Alfred,
If your eth0 and eth1 are different chipsets, then you can tell the
kernel which module to load. That will allow you to use the preferred
NIC as eth0.
You'll need to know which kernel module supports your card, then pass a
kernel commandline arg of:
NIC=xxxxx
where xxxxx is the name of your kernel module without the .ko
Take a look at the KernelOptions wiki page for information about passing
that argument to the kernel.
http://wiki.ltsp.org/twiki/bin/view/Ltsp/KernelOptions
Jim McQuillan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Alfred Nutile wrote:
> Well let me be more clear.
> It boots fine with the second card but then it gets to a point I think
> right before the mounting of NFS where it looks for the dhcpd server again.
> It is at that point that it refers to eth0 BUT since I can not disable
> the onboard card, the card that works is not eth0 but eth1 is there
> somewhere I can tell the kernel to use this instead of eth0.
> I spent an hour trying to update the bios on the card to with no luck.
> Thanks
>
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