This section only applies if a user is going to configure a network card. If not, this section can be skipped.
Create the /etc/init.d/ethnet script by running the following command:
cat > /etc/init.d/ethnet << "EOF" #!/bin/sh # Begin /etc/init.d/ethnet # # Main script by Gerard Beekmans - gerard@linuxfromscratch.org # GATEWAY check by Jean-François Le Ray - jfleray@club-internet.fr # "Specify which IF to use to reach default GATEWAY" by # Graham Cantin - gcantin@pacbell.net # # # Include the functions declared in the /etc/init.d/functions file # and the variables from the /etc/sysconfig/network file. # source /etc/init.d/functions source /etc/sysconfig/network case "$1" in start) # # Obtain all the network card configuration files # for interface in $(/bin/ls /etc/sysconfig/nic-config/ifcfg* | \ grep -v ifcfg-lo) do # # Load the variables from that file # source $interface # # If the ONBOOT variable is set to yes, process this file and bring the # interface up. # if [ "$ONBOOT" == yes ] then echo -n "Bringing up the $DEVICE interface..." /sbin/ifconfig $DEVICE $IP broadcast $BROADCAST \ netmask $NETMASK evaluate_retval fi done # # If the /etc/sysconfig/network file contains a GATEWAY variable, set # the default gateway and the interface through which the default # gateway can be reached. # if [ "$GATEWAY" != "" ]; then echo -n "Setting up routing for $GATEWAY_IF interface..." /sbin/route add default gateway $GATEWAY \ metric 1 dev $GATEWAY_IF evaluate_retval fi ;; stop) # # Obtain all the network card configuration files # for interface in $(/bin/ls /etc/sysconfig/nic-config/ifcfg* | \ grep -v ifcfg-lo) do # # Load the variables from that file # source $interface # # If the ONBOOT variable is set, process the file and bring the # interface down # if [ $ONBOOT == yes ] then echo -n "Bringing down the $DEVICE interface..." /sbin/ifconfig $DEVICE down evaluate_retval fi done ;; restart) $0 stop sleep 1 $0 start ;; *) echo "Usage: $0 {start|stop|restart}" exit 1 ;; esac # End /etc/init.d/ethnet EOF
If a default gateway is required to be setup, the following command does that:
cat >> /etc/sysconfig/network << "EOF" GATEWAY=192.168.1.2 GATEWAY_IF=eth0 EOF
GATEWAY and GATEWAY_IF need to be changed to match the network setup. GATEWAY contains the address of the default gateway, and GATEWAY_IF contains the network interface through which that default gateway can be reached.
Which interfaces are brought up and down by the ethnet script depends on the files in the /etc/sysconfig/nic-config directory. This directory should contain files in the form of ifcfg-x where x is an identification number (or whatever a user named it).
First the nic-config directory is created by running:
mkdir /etc/sysconfig/nic-config
Now, new files are created in that directory containing the following. The following command creates a sample file ifcfg-eth0:
cat > /etc/sysconfig/nic-config/ifcfg-eth0 << "EOF" ONBOOT=yes DEVICE=eth0 IP=192.168.1.1 NETMASK=255.255.255.0 BROADCAST=192.168.1.255 EOF
Of course, the values of those four variables have to be changed in every file to match the proper setup. Usually NETMASK and BROADCAST will remain the same, just the DEVICE and IP variables will change per network interface. If the ONBOOT variable is set to yes, the ethnet script will bring it up during boot up of the system. If set to anything else but yes it will be ignored by the ethnet script and thus not brought up.