Agreed! I generally do that too unless I'm in an ethernet bonding situation where I want to make sure I specify the correct NIC as primary. Most of the time, it really doesn't matter.
...frd
Johnny Hughes wrote:
On Fri, 2007-04-20 at 10:21 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
Ralph Angenendt wrote:
Jerry Geis wrote:
Only thing to add here is the network card does work, however I get a dmesg output that eth1 has an invalid MAC address.
Asus mainboard?
Is that invalid MAC address changing my setup? I dont think it should. granted I'm still looking at finding a way to reset he MAC address or something but I dont think the ifcfg-eth files should be modified.
The random address is different from the one which is in ifcfg-eth* from installation.
This seems like a bug- that is the reason for the post.
Yes. Googling around hints at this being a BIOS bug. Also see http://bugs.centos.org/view.php?id=1949.
Can you fix this by removing the: HWADDR= line from the ifcfg-eth* files? Most of my machines have swappable drive carriers and I routinely swap them and clone machines by dd'ing the raw disks. If I remove the HWADDR entry I can assign the IP addresses when building the disks and have it come up correctly when the disk is installed in some remote machine. I suppose someday this will break when I'm not looking, but it has saved me a lot of trouble over the last several years. Now if the kernels would just be consistent about the order they probe the devices and assign the eth* names....
I was going to suggest trying that too....
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