you can assign it yourself by using "alias" on modules.conf
ie.
alias eth0 8193too
alias eth1 3com123
-JhAzEr- wrote:
On Fri, 25 Oct 2002 at 16:24, Ronald Warner wrote:
how does linux assign its nic numbering, i.e., eth0 to eth[nn]... i am wondering because i have a linux box in which i installed another nic. i configured it as eth1 but found out that eth0 moved to the new nic and the old nic because eth1...;) Hmmmmmm, i've asked myself that question before (but never posted it on the lists). In my own experience it depends on which nic driver module it loads first. For example i have a 3com 3c900b nic and a cnet nic. During bootup the 3com driver loads first followed by the cnet driver (you can check it using 'dmesg'). So my 3com becomes eth0 and cnet becomes eth1 ;) This is based on my own experience, others might have the right answer...(why do i feel that i am right). ;)
is it assigned via slot? how does the numbering go if you have a dual nic?
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