What does eno mean in network interface name ‘eno16777736’ for CentOS 7 or RHEL 7?
Under consistent network device naming scheme, what does ‘eno’ stand for in network interface name eno16777736 for CentOS 7 or RHEL 7?
Under consistent network device naming scheme, what does ‘eno’ stand for in network interface name eno16777736 for CentOS 7 or RHEL 7?
Is there a workaround for Debian Bug #838871?
According to Debian Network setup document allow-hotplug <interface_name> stanza in /etc/network/interfaces file starts an interface when the kernel detects a hotplug event from the interface. What is this hotplug event?
I am Running Raspian on a RaspberryPi.
there are strange things:
I have a problem with my WiFi card on Kubuntu. Sometimes the system doesn’t recognise it, but what is strange is that it doesn’t happen everytime, but just about one boot on four, and I can’t understand why. If I run lshw -C network I get:
I have a service running on 127.0.0.1 with port 2222. I need to forward all requests to 192.168.2.2:2222 (outside IP) only from subnet 192.168.1.0/24 to 127.0.0.1:2222.
I’m able change my network routing metrics with ifmetric, for example ifmetric enp0s3 1.
I would like to do 2 things:
I have a problem with an ASUSPRO B8430UA laptop: when I boot it with Ubuntu 16.04 (or NixOS 16.03) the Ethernet port does not work. The driver used is e1000e, it reports: