Well, with lspci, the two NIC's are Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd.
RTL-28139/8139C/8139C+ (rev 10) and ADMtek NC100 Network Everywhere
Fast Ethernet 10/100 (rev 11), how can I know the kernel modules
asociated?
Thanks!
2007/10/23, Alain Spineux [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Look in your fedora fc1 or
I'm building a Linux box to act as Proxy/Router/Firewall.
I'm using CentOS 4.5, with an old motherboard (Asus A8V-X), and two
Ethernet NIC, based on a realtek chip, that's widely supported under
2.4 and later kernel (the cards were functioning excellent in another
PC whit Fedora Core 1).
CentOS
Quoting Linux Man [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I'm building a Linux box to act as Proxy/Router/Firewall.
I'm using CentOS 4.5, with an old motherboard (Asus A8V-X), and two
Ethernet NIC, based on a realtek chip, that's widely supported under
2.4 and later kernel (the cards were functioning excellent in
No, it doesn't use that.
The unusual things that I use is Nat (S and D), and mark to support TC.
2007/10/22, Barry Brimer [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Quoting Linux Man [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I'm building a Linux box to act as Proxy/Router/Firewall.
I'm using CentOS 4.5, with an old motherboard (Asus
Look in your fedora fc1 or knoppix witch module was loaded for your two nic.
Then try a
# modprobe your_module_name_here
then
# dmesg
to look if both nics where recognized.
If so you have to update your modprobe.conf
Alain
Regards
On 10/22/07, Linux Man [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm building
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