> The patch was not intended to address your issue. It was for > getting correct MAC revision number. So seeing no behavioral change > is normal. > The MAC revision number now indicates 0x00100000 which means you > have slightly different variant. I'll let you know if I happen to > find more clue on that MAC revision.
So now there is no advantage in building that kernel for my i386 USB-stick installation. Do I need to file a send-pr? > One last shot in the dark: > what if you reboot the router in front of the node in question? > Sometimes it was surprised, when managing different mac addresses > on the same adapter. > I might be missing some parts, but did the mobo work before? > Best regards > Zoran I believe I can power off the router, and after a minute or two, power back on. Sure the mobo works, even the Ethernet chip works, but not with FreeBSD. I could boot NetBSD-HEAD amd64, dhclient ran ok, and I was able to checkout the system source tree and pkgsrc tree with cvs. So if I can get past the snag in pkg-config, which was dropped by FreeBSD in favor of pkgconf, I could build subversion and checkout the FreeBSD-HEAD source tree. I wonder if my Ethernet chip is better supported in the upcoming FreeBSD-10.0. I also have the on-motherboard quasi-USB WiFi Atheros AR9271 and the Hiro USB-stick-type WiFi adapter, Realtek RTL8191SU chip. I could also try to boot my OpenBSD 5.3 live USB 8 GB, see if Ethernet chip or Wi-Fi works, but OpenBSD can't access my hard drive or GPT-partitioned USB sticks, since OpenBSD does not support GPT, or USB 3.0. Tom _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"