We have the driver compiled into the kernel and we have tried the ether= command at startup but that is not working either. I have also change the irq assigned to each by the bios. The gigabit card is still coming up as eth0. --Mike CW Harris wrote: On Fri, Mar 05, 2004 at 01:28:26PM -0800, Rodney D. Myers wrote:On Fri, 05 Mar 2004 14:46:58 -0600 Michael Robokoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:I have a machine with 2 ethernet interfaces installed. The systems installed with the Gigabit interface as eth0 and 100MB interface as eth1. Can someone tell me how to change this so the 100MB interface is eth0 and the gigabit interface is eth1? Thanks --MikeI may be off here, and someone will let me know. It should be as simple as shutting down the interfaces "ifdown -a" Then editing the /etc/network/interface file, and swapping the "eth0" & "eth1"That will change the assignments (address, etc) of eth0, eth1 but not which physical card is eth0, eth1. Look at the "ether=" boot parameters for the kernel (see the Ethernet-HOWTO for more info.)-- Rodney D. Myers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Registered Linux User #96112 ICQ#: AIM#: YAHOO: 18002350 mailman452 mailman42_5 They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. Ben Franklin - 1759 |
- swapping interfaces Michael Robokoff
- Re: swapping interfaces Rodney D. Myers
- Re: swapping interfaces Jonathan Schmitt
- Re: swapping interfaces CW Harris
- Re: swapping interfaces - Update Michael Robokoff
- Re: swapping interfaces - Update CW Harris
- Re: swapping interfaces - Update CW Harris
- Re: swapping interfaces Jonathan Schmitt
- Re: swapping interfaces Colin
- Re: swapping interfaces stephen parkinson
- Re: swapping interfaces Michael Robokoff
- Re: swapping interfaces Daniel Teichert