I found under CentOS 4 a few years ago that the OS would only bring up
virtual interfaces starting with 0:0 and increasing sequentially -- if
there was a gap, it would stop at that gap point.
I.e.:
Good: eth0, eth0:0, eth0:1, eth0:2...
Bad: eth0, eth0:0, eth0:2 (system woul
Kai Schaetzl schreef:
or, at the same time while you are waiting for more replies, you could try
starting up with only the first alias and if that succeeds try the next
one and so on ...
I was doing exactly that. And I was trying to figure out how the
networking scripts work and what they do -
or, at the same time while you are waiting for more replies, you could try
starting up with only the first alias and if that succeeds try the next
one and so on ...
If you get less errors than you have aliases it's likely that some of the
files have simply wrong values.
Kai
--
Kai Schätzl, Be
Update: Didn't help - but this time I was connected to a console so I
could see the bootup and I get this:
"SIOCSIFFLAGS: Cannot assign requested address"
Strange thing is that I have multiple aliasses and only 3 errors...
I tried Google with this error and I see lots of people with Ubuntu
run
None of the files have ONBOOT but they do have ONPARENT...
I'll add the ONBOOT param and reboot the server tonight to see if it worked.
Cheers,
Berend
Ralph Angenendt wrote:
Berend Dekens wrote:
However, after a reboot, all aliasses are disabled: they are present in
the configuration but
Ralph Angenendt wrote on Thu, 13 Nov 2008 12:16:22 +0100:
> If they have "ONBOOT=YES" change that to "ONPARENT=YES". If they have
> neither, add ONPARENT=YES.
FYI: I've been creating NIC aliases with ONBOOT=yes for quite some time
without a problem as I wasn't aware of the ONPARENT directive. I
Berend Dekens wrote:
> However, after a reboot, all aliasses are disabled: they are present in
> the configuration but they are not activated. I feared I did something
> wrong so I removed all addresses, tried to find more clues in the docs
> and now I'm back where I started.
Go into /etc/sy
With one problem down I still have another remaining. Since the
installation of our primairy webserver we have had a problem with the
network aliasses.
Our server has 8 IP adresses so we used the tool provided in the GUI to
specify (and name - for our own convinience) eth0 aliasses with the
o
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