Hi,

Use the "ifconfig -a" command to collect all the availables interfaces informations.

Best,

Le 9 oct. 04, à 23:20, Alex Tweedly a écrit :

At 15:18 09/10/2004 -0500, Ken Ray wrote:
(Sorry about that last one)

Thanks, Mark... I tried this in my copy of RedHat 9, and I don't get
anything with "HWaddr" in /sbin/ifconfig. When I looked at Mark Waddingham's
approach of doing "cat /proc/net/arp", I didn't get anything either. The
only thing I got with /sbin/ifconfig is the localhost address (127.0.0.1).


So perhaps it's not as universal as we'd think... any suggestions for
getting MAC address in RedHat 9?

Stupid question - but are you sure you had an ethernet interface up and running on the Redhat9 box when you tried this ?


Getting only localhost back is what you'd expect if there is no active ethernet interface, and the /proc/net/arp method would similarly give you nothing back.I don't have a copy of Redhat - but I know that back at version 6 it supported ifconfig as needed for this method to work.

-- Alex.
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