Dennis,
You should be able to shut off the on-board NIC in the
BIOS setup on the server. That should cause the
system to recognize the new PCI card as eth0.
Otherwise you can use something like webmin to
configure the DHCP server to use eth1.
Todd
--- DenisG [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi
Denis,
Did you change your DHCP server settings to listen on eth1?
Pete Billson
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http://www.elbnet.com
ELB Internet Service, Inc.
Web Design, Computer Consulting, Internet Hosting
DenisG wrote:
Hi list
I changed the network card on my LTSP server, and since that the client
can't get an
Denis,
It depends on the distro. For Redhat, it's in /etc/sysconfig/dhcp
Jim McQuillan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 1 Nov 2005, DenisG wrote:
Hi list
I changed the network card on my LTSP server, and since that the client can't
get an IP at boot, displaying
Searching for server
Denis,
Did you change your DHCP server settings to listen on eth1?
Pete Billson
Thanks for your reply (and thanks to Todd too)
That's exactly what I want to do, but I don't find where to do this!
I use dhcp3-server on Ubuntu. There's nothing about it in dhcpd.conf.
Not sure where
YEEES !!
Thanks Jim, that was the information I was looking for, and it worked. I
thought everything was in dhcpd.conf. I learnt something today again ;)
Thanks to Todd and Peter too.
DenisG
Jim McQuillan a écrit :
Denis,
Ah, now we have enough information to really help you.
On Ubuntu,
Peter Billson a écrit :
Denis,
Did you change your DHCP server settings to listen on eth1?
Pete Billson
Thanks for your reply (and thanks to Todd too)
That's exactly what I want to do, but I don't find where to do this!
I use dhcp3-server on Ubuntu. There's nothing about it in dhcpd.conf.
Denis,
Ah, now we have enough information to really help you.
On Ubuntu, with dhcp3, you need to edit the /etc/default/dhcp3-server
file, and set:
INTERFACES=eth1
Then, restart dhcp3-server
Jim McQuillan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 1 Nov 2005, DenisG wrote:
Peter Billson a écrit :
Denis,
I don't use Ubuntu but (since it is Debian-based) in Debian the
setting is in a file under /etc/defaults - file name is something like
dhcp or dhcp3.
You can also look in the /etc/init.d/dhcp* start up script.
Pete Billson
--
http://www.elbnet.com
ELB Internet Service, Inc.
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