
I believe, that by default, you must create your network connection after a fresh install of crux. It's not auto-configured for you like most distro's, nor should it be really. Follow the yellow brick road, follow follow follow, follow the yellow brick road.:) http://crux.nu/Main/Handbook3-1#ntoc53http://crux.nu/Main/Handbook3-1 On Wednesday, December 31, 2014 8:36 AM, James Trimbee <james.trimbee@gmail.com> wrote: On Dec 31, 2014 11:06 AM, "Cezar Rangel" <cezar.rangel@gmail.com> wrote:
I have run 'make menuconfig' and I have configured everything as it has been told. In the end, everything seemed perfect, no error message, no kernel panic when I rebooted. The graphic mode was ok.
However no connection. I have edited /etc/rc.d/net with DHCP. However, when I run #ping 8.8.8.8 the result is that the network is unreachable either with the intel card or with the RTL8169.
If I run #ip link show there is only lo, no device corresponding to an ethernet controller is recognized but if I run #lspci the intel controller is there:Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82574L Gigabit Network Connection.
I shall remark that when I first installed Crux 3.1 I made no changes concerning the kernel (linux-3.12.24) contained on the installation disc and I had no problem with the network. the ethernet controller was recognized as enp3s6 when I first rebooted and I could connect to the internet.
It is still missing drivers. 'lspci' will enumerate devices it polls - it doesn't mean they have drivers loaded. The missing items when you run ip suggests that. The Intel hardware in particular should be very straightforward. I'll take a look at the kernel config items when I get a moment. In the meantime please pastebin the contents of your kernel .config file and drop the link here.
_______________________________________________ CRUX mailing list CRUX@lists.crux.nu http://lists.crux.nu/mailman/listinfo/crux