El mié, 24-10-2007 a las 10:11 -0400, Douglas A. Tutty escribió: > On Wed, Oct 24, 2007 at 10:02:31AM +0200, Matthias Feichtinger wrote: > > I had the same problem. > > The mistake was made while installing. > > It is not possible to change things, e.g. having to configure more > > than one ethernetcard. > > I made a script of my own need and everythings works as I wanted it > > to work. So, first man ifconfig, then man route and if needed, you might > > start your script with init.d. > > At next installing don't mention any NIC at all. The debian way to do > > is a kind of mystery. When there's enough time I will rebuild it. > > Are you seriously telling people that you can't add a NIC to Debian > without re-installing? Get a life. > > Now, if you're using some pointy-clicky lindows thingy, perhaps. Get > rid of it. > > udev should find all your hardware. If you find it doesn't, do the > old-fashioned method. Find the right module (read the kernel-docs, read > the chips on your NIC, match them up), and insmod it. If you need > parameters its easier (if you want a bit of a GUI) to install modconf > which will ask for the parameters and put them in the right place. > > Your module name would go under /etc/modules and be loaded at each boot. > > Once you have an eth* you can then go ahead and put it in > /etc/network/interfaces. > > Done. > > The Debian way isn't a mistery. Read the debian-manual, man pages, and > if necessary, ask here. > > Doug. > >
Could you, forget the theoretical explanation and show it by a simple example? i have the same problem, and it can not be solve by ifconfig, iwconfig, route and others. Broadcom card 4311, Compaq Presario v3019US. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]