Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: > Am 06.04.2013 21:33, schrieb Mick: >> On Saturday 06 Apr 2013 20:03:15 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: >>> Am 06.04.2013 17:57, schrieb Alan Mackenzie: >>>> Hi, Nick. >>>> >>>> On Sat, Apr 06, 2013 at 10:51:42AM -0400, Nick Khamis wrote: >>>>> After updating our systems we lost network connectivity to the >>>>> servers. When trying to start net.eth0 we got the following message: >>>>> /ib64/rc/net/wpa_supplicant.sh: line 68: _is wireless command not >>>>> found /etc/init.d/net.eth0: line 548: _exists command not found >>>>> Errror: Interface eth0 does not exist >>>>> Ensure that you have loaded the correct kernel modules for your >>>>> hardware >>>>> # lsmod >>>>> module used by >>>>> tg3 0 >>>>> lbphy tg3 >>>>> eth0 >>>>> flags=4098<broadcast,multicast> mtu 1500 >>>>> .... >>>>> interrupt=16 >>>>> >>>>> lo >>>>> flags=73<UP,LOOPBACK,RUNNING> mtu 16436 >>>>> inet 127.0.0.1 BROADCAST 255.255.255.0 >>>>> inet6 ::1 prefixlen 128 scopeid 0x10 <host> >>>>> >>>>> Please excuse me, I am running back and forth from the servers and >>>>> typing the error message here. Did our configuration get switched to >>>>> IP6? These are our DB servers and why me!!! Why ME!!!!! >>>> No, it's not just you, it's happened to pretty much everybody. >>>> udev-200 now renames eth0, eth1, .... to something else, dependent upon >>>> complicated rules. In my case eth0 has become p6p1, though many people >>>> seem to have got longer names. >>>> >>>> Have a look in /sys/class/net and see if your new name is there. If >>>> so, edit all your config files containing eth0, switching to the new >>>> name. >>>> >>>> Once you got that done and things work again, take a deep breath and >>>> have a look at the most recent Gentoo news item ($ eselect news read) >>>> which >>>> explains it all, more or less. Then decide whether the above is a long >>>> term solution, and if not start reading docs about writing udev rules. >>>> >>>> Yes, it's a pain in the backside. But at least with Gentoo, you've a >>>> good chance of fixing things like this quickly. >>>> >>>>> Your help is greatly appreciated, >>>>> Nick >>> in my case it is still eth0: >>> ifconfig >>> eth0: flags=4163<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500 >>> inet 192.168.178.21 netmask 255.255.255.0 broadcast >>> 192.168.178.255 >>> inet6 fe80::1e6f:65ff:fe87:6f6a prefixlen 64 scopeid >>> 0x20<link> >>> ether 1c:6f:65:87:6f:6a txqueuelen 1000 (Ethernet) >>> RX packets 4647305 bytes 6693078055 (6.2 GiB) >>> RX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 frame 0 >>> TX packets 2943816 bytes 226871998 (216.3 MiB) >>> TX errors 0 dropped 1 overruns 0 carrier 0 collisions 0 >>> >>> sys-fs/udev >>> Available versions: (~)168-r2[1] [M]171-r10 197-r8^t{tbz2} >>> (~)198-r6^t{tbz2} (~)199-r1^t{tbz2} 200^t{tbz2} **9999^t {acl >>> action_modeswitch build debug doc edd extras +firmware-loader floppy >>> gudev hwdb introspection keymap +kmod +openrc +rule_generator selinux >>> static-libs test} >>> Installed versions: 200^t{tbz2}(18:30:31 >>> 29.03.2013)(firmware-loader gudev hwdb keymap kmod openrc -acl -doc >>> -introspection -selinux -static-libs) >>> >>> I did keep net.eth0.... >> Is your eth0 NIC a module (modprobed), or built in the kernel? > r8169 41918 0 > module
For me its built in. - Jörg