From: "Renchi Raju" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > the fact that you have to do a pcmcia start eth0 is surprising. you might > have a corrupted script file. you can try purging the current pcmcia-cs and ... > /etc/pcmcia/config and then loads up the corresponding driver for it. It > also recognizes the class of the card and so in your case should bind the > card to the class network and so eth0. the /etc/init.d/pcmcia script should > call the network script automatically which is /etc/pcmcia/network. but in > your case it seems that the class of the card is not recognized and so you > have to force it to recognize it as eth0. try looking at the messages (i
Ah, bells begin to ring. It's an old, but still useful, dual function card. I know I've seen specific mention about dual-function problems. I suspect the unused modem function is interfering with auto-recognition. Also, there's the issue of having compiled in PCMCIA support when I built the kernel. Seems like everything I've come across since says I shouldn't do that, so I think I'll run a recompile today, reinstall pcmcia-cs, and see if things improve. Thanks. -- Derek -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]