On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 2:55 PM, Eero Volotinen eero.volotinen@iki.fi wrote:
2010/10/13 Boris Epstein borepstein@gmail.com:
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 2:19 PM, Brunner, Brian T. BBrunner@gai-tronics.com wrote:
I just tried a full powerdown with NTP deactivated. The system came up, the time is fine.
Not that the time on the motherboard should necessarily affect the MAC on an expansion card, but that was a good test nonetheless.
I'm suspicious (as others have suggested) the card itself is bad. I think to suspect the flash chip that stores the MAC addr. The rest of the card may be perfect. Using it long-term might require no more than a manual edit of the init script for it adding something to this effect 'if MAC == zeros; then set MAC to 00:0a:cd:1a:c1:71 fi'. This will fix this card without clobbering it's successor down the road.
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Brian,
While those suspicions were well justified I am not sure your guess is correct in this particular case as I just swapped the NIC I had for a different one and I seem to be getting the same sort of errors again. What's the likelihood that two NICs in a row have a faulty flash?
Well, you can set new mac address also manually on ifcfg-ethX script .. or ifconfig ..
-- Eero _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
OK... how do I set it? Or, more importantly, how do I find out what MAC the card currently thinks it has?
Boris.