On Saturday 04 April 2009 19:07:53 Miles Fidelman wrote: > H.S. wrote: > > Miles Fidelman wrote:
> > Is udev giving your interface a new name (ethx instead of, say eth0)? > > how would I check that, and why would it just start doing that? I ran into this recently. It does that because udev maintains a list of network devices listed by MAC address in a file somewhere -- I thought it was obvious in /etc/udev, but I can't seem to find it on my system here -- maybe it's different in lenny? Anyways, it certainly did this in "etch". When you transplant a system image including this file onto new hardware, udev notices the difference in MAC address, and gives the interfaces it finds names that won't conflict with the MAC address assigned for eth0. Obviously this system is designed to maintain name integrity when you drop a new network card into an existing system, but it does have unexpected behavior for transplanted images. -- A. -- Andrew Reid / rei...@bellatlantic.net -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org