On Sun, Nov 22, 2009 at 9:33 PM, Tom H <tomh0...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 2:38 AM, Gordon McLellan <gordonth...@gmail.com> > wrote: >> KERNEL=="eth?", SYSFS{address}=="00:21:e9:17:64:b5", NAME="eth1" # >> Now, all three network cards get assigned as eth0! eth1 and eth2 are >> no longer found. The pci-express nics (onboard) get detected first, >> and the pci nic is last, so it ends up "owning" the eth0 alias. > > Changing SYSFS to ATTR should do it. > _______________________________________________
Tom, Now I get in the syslog: Unknown key: ATTR{address} I also tried ATTRS{address} seen in some examples, same error. Digging around google a bit more I came up with different rules, and fingers crossed, they seem to work! SUBSYSTEM=="net", SYSFS{address}=="00:1b:21:4d:c3:e8", NAME="eth0" # pro/1000gt SUBSYSTEM=="net", SYSFS{address}=="00:e0:81:b5:7a:30", NAME="eth1" # internal 1 SUBSYSTEM=="net", SYSFS{address}=="00:e0:81:b5:7a:31", NAME="eth2" # internal 2 I also performed chmod +x on the 60-net.rules file, I noticed some other files in rules.d were marked as executable, so I figured it couldn't hurt! Gordon _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos