On Wed, 8 Mar 2000, Jon Pennington wrote:
Are the cards sharing a single IRQ?
No. The first card gets 10 and the second 11. I even tried using a kernel option ether=0,0,eth1.
Have you tried moving one card up or down a slot on the motherboard?
Let me do that and get back to you.
One of the advantages to a *modular* kernel design is the ability to troubleshoot problems like this one. Modular kernels don't run any slower than purely monolithic kernels when used in something like a firewall/router, so don't roll your eyes at the idea. ;)
With modular support for ne2k-pci, the cards are detected properly, the interfaces eth0 and eth1 show up with "ifconfig -a", but I cannot ping machines on either network. My routes are configured properly. The output of "route -n" gives the following: Kernel IP routing table Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth0 202.54.17.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth1 127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0 lo 0.0.0.0 202.54.17.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth1 Thanks and hope to sort this out soon. Gurunandan -- To unsubscribe send e-mail to suse-linux-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the FAQ at http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/