Dear friends, I finally got my NIC card and Linux "happily married"! ;) Well at least during the "honeymoon" (well I only tested pinging thus far! I hope I am not celebrating too soon... :-o Anyways it *is* a step forward!)
I would like to thank everyone out there for their support. Without you guys this would have been a nightmare! For those of you still struggling on a particular problem... HANG ON THERE! ;-) It will eventually work! :-) *** you can skip the remainder of this message if you are not interested in knowing what might have caused my 3C905-TX not to work *** Just that you know (and for the sake of other people experiencing similar problems) I will briefly describe what I think could have been the problems... (are you seating down? ;-) ) I think in my case it was a combination of hardware and software problems: Hardware -------- 1. When I initially setup Debian Linux the twisted pair cable I was using was damaged. I remember changing cables with another workstation and that still not working. The thing is (and I read it somewhere later on) that if you change cables you are best rebooting or initializing the card in some way. Because of this intial cable swap test I never considered the cable a problem anymore (until I got really "desperate" about things still not working! ;-) ) 2. In my "desperate" mood ;-) I also swaped network cards (exactly the same card) with another workstation (NT). The card that used to be on the Linux box works fine on NT so I don't think that was the problem at all though I haven't been able (or willing) to isolate that and find if it was a problem under Linux. Software -------- 1. Get the LATEST stable driver that SUITS your setup! For example a particular version of the driver (not necessarily the latest) might work better if you run your network at 10Mbps while another version (probably a later one) work best if you run at 100Mbps. Also the kernel that you currently are using might affect in many ways the driver. 2. ENSURE you have the proper driver configuration! I think this is probably the easiest and yet most common reason for things not working! I think this was (in addition to the cable) the single most important reason for the card not to work. The default options were 0,,12 and what made it work for me was 6 (I guess I thought it was safe to just accept the defaults but it is not always the case). In any case I did upgrade to the latest driver so I haven't tested the default driver (the one that comes with 2.0.29 kernel) with the new configuration. ADVICE if you run into problems/difficulties making things work: --------------------------------------------------------------- a) Ensure that you have a driver that works for your particular hardware (check with other people on the list for this). More importantly ENSURE that you have the right CONFIGURATION for your hardware. For example, in my case (and eventhough again I have not been able to isolate whether that was *the* cause of the problem) I was using the driver's default configuration which was NOT suitable for my setup; b) If everything else fails, CHECK your hardware!!! (i.e. NIC and cable) (particularly if you find out that other people under the same software configuration than you made it to work). Ok I hope this is not too confusing... =8-) I still have a few error messages on my Linux system I would like to get rid off. I will post other messages addressing this later on. Once again THANKS everyone! David -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .