Mark, Thanks for the help. I had exactly the same experience with my PCMCIA Ethernet card. I did not have to do the card eject part, since my 3c589D was recognized by pcmcia. I now have everything working (I hope I can remember how I did it for next time!). I have thought about upgrading to 6.2, but it was such a hassle to get everything working at this point, that I may live with it for awhile before I make changes. Thanks again! Mark -----Original Message----- From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Mark Holbert Sent: Monday, December 04, 2000 6:28 PM To: plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us Subject: Re: Help - Linux Install problem! Mark, I recently re-installed Red Hat 6.1 on my laptop and had several problems with networking. (Note: 6.2 did not have any of the same problems) Some of the issues stem from the fact that my network card is PCMCIA. When the boot process tries to initiate eth0 it fails. Then later in the boot script it will initiate PCMCIA that will pick up and configure the network card. I can't remember where I read this, but somewhere it told me that when using PCMCIA and linuxconfig you should not put in anything for the Kernel module, I/O or . PCMCIA will probe your card and try to figure out what it is for you. A very nice feature when it works. Unfortunately it doesn't work quite right during boot up for me. I have to run "cardctl eject" and "cardctl insert" to re-initialize my network card (Red Hat 6.2 did not have this problem with the same laptop and network card). It might have to do with the fact that it's a 10/100 card running on a 10-bit network. I found most of my information in the PCMCIA How-To, but there are a couple of other sites that might have answers to your questions. I found a good one for my Toshiba that addressed specific problems for my hardware through www.google.com. Hope this helps. Mark Holbert mark@linuxsoftware.org > > -----Original Message----- > I have installed (several times!) Redhat 6.1 on my Dell Inspiron 3000 laptop > from a CD. > > The installation proceeds without a problem, and linux comes up just fine. > It even auto-recognizes my network card - 3Com 3C589D (eth0). I can log in > and poke around, start Gnome and try to configure the network. Now, as I try > to configure the network I run into problems. > > I can configure the interface eth0 (192.168.0.154), setup the host name > (dell_linux) and add a second host (192.168.0.145). If I do not add an entry > for dell_linux to the list of hosts, the machine reboots with one error > during boot from http server that it cannot resolve the host name. Gnome > (and X) start, but I get an error from X that says it cannot resolve the > host name dell_linux. I can ping the other host, and even surf the web. > > Now, if I add dell_linux to the list of hosts, the machine will not reboot. > It hangs in the boot process when it tries to enable(?) sendmail. > > My kernel is 2.2.5.-15 (I think - I am reinstalling it again so I can't > check right now.....ah the joy of it all). > > Any and all suggestions will be greatly appreciated!! > > Thanks! > > Mark > ________________________________________________ See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss