Hi,
I already know my network card was not detected.
The install of debian I have was placed on a hard drive separate from a
computer later built for me, and into which the drive holding debian was
later placed.
If I simply connect the card will debian find it on boot?
Karen
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013, Joao Luis Meloni Assirati wrote:
Hi folks,
I have been considering all day how I will ask this.
it is very very important that I get the answer I seek, and with so many
variations, things can shift off the mark if not careful.
going to keep it simple only adding extra detail if necessary.
If one already has an install of debian, in this case squeeze that did
not involve including network access at the time, how does one add the
networking aspect later?
I will have working dsl I trust this weekend. I want the individual
helping me connect my main computer to also inform my Debian machine that
a
network connection exists, letting debian establish the best drivers
etc., for the network.
How specifically is this done?
Chances are that your network card was detected and the correct kernel
module is already being loaded. If this is the case and you never touched
any network configuration file, and also you dsl provider does not use
pppoe but instead plain ethernet with dhcp, then networking will just work
when you connect the network cable.
If it does not work, please write again to this list including the output
of the comands
cat /etc/network/interfaces
dpkg --status network-manager | grep Status
lspci -v
dmesg | grep eth0
/sbin/ifconfig
and whether your provider uses pppoe or plain ethernet with dhcp.
João Luis.
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