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Thanks very much! I think I have found an issue in the init script dependencies. Basically, /etc/init.d/network does not depend on /etc/rc.d/pcmcia, but defers network initialization to /etc/rc.d/pcmcia. This fails when you are using IP-aliasses on a PCMCIA ethernet adapter. Let me explain more clearly: I have a laptop with eth0 being a PCMCIA card. The configuration of eth0 with an IP-address went ok - really no problem at all. Now I wanted to have an IP alias eth0:0, and this seems easy: extra entry in yast that gets into /etc/rc.config (see the snippets below). Starting the alias was no problem either: just run "/etc/rc.d/network start" and you are go. Now rebooting is a different issue: after a reboot, eth0 is up, but eth0:0 is not. Running "/etc/rc.d/network start" again solves this, but a reboot kills it. The issue appears to be that the card is a PCMCIA card, and this is not handled correctly by the init scripts. The /etc/rc.d/network script runs first, and defers eth0 initialization until /etc/rc.d/pcmcia is executed. But since eth0:0 depends on eth0, it is skipped by /etc/rc.d/network (without ANY warning!), and not deferred to /etc/rc.d/pcmcia . When /etc/rc.d/pcmcia runs, it only knows about eth0 (because that is a PCMCIA card) and not about eth0:0 (which it thinks is a regular network card). Looking at the init scripts (see snippets below) you can see the dependencies. I have a temporary workaround: 1. add 'pcmcia' to the 'Required-Start:' line in /etc/rc.d/network. It now looks like this: # Required-Start: $local_fs dummy usbmgr dhclient firewall_init pcmcia 2. run 'insserv' to re-generate the links in the runlevel directories. I am not satisfied with this workaround, as it creates a circular dependency (/etc/rc.d/network and /etc/rc.d/pcmcia depend on each other), but on my machine it now boots fine: /etc/rc.d/pcmcia is executed first, followed by /etc/rc.d/network. Since /etc/rc.d/pcmcia detects the PCMCIA card fine, /etc/rc.d/network starts both eth0 and eth0:0. But somehow this solution feels awkward. So I'd appreciate suggestions on how to fix this better. Snippet from /etc/rc.d/network: # /etc/init.d/network # ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: network # Required-Start: $local_fs dummy usbmgr dhclient firewall_init # Required-Stop: # Default-Start: 2 3 5 # Default-Stop: # Description: Configure the network interfaces ### END INIT INFO Snippet from /etc/rc.d/pcmcia: ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: pcmcia # # /sbin/init.d/pcmcia # ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: pcmcia # Required-Start: network # Required-Stop: # Default-Start: 2 3 5 # Default-Stop: # Description: Loads pcmcia base modules and starts cardmgr ### END INIT INFO Snippet from /etc/rc.d: # Networking # # Number of network cards: "_0" for one, "_0 _1 _2 _3" for four cards # NETCONFIG="_1" # # This variable contains all indices of active PCMCIA network devices # NETCONFIG_PCMCIA="_0" # # IP Adresses # IPADDR_0="10.0.0.151" IPADDR_1="192.168.1.151" IPADDR_2="" IPADDR_3="" # # Network device names (e.g. "eth0") # NETDEV_0="eth0" NETDEV_1="eth0:0" NETDEV_2="" NETDEV_3="" # # Parameters for ifconfig, simply enter "bootp" or "dhcpclient" to use the # respective service for configuration. # Sample entry for ethernet: # IFCONFIG_0="192.168.81.38 broadcast 192.168.81.63 netmask 255.255.255.224" # IFCONFIG_0="10.0.0.151 broadcast 10.0.255.255 netmask 255.255.0.0 up" IFCONFIG_1="192.168.1.151 broadcast 192.168.1.255 netmask 255.255.255.0 up" IFCONFIG_2="" IFCONFIG_3="" -- Jeroen W. Pluimers Consultant at All I M http://www.all-im.com