![]() If, on your host, you monitor the log via “ dmesg -follow”, and then plug in the USB cable, you should see messages which include MAC address. Whenever you enable such a device you need to know its MAC address. At other times you might have to go into the host PC settings and tell it to allow use of the micro-B USB virtual device. Most of the Ubuntu 18.04 installs will go ahead and use that device if it is found. The trouble is that the host might not be set to just allow any plugged in device to be used for networking. Thus you’d be able to use ethernet to “ 192.168.55.1” if this is working, or else use the wired ethernet address. In theory the PC would use this and the Jetson’s built in virtual router would assign address “ 192.168.55.1” to the Jetson, and address “ 192.168.55.100” to the host PC. ![]() When the Jetson is up and running, then the default is that if the cable is connected to the host PC, then one of the things the host PC will think is that the Jetson is itself a network device. ![]() The micro-B USB can pretend to be a wired ethernet device, complete with its own router. The wired ethernet should “just work” if it is on a router that is also on your host PC, but you’d need to know the IP address the router assigned to the Jetson.
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