Sun Microsystems GigaSwift Ethernet Adapter User Manual
Page 45
Chapter 2
Installing the Adapter
23
1. At the command line, use the
grep
command to search the
/etc/path_to_inst
file for
ce
interfaces.
In the example above, the device instance is from a Sun GigaSwift Ethernet adapter.
For clarity, the instance number is in bold italics.
2. Use the
ifconfig
command to set up the adapter’s
ce
interface.
Use the
ifconfig
command to assign an IP address to the network interface. Type
the following at the command line, replacing ip-address with the adapter’s IP
address:
Refer to the
ifconfig
(1M) man page and the Solaris documentation for more
information.
■
If you want a setup that remains the same after you reboot, create an
/etc/hostname.ce
number file, where number corresponds to the instance
number of the
ce
interface you plan to use.
To use the adapter’s
ce
interface in the Step 1 example, create an
/etc/hostname.ce0
file, where
0
is the number of the
ce
interface. If the
instance number were
1
, the filename would be
/etc/hostname.ce1
.
■
Do not create an
/etc/hostname.ce
number file for a Sun GigaSwift Ethernet
adapter interface you plan to leave unused.
■
The
/etc/hostname.ce
number file must contain the hostname and IP address
for the appropriate
ce
interface.
■
The host name and IP address must be listed in the
/etc/hosts
file.
■
The host name must be different from any other host name of any other interface,
for example:
/etc/hostname.ce0
and
/etc/hostname.ce1
cannot share the
same host name.
The following example shows the
/etc/hostname.ce
number file required for a
system called
zardoz
that has a Sun GigaSwift Ethernet adapter (
zardoz-11)
.
# grep ce /etc/path_to_inst
"/pci@8,600000/network@1" 0 "ce"
# ifconfig ce0 plumb
ip-address
up
# cat /etc/hostname.hme0
zardoz
# cat /etc/hostname.ce0
zardoz-11