I hear you, I bought 2 rev.2 sk cards that perform nice, low interrupt load, it seems that is the foremost quality of the cards, apart from the jumbo frames. Then I ordered 10 more and I ended up with an unsupported rev.3 card with a realtek chipset but it is still identified as a Linksys EG1032 in the dmesg, I just noticed that you can actually see the realtek chip on the picture of the card (in rev.3) on the outside of the shrink wrapped box. I would be happy to ship one to someone who feels like crafting a driver for it.
On 7/12/05, Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I already read through man sk and it only mentions the older series of > NICs which are no longer in production. I wouldn't even bother asking > but people like Henning keep mentioning how sk NICs are the best ones > out there so in my new firewall I'd like to put the best. > > -Adam > > Johan P. Lindstrvm wrote: > > > Maby you already tried it, but check out man sk > > > > On 7/12/05, *Adam* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: > > > > Does anyone know if the Syskonnect SK-9S22 (dual port gigabit > > PCI-X nic) > > works well with OpenBSD? > > > > I know that the SK-9822 is supported, but I can't seem to find > > those for > > sale anymore. I think they are no longer made. The two cards are > > significantly different, but I think the main things are that the 9S22 > > is PCI-X and the 9822 is PCI, and the Yukon II vs. Yukon chipsets. > > > > If anyone knows if the new line of cards is supported, and/or knows > > where to get the SK-9822 nics, I'd appreciate a response. > > > > Thanks, > > > > -Adam