It took me some time to get back into Solaris, too. To change the network driver:
After changing the kvm configuration you should boot Solaris at usual. It will complain about some services not being run, and put you into single user mode. Now you can run "ifconfig -a" to get the new network device name (e.g. "e1000g0". Rename "/etc/hostname.rtl0" to "/etc/hostname.e1000g0". Rename "/etc/dhcp.rtl0" to "dhcp.e1000g0". Reboot. I should have mentioned that my virtual Solaris hosts are supposed to get IP address and host name via DHCP. Sorry, I forgot. I will try a fixed address when I am back in the office. > I left `ping -f $solaris-ip' process running for whole > night - it were still running in the morning without any > visible issues, at 100% CPU usage (2 cores - for ping, > host kernel and kvm processes). No ping replies have been lost? Hope this helps. Regards Harri -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org