Re: New network device causes 'jump' from eth0 to eth1

2008-07-04 Thread Oron Peled
Since people pointed to distribution specific files, let's consolidate the knowledge: * Renaming interfaces used to be done by the nameif(8) command. * Although this command is still carried by modern distributions (e.g: my Fedora-8 and Fedora-9) its usage was deprecated in favor of the

New network device causes 'jump' from eth0 to eth1

2008-07-03 Thread Noam Rathaus
Hi, I moved an HD from one computer to another (not related to the grub issue :D), and because there is a different network card, eth0 is not longer present and now eth1 is the deacto network card. I don't want to reconfigure a few products I have bounded to eth0 (mainly firewall rules). How

Re: New network device causes 'jump' from eth0 to eth1

2008-07-03 Thread Shachar Shemesh
Noam Rathaus wrote: Hi, I moved an HD from one computer to another (not related to the grub issue :D), and because there is a different network card, eth0 is not longer present and now eth1 is the deacto network card. I don't want to reconfigure a few products I have bounded to eth0 (mainly

Re: New network device causes 'jump' from eth0 to eth1

2008-07-03 Thread Omer Zak
--=-norL4QRk5t43W51udD8G Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit The relevant file is /etc/network/interfaces - see man 5 interfaces. On Thu, 2008-07-03 at 16:27 +0300, Noam Rathaus wrote: Hi, I moved an HD from one computer to another (not related to the grub issue :D),

Re: New network device causes 'jump' from eth0 to eth1

2008-07-03 Thread Baruch Siach
Hi Noam, On Thu, Jul 03, 2008 at 04:27:29PM +0300, Noam Rathaus wrote: Hi, Or basically, where is it written that eth0 is 'thismodule' while eth1 is 'thisothermodule'? udev takes care of this. On Debian machines the relevant configuration file is /etc/udev/rules.d/z25_persistent-net.rules.

Re: New network device causes 'jump' from eth0 to eth1

2008-07-03 Thread Ehud Karni
On Thu, 3 Jul 2008 16:41:20 Baruch Siach wrote: On Thu, Jul 03, 2008 at 04:27:29PM +0300, Noam Rathaus wrote: Hi, Or basically, where is it written that eth0 is 'thismodule' while eth1 is 'thisothermodule'? udev takes care of this. On Debian machines the relevant configuration file is