by definition, "the intended recipient" 2. All information in the email is mine to do with as I see fit and make such financial profit, political mileage, or good joke as it lends itself to. In particular, I may quote it on USENET or the WWW. 3. I may take the contents as representing the views of your company. 4. This overrides any disclaimer or statement of confidentiality that may be included on your message \end{humor} www: http://dman13.dyndns.org/~dman/ jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature