I installed off the live CD. I will try a 6.3 net install and see what changes.
El Aug 9, 2012, a las 2:40 PM, m.roth@5-cent.us escribió:
Richard Reina wrote:
If it's as simple as sticking the MAC address into the ifcfg-eth file, I can live with that. But only ifcfg script that exits in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ is ifcfg-lo
I have no idea what k3wl is.
Script-kiddie speak. 3 == e. I was being sarcastic (about the fedora developers).
Thanks for the replies.
There should be *something*. Sounds like something's missing in the network part of your install.
mark
2012/8/9, m.roth@5-cent.us m.roth@5-cent.us:
Scott Robbins wrote:
On Thu, Aug 09, 2012 at 12:33:43PM -0500, Richard Reina wrote:
I have just installed 6.3 on a machine that was previously running 5.8. Under 5.8 eth0 was eth0. Now with 6.3 /sbin/ifconfig gives me lo, wlan0 and p4p1 (instead of eth0). I would like to make the ethernet a static IP as I intend to for this to be machine used on my LAN only. However, when I do /usr/sbin/setup -> Network Configuration the device is not listed. Can anyone tell me why this is happening and how I can fix it. Or if not how I can set a static and persistent IP address for the ethernet?
Well......
I tend to agree with the slashdot commentator who called it overcomplicated and unnecessary. It's another idea from
Yup. The difference between that, and sticking the MAC address into a simple, existing config file is, oh, that's right, it's k3wl.
Fedora, the theory, IIRC, was that this way, devices would always have the same name, whereas under the method that has been used device names could change on a reboot. (Haven't experienced that myself, but dunno).
I have. Putting the MAC address into ifcfg-eth? fixes it.
<method elided>
EXCEPT that in 6.x, you really need to edit /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistant-net.rules, too, or take the MAC out of ifcfg-eth?, since it needs to be in 70-blahblah.
mark
If you google Fedora biosdevname you'll come across various explanations. To change it back once the thing's been installed, I've always done it by first rpm -e biosdevname, then editing /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-whatever, changing the device name in there to eth0, changing the name of the file, e.g, ifcfg-p4p1 to ifcfg-eth0 and restarting. I haven't gotten it working by just restarting networking, but at any rate, if you know you don't want it during installation, you can add biosdevname=0 to the command line.
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