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Re: Where is eth0?



Thanks for the hint Rick. I tried it but it didn't work.
It just poped an unhandled error telling me to report it. Thing is, I didn't write it down so I can't do it anymore.
I had to change my card to a PCI card . Once I had removed kudzu which seems to inhibit all connections to the outside
# chkconfig --del kudzu
and done a correct
# ifconfig eth0 ... netmask ...
with my parameters and a
# ifup eth0
well, it all worked fine.


For a reason, this didn't work with my former ISA card. I have no idea why.

So I now updated my system to Fedora Core 2 and once more removed kudzu and ... no problem.


Rick Stevens a écrit:


Cédric CACHAT wrote:

Hello,

I'm just getting started with Linux so please excuse me if the explanations aren't clear enough.
I have encountered some problems while installing Fedora Core 2 on my computer. All information concerning eth0 is lost after installation, I can't have any network connection whatsoever.


Here is a summary of what I've done so far:
- I've put Fedora core 2 with minimal configuration on a computer that used to be running with windows. This first time, it worked just fine. I could update the rpms to the latest version available with up2date.
This is where I screwed up:
- I then tried to install ALL the rpms from the CD, starting from scratch, and as I rebooted the computer, the connection to internet was lost as if my 3com card wasn't there anymore
- I tried to put back the minimal configuration, even get back down to Fedora Core 1, but always with the same result.
- I tried to install from a hard drive => didn't work either
So I figured my card was dead. I tried to put windows on a partition and Fedora on an other. When I boot with windows, there is no problem with the network connection.
But as soon as I try to start using the fedora partition, well, I let you guess... nothing!
The % ifconfig is nearly "empty". It just gives the "lo" details. The % ifup eth0 gives "configuration for eth0 not found". How could I restore my connection?


Has anybody encountered such problems? Can you tell me what to do?


When you did the second install, the system probably asked you if you
wanted to migrate your network settings.  If you answered "No", then the
old config is erased.

Log in as the root user. At the "#" prompt under Fedora Core 1, enter:

redhat-config-network

If you're using Fedora Core 2, use:

system-config-network

Fill in the forms as you need them.  That should reconfigure your
network settings.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Rick Stevens, Senior Systems Engineer     rstevens vitalstream com -
- VitalStream, Inc.                       http://www.vitalstream.com -
-                                                                    -
-           Give me ambiguity or give me something else!             -
----------------------------------------------------------------------


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