We seem to be slightly out of topic here... I am regretably not on my machine, however, (just by memory) you should look in your menu for a system (?) item (I find it in gnome as well as in kde) there is a network config there where you can select which card should be used and I believe configure the network parms for that card. Each card has its own config since one usually use a two card PC for IP maskerading(i.e. one card is internet access, the other is local network). I would have to be on my machine in order to help more... Lionel --- fernando@usicomputer.com wrote: > Hi Alex, > I have this motherboard with two network cards onboard, I loaded RH7.3. When > I was installing RH, the OS found the two cards(nic), I set them up with two > different IP addresses and all the necessary information for our network. > Ounce I finished the installation, I tested eth0 by going in the internet, > which it work nicely, then I tried the same thing with eth1(I unpluged the > cable from eth0 and plugged into eth1). After a minute or two I got a > message saying it didn't find the site or server maybe be down and try later > or something like that. > Basically, I want to test that both cards work and I thought going in the > internet was the best test for the network cards. > > when you say: > "There exists exactly one route to your default gateway, either eth0 or > eth1, not both." > it means that I can only use one network card to go in the internet? is that > right? Remember I am still learning linux. > Thanks againg. > > Fernando > > > -----Original Message----- > From: newbie-admin@XFree86.Org [mailto:newbie-admin@XFree86.Org]On > Behalf Of Alexander Neundorf > Sent: Tuesday, August 06, 2002 12:30 AM > To: newbie@XFree86.Org > Subject: Re: network cards > > > On Tuesday 06 August 2002 01:14, you wrote: > > The cards have different ip addresses. > > Like I mention before only one card(eth0) allows me to get in the internet > > but not the other(eth1) I would like to know what do I need to do in order > > for the second nic to work. > > Thanks for your help. > > > > Fernando > > Hi, > > what do you mean by "it doesn't allow you to get in the internet" ? > If you enter an address from the internet (as opposed to an address inside > your LAN), the packets will be sent to your default gateway. There exists > exactly one route to your default gateway, either eth0 or eth1, not both. > > Please describe a bit more exactly what you want to do. > > Bye > Alex > _______________________________________________ > > Newbie@XFree86.Org > *** To unsubscribe , or change message options, see: > http://XFree86.Org/mailman/listinfo/newbie > > > _______________________________________________ > > Newbie@XFree86.Org > *** To unsubscribe , or change message options, see: > http://XFree86.Org/mailman/listinfo/newbie __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Health - Feel better, live better http://health.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ Newbie@XFree86.Org *** To unsubscribe , or change message options, see: http://XFree86.Org/mailman/listinfo/newbie