I figured that out on my own as a newbie in the early days, and lemme
tell you, that's no way to begin a relationship with an operating
system.  It's lucky we're still talking.  Why, in the name of all
that's holy, would card services default to starting *after*
networking, given that any machine so equipped almost certainly has a
PCMCIA network device?  Is there some reason for this that escapes me?

And while I'm griping, why does the BIND update rpm insist on
disabling automatic named startup?  Another fist-waving session till
I discovered and reversed that little hairball.

-d

Steve Feehan wrote:

:By default Redhat starts networking before pcmcia. So you can do something
:like this:
:
:# mv /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/S??pcmcia /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/S09pcmcia
:



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