On Sunday 05 December 2004 04:23 pm, fedora-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > Date: Mon, 6 Dec 2004 00:09:39 +0100 (CET) > From: Salvatore Indiogine <sindiogine@xxxxxxxx> > Subject: Lost all network connectivity after clean FC3 install > To: fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > Message-ID: > <20041205230939.36086.qmail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 > > Greetings! > > I had a decently working FC1 install on my PC. I have > 2 network cards on my PC (eth0 and eth1). > > eth0 is connected to a Motorola SB5100 cable modem. > The card is detected as D-Link RTL81. The driver > loaded is: 8139too > > eth0 is configured as DHCP with automatic obtain DNS > info from provider. > > eth1 is connected to another FC1 PC with a crossover > cable. It is configured as 10.0.0.1 with mask > 255.0.0.0 and gateway 10.0.0.1 > > When FC1 was installed it all worked perfectly: > internet and LAN, iptables masquerading and forwading. > > After the clean FC3 install nothing works anymore: > > eth0 failes to come up. > > eth1 comes up but any ping or ssh gives a network > unreacheable response. > > I do not have SELinux installed and also inactivated > the firewall, but to no avail. > > I really like Fedora and would like to keep using it. > However, a home LAN and internet connectivity are > essential for my whole family and I am afraid to I > have to switch to Ubuntu or SUSE if I can not get the > networking to work. > > Hopefully I have only overlooked something and it is > fixable. > > Thanks in advance. > > Enrico What does your: /etc/sysconfig/network say? To turn on Networking make sure it says NETWORKING = yes. Also check your: /etc/sysconfig/networking/devices/ifcfg-eth* where ifcfg-eth* stands for either eth0 or eth1. These files will hold your profiles for those devices. Jay Scherrer