On Friday 07 January 2005 01:31 pm, Jim McCloskey wrote: > rich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > |> I have several network cards in my laptop - wired lan, wireless > |> lan, loopback & firewire. After a recent update (I'm running > |> testing) my interface numbers all jumped around so that instead of > |> the wired lan being eth0, it's now eth1 & the firewire is eth0. > |> What defines what eth'x' number is given to which network device? > |> It's a pain having to change configuration each time they move > |> numbers (as also happens depending on whether I boot with my > |> wireless cardbus in the slot or not)! > > This is just what the ifrename package is for (part of wireless-tools > but it's a separate package in Debian). > > It assigns a user-defined interface-name permanently on the basis of > certain static criteria, usually the device's MAC address. > > I use it on my laptop to ensure that the built-in ethernet adapter > is always `nic', one wireless card is always `wlan1', and the second > wireless card is always `wlan2'. > > It's easy to set this up, but if you want a really good detailed > account of this and related issues, try: > > http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Jean_Tourrilhes/Linux/HOTPLUG.txt > > Jim
Rant: Yes ...but, what is up with giving , or trying, as is the default with Sarge, to give an network interface to firewire ? Until I added the IPW2100 Centrino driver the firewire driver was always loaded, which prevents the onboard ethernet & PCMCIA from configuring correctly. I would think that firewire would be the 'last' choice to configure as an interface, I have never even seen a firewire nic, but thats just me. Thanks for the link though :) -- Greg C. Madden -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]