I found that the easiest thing was to run dmesg and see if the OS tried to load the modules for the cards. You may have loaded both cards but you haven't setup ifconfig for eth1. Look at dmesg.
Chris Mason Box 340, The Valley, Anguilla, British West Indies Tel: 264 497 5670 Fax: 264 497 8463 USA Fax (561) 382-7771 Take a virtual tour of the island http://net.ai/ The Anguilla Guide Find out more about NetConcepts www.netconcepts.ai bwz*mq -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Robert Waldner Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2000 1:28 AM To: Nick Barron Cc: debian list Subject: Re: installing two NIC's On Wed, 05 Apr 2000 16:04:54 PDT, Nick Barron writes: >now they are seperated, but i still can't seem to figure out how to >initialize >eth1 > >i think i might be trying to load module on top of module >loading eth0 instead of eth1 >how is this done effectively? you can look at the currently loaded modules with lsmod, if ne2k-pci isn´t there yet, ´insmod ne2k-pci´ will (try to) load it. You should then see it via ifconfig, if you don´t, try ´ifconfig -a´. ´ifconfig eth1 x.x.x.x/xx up´ will set the ip-address and netmask. if this works, all you have to do is put ne2k-pci in /etc/modules to get the module loaded at boot time, and edit /etc/init.d/network accordingly to the appropriate ip-addresses. hth, &r<just looking for a 4th nic>w -- / Robert Waldner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | Phone: +43 1 89933 0 Fax x533 \ \ KPNQwest/AT tech staff | Diefenbachg. 35 A-1150 Wien / -- Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null