At 10:50 AM 11/15/2012, you wrote: >david wrote: > > > > The Centos installation I chose was the "NetInstall". The > > installation process identified eth0, I selected IPV4 DHCP, disabled > > IPV6, and successfully completed the install of "desktop" using the > > wired connection through my home network. The wireless was turned > > off. The ethernet controller shows up in Windows with the name "Intel > > 8255LM". > > > > When the reboot occurred after installation, the Ethernet did not > > work. The "ifconfig eth0" command showed no IP address. Where do I > > go from here? > > >Hi, david. First question: does the laptop have a physical switch on the >side that turns on/off wifi, the way Dells do? > >Try an lspci, and see if it shows. > >If it does, wireless will be wlan0, usually. Why your wired ethernet's not >working - look at dmesg and/or /var/log/messages, and see if the driver >was loaded. Next, look at /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts, and see if >ifcfg-eth0 is turned on at boot. > > mark Thanks for the hints, Mark. Here's what I found... Wireless has no "physical" switch, but something I think is pretty much the same. There's a lighted button above the keyboard which, I think, is interpreted directly by the bios. It shows "off", and does change when pressed. It is set off, which I suppose means that the radio is off. The system does show both eth0 and wlan0, both as options during the net-install, and also in the "ifconfig" response. Strangely, when I tried the install again just now, and selected "Desktop" (instead of "Minimal Desktop" as I did last time), all worked properly. Ethernet works. Perhaps the problem is that "minimal desktop" didn't include the ethernet drivers? I guess I withdraw my complaint. David _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos