Okay, for the life of me, I can't figure this one out... It's got me
thoroughly perplexed.
I'm running an NVidia NForce 2 chipset and using the forcedeth driver
for the networking from the 2.6.8-gentoo-r4 kernel. When I boot the
system, it gets through everything just fine until it gets to the
default runlevel... At which point, it makes no mention of bringing up
interface eth0, (though it proudly proclaims it's finished bringing up
lo) then goes on to fail mounting the Samba file system, and failing
to set the system clock via NTP... But once the system is up, and I've
logged in (Be it console or X) I have no problem doing either one of
these things manually, and the interface works normally... Which is
fairly annoying.
Anyone else experience anything similar to this?
--
-Jokr 2 Thief
Your speedbump on the information super highway.
----
"It dosen't matter how many times you type them... 'u, ur, r ne1 b and
y' are *NOT* real words." - Me
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
thoroughly perplexed.
I'm running an NVidia NForce 2 chipset and using the forcedeth driver
for the networking from the 2.6.8-gentoo-r4 kernel. When I boot the
system, it gets through everything just fine until it gets to the
default runlevel... At which point, it makes no mention of bringing up
interface eth0, (though it proudly proclaims it's finished bringing up
lo) then goes on to fail mounting the Samba file system, and failing
to set the system clock via NTP... But once the system is up, and I've
logged in (Be it console or X) I have no problem doing either one of
these things manually, and the interface works normally... Which is
fairly annoying.
Anyone else experience anything similar to this?
--
-Jokr 2 Thief
Your speedbump on the information super highway.
----
"It dosen't matter how many times you type them... 'u, ur, r ne1 b and
y' are *NOT* real words." - Me
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list