Hallo an alle Interessierten, Danke Poedi und Guido,
Wolfgangs Tipp auf > debian-edu_at_lists.debian.org
war richtig und löste mein Problem:
>
> IMO this is not a network card issue.
> I guess renaming the interface names would help.
>
> Only do the following if the system isn't used by anyone else...
>
> (0) Put down the MAC addresses of eth3 and eth4 (eth4 should be eth0 and
> eth3 should be eth1 later)
> (1) Remove 'net.ifnames=0' from the kernel command line in
> /etc/default/grub
> (2) Run 'update-grub'
> (3) Reboot. 'ip a' will show you the persistent network interface names
> (probably something like enpXsY, where Y is the slot name) and MACs
> (4) Add MAC matching lines at the begin of /etc/network/interfaces, e.g.:
> rename enp0s3=eth0
> rename enp0s8=eth1
> (5) Reboot and check if everything works, otherwise fix the renaming lines
>
Danke!
readU
Frank
Received on Tue Nov 24 2020 - 07:57:45 CET
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