Re: Network (LAN) 'lost'

2007-12-14 Thread Uwe Dippel
On Tue, 11 Dec 2007 16:11:57 +0100, Benjamin Schmidt wrote: The configuration file you need, is: /etc/udev/rules.d/z25_persistent-net.rules delete the entry with eth0 and rename the other entry from eth2 to eth0. Ok, now reboot (or only restart udev, don't know) and you will have eth0

Re: Network (LAN) 'lost'

2007-12-14 Thread Sudev Barar
On 11/12/2007, Benjamin Schmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: If you have udev installed and it recognizes a ethernet adapter with a unknown mac address, it will assign a new eth*-reference. So maybe you used a mac changer or some updates deletes a udev specific file. I don't know. The

Network (LAN) 'lost'

2007-12-11 Thread Uwe Dippel
This morning, at boot, suddenly no LAN. The boot screen already had some SIOCSIF errors. Solaris booted properly, with LAN. In a nutshell, eth0 suddenly migrated to eth2, as one and only eth device. Details: This is what I get from dmesg: ... ACPI: Processor [CPU1] (supports 16 throttling

Re: Network (LAN) 'lost'

2007-12-11 Thread Benjamin Schmidt
If you have udev installed and it recognizes a ethernet adapter with a unknown mac address, it will assign a new eth*-reference. So maybe you used a mac changer or some updates deletes a udev specific file. I don't know. The configuration file you need, is:

Re: Network (LAN) 'lost'

2007-12-11 Thread Uwe Dippel
On Tue, 11 Dec 2007 16:11:57 +0100, Benjamin Schmidt wrote: If you have udev installed and it recognizes a ethernet adapter with a unknown mac address, it will assign a new eth*-reference. So maybe you used a mac changer or some updates deletes a udev specific file. I don't know. The