On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 04:28 +0000, Lingyun Yang wrote: > On 4/19/05, Ow Mun Heng <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Tue, 2005-04-19 at 15:33 +1200, Nick Rout wrote: > > > although you say you are using only eth0 OR eth1, it looks like you are > > > using both, even when the LAN connection is not plugged in. > > > > > > when on wireless try /etc/init.d/net.eth0 stop > > > > Can you also look at your /etc/conf.d/net file and determine if you've > > specified a default Gateway? > > > > You might need to omit that and it'll work. Since DHCP will put the > > default GW automatically it isn't needed unless you're on static IP. > > > > I didn't change anything about net.eth1 > except net.eth1 is a soft link to net.eth0 > and if I type ifconfig, I would see both eth0 and eth1 are on
That's the default. However, you can verify if they have an IP. bets are that eth0 does not have an IP > cat /etc/conf.d/net > # This blank configuration will automatically use DHCP for any net.* > # scripts in /etc/init.d. To create a more complete configuration, > # please review /etc/conf.d/net.example and save your configuration > # in /etc/conf.d/net (this file :]!). > > dhcpcd_eth0="-t 5" You're sure of this?? BTW, did you try rebooting the machine and did it _still_ have these sort of problems? I reckon you already tried that. If this is the real case, there's still a workaround, a hack though. Write a small shell script and delete the routes before you up the wireless. -- Ow Mun Heng Gentoo/Linux on DELL D600 1.4Ghz 98% Microsoft(tm) Free!! Neuromancer 13:25:24 up 22:00, 4 users, load average: 0.24, 0.29, 0.24 -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list