Mike McGrath >> Though I believe the issue you may be having is that you're trying to >> assign the same IP address to both interfaces. They should have a >> different IP address (and ideally be on a different network) for >> example, eth0: 192.168.1.250, eth1: 192.168.2.250. Bruno Wolff III: > No that isn't it. You can use the same IP address on different interfaces. That's asking for problems. IP addresses relate to interfaces, not machines. Each interface should have an unique address. You'd be relying on your system trying to sort out problems for you with the same IP on different interfaces, and that's never a good thing. > The message about an IP address already in use, means some other system on > the same network is using that address. How's it going to do that, then? My computer has no idea about another computer on my network unless it talks to it, and they don't do that unless I deliberately try something between the two of them. I *can* set two PCs on a network with the same IP address, it's an accident that happens time and time again on any network that has visiting PCs. Of course I'm going to have lots of problems, but nothing stops me from doing so in the first place. -- Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.