On Thu, Nov 11, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Jerry Geis wrote:
> centos 5 had modprobe.conf entries for eth0 and if present eth1.
> something like:
> alias eth0 forcedeth
> alias eth1 e1000e
>
> For the new centos 6 (I have the rhel 6 client installed on my laptop)
> the modprobe.conf file is gone. Which is
At Thu, 11 Nov 2010 18:32:28 +0200 CentOS mailing list
wrote:
>
> Jerry Geis wrote:
> > centos 5 had modprobe.conf entries for eth0 and if present eth1.
> > something like:
> > alias eth0 forcedeth
> > alias eth1 e1000e
> >
> > For the new centos 6 (I have the rhel 6 client installed on my lap
On Thursday, November 11, 2010 11:20:47 am Jerry Geis wrote:
> So I used to grep for eth0 and eth1 do get the module names from
> modprobe.conf.
> How do I get that information in RHEL 6 since it doesnt seem to be there.
> Thanks, (just trying to prepare)
I would think it would work like Fedo
Jerry Geis wrote:
> centos 5 had modprobe.conf entries for eth0 and if present eth1.
> something like:
> alias eth0 forcedeth
> alias eth1 e1000e
>
> For the new centos 6 (I have the rhel 6 client installed on my laptop)
> the modprobe.conf file is gone. Which is fine. I understand files can be
>
centos 5 had modprobe.conf entries for eth0 and if present eth1.
something like:
alias eth0 forcedeth
alias eth1 e1000e
For the new centos 6 (I have the rhel 6 client installed on my laptop)
the modprobe.conf file is gone. Which is fine. I understand files can be
created in /etc/modprobe.d and ser
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