On Tue, Feb 22, 2000 at 12:11:48PM -0500, Adam Goode wrote: > Looks like woody and potato got the new netbase, adding use to the > /etc/network/interfaces file (and taking away the need for > /etc/init.d/network). Looks to me like /etc/init.d/pump and > /etc/init.d/dhcp-client should be going as well. Any comments on this? Are > updates to pump and dhclient going to remove these files?
I've disabled /etc/init.d/pump on my system after enabling the ethernet interface in /etc/network/interfaces, and it seems to work well enough. I haven't rebooted, but i did take down and reup eth0 a few times with much success. On Tue, Feb 22, 2000 at 03:02:13PM -0500, Allan M. Wind wrote: > > Does the up line run before/concurrently/after with what used to be > ifconfig up? My ISP does access control based on MAC address, so I > have to set it before bringing up the interface. My machine is 100% > stable yet, so I can't change my records with them quite yet. ifconfig up used to be in /etc/init.d/network, IIRC (if i'm wrong, then ignore this next part). The new file is /etc/init.d/networking, and it is installed into rcS.d at level 40 just as network was, so it should be run at the same point in the boot process. > Is there better docs than the man pages for if{up,down}, because I > couldn't deduce the format for the network file from it? /etc/network/interfaces provided with the package is well commented. On Sun, Oct 31, 1999 at 04:54:24PM +0100, Radim Gelner wrote: > > I've installed the new netbase right now. One question: in /etc/rc.S > there's still one link pointing to /etc/init.d/network. Can I delete it? It depends on your setup. Once you get /etc/network/interfaces configured to set up anything /etc/init.d/network currently handles, i don't see why you couldn't. Anyway, if you keep /etc/init.d/network the worst that could happen is that the network won't come up on a reboot, and you'll have to restore the symlink, fix /etc/network/interfaces, or ifconfig the network manually. In my case, i didn't really need /etc/init.d/network ever since i upgraded to a 2.2 kernel, since 2.2 handles lo by itself and pump handles eth0. -- finger for GPG public key.
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