Remove eth0

Ubuntu uses the new naming scheme.  Forcing the user to figure out the
correct name avoids them blindly typing eth0 and ending up with broken
networking.
Richard Laager 2016-08-21 00:22:06 -05:00
parent a9b77b76ac
commit ccc67bcb48
2 changed files with 14 additions and 8 deletions

@ -150,11 +150,14 @@ The `debootstrap` command leaves the new system in an unconfigured state. An al
4.2 Configure the network interface: 4.2 Configure the network interface:
# vi /mnt/etc/network/interfaces.d/eth0 Find the interface name:
auto eth0 # ifconfig -a
iface eth0 inet dhcp
Customize this file if the interface is not named eth0 or if new system is not a DHCP client on the LAN. # vi /mnt/etc/network/interfaces.d/NAME
auto NAME
iface NAME inet dhcp
Customize this file if the system is not a DHCP client.
4.3 Bind the virtual filesystems from the LiveCD environment to the new system and `chroot` into it: 4.3 Bind the virtual filesystems from the LiveCD environment to the new system and `chroot` into it:

@ -151,11 +151,14 @@ The `debootstrap` command leaves the new system in an unconfigured state. An al
4.2 Configure the network interface: 4.2 Configure the network interface:
# vi /mnt/etc/network/interfaces.d/eth0 Find the interface name:
auto eth0 # ifconfig -a
iface eth0 inet dhcp
Customize this file if the interface is not named eth0 or if new system is not a DHCP client on the LAN. # vi /mnt/etc/network/interfaces.d/NAME
auto NAME
iface NAME inet dhcp
Customize this file if the system is not a DHCP client.
4.3 Bind the virtual filesystems from the LiveCD environment to the new system and `chroot` into it: 4.3 Bind the virtual filesystems from the LiveCD environment to the new system and `chroot` into it: