I have been stumped by this problem, despite plenty of help. I thought I
knew Linux networking pretty well but could not solve this one.
The problem turned out to be ACPI related. I found a comment online
describing a solution
Add pci=noacpi to the boot parameters.
I tried this and had no furt
Les Mikesell wrote:
Chris Mason (Lists) wrote:
Ray Leventhal wrote:
I'm no expert, but I'd be the HWADDR values in your
/etc/sysconfig/ifcfg-ethx files need to be updated to reflect the
new MAC addresses of the physical interfaces in the box.
Done that. The ifcfg-ethX is referencing the
Chris Mason (Lists) wrote:
Ray Leventhal wrote:
I'm no expert, but I'd be the HWADDR values in your
/etc/sysconfig/ifcfg-ethx files need to be updated to reflect the new
MAC addresses of the physical interfaces in the box.
Done that. The ifcfg-ethX is referencing the right interfaces.
Ray Leventhal wrote:
I'm no expert, but I'd be the HWADDR values in your
/etc/sysconfig/ifcfg-ethx files need to be updated to reflect the new
MAC addresses of the physical interfaces in the box.
Done that. The ifcfg-ethX is referencing the right interfaces.
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Chris Mason (Lists) wrote:
I have a centos 4.0 box that has three network interfaces and is used
as router. It runs shorewall as a two-ISP firewall for a single LAN.
This morning, the motherboard's LAN interface gave trouble, spewing
out IRQ problems, so I disabled it and changed the network car
I have a centos 4.0 box that has three network interfaces and is used as
router. It runs shorewall as a two-ISP firewall for a single LAN.
This morning, the motherboard's LAN interface gave trouble, spewing out
IRQ problems, so I disabled it and changed the network cards. As I only
had two slots
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