>Wes Peters wrote:
>> Wes Peters wrote:
>> >
>> > This might be the new 82559ER; I'm downloading the datasheet now. Have
>> > a peek at:
>> >
>> > http://developer.intel.com/design/network/datashts/index.htm
>>
>> Nope, that one is apparently device ID 0x1209. Too bad they don't have
Wes Peters wrote:
> Wes Peters wrote:
> >
> > This might be the new 82559ER; I'm downloading the datasheet now. Have
> > a peek at:
> >
> > http://developer.intel.com/design/network/datashts/index.htm
>
> Nope, that one is apparently device ID 0x1209. Too bad they don't have
> a PCI d
Wes Peters wrote:
>
> This might be the new 82559ER; I'm downloading the datasheet now. Have
> a peek at:
>
> http://developer.intel.com/design/network/datashts/index.htm
Nope, that one is apparently device ID 0x1209. Too bad they don't have
a PCI device ID cross-reference on the web
David Greenman wrote:
>
> >
> >Sorry, I forgot to say about the above. Since Wes Peters suggested that it
> >might be a 82558, it put the above name. Please correct it to whatever the
> >name should be.
>
>From your other email it sounds like it has an 82559. Intel has been
> shipping that f
>
> If you can't find the id on the chip, I'll see what I can track down at
> Intel tomorrow.
>
I am looking up the Intel website. The chip indeed is 82559. Also
there doesn't seem to be a correlation between the chip and the PCI device_id.
I have two network cards (I mentioned them in my l
Mohit Aron wrote:
>
> >
> > > #define FXP_VENDORID_INTEL 0x8086
> > > #define FXP_DEVICEID_i825570x1229
> > >+#define FXP_DEVICEID_i825580x1030
> >
> >This wouldn't be correct. The 82558 has been used for years on Pro/100+
> > boards and they ID as 0x1229.
> >
>
> Sorry, I forgot
>
>From your other email it sounds like it has an 82559. Intel has been
> shipping that for more than a year as well on boards that ID as 0x1229,
> so apparantly the chip being used doesn't correlate with the ID number.
I mentioned another similar card in my last posting. That one I got fro
>
>>
>> > #define FXP_VENDORID_INTEL 0x8086
>> > #define FXP_DEVICEID_i825570x1229
>> >+#define FXP_DEVICEID_i825580x1030
>>
>>This wouldn't be correct. The 82558 has been used for years on Pro/100+
>> boards and they ID as 0x1229.
>>
>
>
>Sorry, I forgot to say about the above.
>
> Bah. It sounds like an Intel ploy so that they can trivially identify
> these cards and put the "right" name up in the Windows network setup box.
> This isn't quite what the idea was with PCI IDs originally. 8(
Probably. One of our faculty actually bought what seems like a slightly
diffe
>
> > #define FXP_VENDORID_INTEL 0x8086
> > #define FXP_DEVICEID_i825570x1229
> >+#define FXP_DEVICEID_i825580x1030
>
>This wouldn't be correct. The 82558 has been used for years on Pro/100+
> boards and they ID as 0x1229.
>
Sorry, I forgot to say about the above. Since Wes P
> #define FXP_VENDORID_INTEL 0x8086
> #define FXP_DEVICEID_i825570x1229
>+#define FXP_DEVICEID_i825580x1030
This wouldn't be correct. The 82558 has been used for years on Pro/100+
boards and they ID as 0x1229.
-DG
David Greenman
Co-founder/Principal Architect, The FreeBSD Project
>
> It's probably an 82558 chip. Does it support Wake-on-LAN?
>
Not sure what Wake-on-LAN means. I believe there are some cards out there
now that support some kind of network management. This is not that if that
helps.
>
> Add the device IDs to the list in the driver and recompile. If it
> I got some new Intel 10/100Mbps network interfaces recently, but
> unfortunately found that FreeBSD (version 4.0-19990827-CURRENT) doesn't
> recognize them. These are called the "Intel InBusiness 10/100 PCI Network
> Adaptor". Unfortunately, these are the only ones supported in the stores
Mohit Aron wrote:
>
> Hi,
> I got some new Intel 10/100Mbps network interfaces recently, but
> unfortunately found that FreeBSD (version 4.0-19990827-CURRENT) doesn't
> recognize them. These are called the "Intel InBusiness 10/100 PCI Network
> Adaptor". Unfortunately, these are the only
Hi,
I got some new Intel 10/100Mbps network interfaces recently, but
unfortunately found that FreeBSD (version 4.0-19990827-CURRENT) doesn't
recognize them. These are called the "Intel InBusiness 10/100 PCI Network
Adaptor". Unfortunately, these are the only ones supported in the stores no
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