Sorry, I'm a late comer here, but I might have an idea.  First off, I don't see 
below what
kernel version you are using? I may have missed it somewhere.
[dj]
Sorry I should have mentioned that earlier. I'm using 2.6.29-rc5 (pulled couple 
of days ago)

Hmm, well, the first thing I catch is this is an old dts format. Depending on 
your kernel version, you
may want to comply with the  dts v1 spec. The v1 spec is much more strict on 
the format of the values
that are provided for the properties.
[dj]
I've fixed that since. Thanks.

                       phy0: ethernet-...@0 {
                               interrupt-parent = <&ipic>;
                               interrupts = <3 8>;
                               reg = <0>;
                               device_type = "ethernet-phy";
                       };
                       phy1: ethernet-...@1 {
                               interrupt-parent = <&ipic>;
                               interrupts = <3 8>;
                               reg = <1>;
                               device_type = "ethernet-phy";
                       };
               };

Are you sure both PHY's use interrupt 3? I would think not.
[dj]
I need to follow that through and see.

 Also is top posting ok? I haven't figured out how to enable '>' on bloody 
Microsoft Outlook, for incoming plain text messages.

I'm a little new to this list, but in general top posting is frowned upon. 
Unfortunately, I can't help you with the Outlook problem.
I can tell you that not being able to determine what part of a message came 
when is extremely annoying. I hope you find a fix
for it. Or, you could try Thunderbird :)
[dj]
I'm using the HTML format. I've tagged my comments just in case the context is 
lost.
Consequently, I found, some further insights into the issue. Here's a debug 
output.
[    7.124188] {
[    7.143107] bus_id=m...@24520:00                                 < - - 
printed in drivers/net/phy/phy_device.c : phy_connect()
[    7.181907] match check m...@24520:1f                       < - - printed in 
drivers/base/bus.c : match_name()
[    7.225946] m...@24520:00 not found
[    7.267883] }
Where does the :1f or :00 get added?
Thanks
D

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