Hi Sigurd,

Sorry I made a mistake.  

This PC has 2 NICs.  I use eth1 to connect broadband leaving eth0 idle without 
removed.

# dmesg | grep eth
eth0: RealTek RTL8139 Fast Ethernet at 0xd8c19000, 00:50:fc:6c:70:f7, IRQ 11
eth0:  Identified 8139 chip type 'RTL-8139C'
eth1: RealTek RTL8139 Fast Ethernet at 0xd8c1b000, 00:50:fc:61:f3:94, IRQ 10
eth1:  Identified 8139 chip type 'RTL-8139C'
eth0: Setting half-duplex based on auto-negotiated partner ability 0000.
eth0: no IPv6 routers present
eth1: Setting half-duplex based on auto-negotiated partner ability 0000.
eth1: no IPv6 routers present

B.R.
Stephen



On Thursday 23 October 2003 12:10, Sigurd Stordal wrote:
> > > > (Remark: the denotation of NIC of this PC is eth1 because previously
> > > > it had 2 NICs, eth0 and eth1.  I removed eth0, the remaining NIC
> > > > retaining eth1)
>
> This I don't understand. Do you have only one NIC, then this NIC should be
> eth0 no matter what it was before. But if you have to NIC's, or one ppp
> connection, then it makes more sense.
> what will dmesg | grep eth give.


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