######### Do not Cc: me, I am on THE LIST and I do not need ########## ######### messages twice which make it very hard to answer. ##########
Am DATE hackte AUTHOR in die Tasten: to...@tuxteam.de > This is all? No "lo" stanza? Hm. it is: auto lo iface lo inet loopback > In that case, it looks more or less correct. Issuing "ifup -a" > should bring up your enp0s25 interface. Does it? Yes, it is up. The problem since Jessie is, that my PostgreSQL instances (I have 4) and the nfs mounts plus VPN are ALWAYS started before the network and exit with errors. I have to start ALL services by hand in order! If PostgreSQL can not start, then NO USER can log into the systenm! > But in this case it isn't clear what is triggering your DHCP > client. I have already deinstalled the isc-dhcp-client. > Nothing else in some subdirectory /etc/network/interfaces.d? No. I have now moved the config for ethernet to /etc/network/interfaces.d/enp0s25 So the content of the files show ----[ /etc/network/interfaces ]----------------------------------------- # This file describes the network interfaces available on your system # and how to activate them. For more information, see interfaces(5). source /etc/network/interfaces.d/* # The loopback network interface auto lo iface lo inet loopback ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ----[ /etc/network/interfaces.d/enp0s25 ]------------------------------- auto enp0s25 iface enp0s25 inet static address 192.168.0.202 netmask 255.255.255.0 gateway 192.168.0.1 network 192.168.0.0 allow-hotplug enp0s25 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > OK. Let's try to debug that: since you're doing SysV init, the > whole magic is done in /etc/init.d/networking. This one is controlled > by parameters set in /etc/default/networking. What is in there? ----[ /etc/default/networking ]----------------------------------------- # Configuration for networking init script being run during # the boot sequence # Set to 'no' to skip interfaces configuration on boot CONFIGURE_INTERFACES=yes # Don't configure these interfaces. Shell wildcards supported/ #EXCLUDE_INTERFACES= # Set to 'yes' to enable additional verbosity VERBOSE=yes ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Next time you boot: could you watch your boot process and see whether > you see anything special around "Configuring network interfaces" (that > should be the message issued by /etc/init.d/networking). Perhaps there > is something enlightening around that. > > Cheers Thanks in advance -- Michelle Konzack Miila ITSystems @ TDnet GNU/Linux Developer 00372-54541400