How do I assign additional IP addresses in RedHat/CentOS?

If you are using CPanel, you should add the IP addresses through WHM.  Do not follow these instructions if you are using CPanel.

If you want to assign the addresses 3.2.1.1 – 3.2.1.20 to your server, you will need to create a RANGE file.

cd /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts
ls ifcfg-eth1-range*


If you already have a range file, you will need to create a new one for the new range of IPs you are adding, eg ‘nano ifcfg-eth1-range1` .  If you have one named range1, name the next range2 and so on.

nano ifcfg-eth1-range1

Place the following text in the file:

IPADDR_START=192.168.0.10
IPADDR_END=192.168.0.110
CLONENUM_START=0

Note: CLONENUM_START defines where the alias will start.  If this is the second range file, you will need to set CLONENUM_START to a value higher than the number of IP addresses assigned.  To check what you currently have used, you can run ‘ifconfig –a | grep eth1’.  This will list devices such as eth1:0, eth1:1, eth1:2, and so on.  If you are currently using upto eth1:16, you will need to set CLONENUM_START to 17 to assign the IPs correctly.

When done, just type below to restart your network

service network restart

Was this answer helpful?

 Print this Article

Also Read

How to change cPanel password from command line?

cPanel password of a domain can be changed from command line using cPanel script. Given below are...

How to reboot a unix server via telnet?

Using a telnet program like http://www.telnet98.com/ or SSH Client like putty (for windows),...

Why my drive is slow

First, check to make sure write cache is enabled. On Centos, you type hdparm -I /dev/sda Then...

Hypervm Xen Windows VPS Network not showing 1Gbps

If you're running HyperVM Xen VPS and your Windows vm somehow not showing 1Gbps port, only...

How to re-install Centos yourself remotely

NOTE: This is only for Dedicated Servers. All VPS, go to client area.Assuming you currently have...