ers still suffer from
> instability issues but I guess it's different one that came from
> lack of documentation of PCIe based controllers.
> If you are not running 7-stable, try it 7-stable first and let me
> know how it goes.
>
>
Pyun:
Understood. I'm on a stock 7.0-REL
On Thu, Jun 19, 2008 at 11:41:32AM -0700, Alexander Sack wrote:
>
>
>
> Paul Haddad wrote:
> >
> > All,
> > As a follow up to myself I installed an Intel PCIe NIC and disabled the on
> > board RTL based one and all my problems went away. Been running with 4GB
> > installed for a coupl
track this down myself.
Thanks!
-aps
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freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing l
All,
As a follow up to myself I installed an Intel PCIe NIC and disabled the on
board RTL based one and all my problems went away. Been running with 4GB
installed for a couple days now with absolutely no network issues. So seems
like there's some problem with RTL NICs and >= 4GB of RAM.
--
Paul H
Hi,
Paul Haddad wrote:
I've got the below system setup that has so far been very stable when
running with 2GB of RAM. I've recently been attempting to upgrade it to 4GB
of ram (using 4 DIMMs vs the current 2). The problem is that within a few
hours of running with the 4GB config I start gettin
I had some similar issues for some reason.. Check the output of netstat -m
and see if the mbuf clusters in use line if the total is anywhere near
the max. Mine was maxing out and causing some very weird problems with
no errors in any log anywhere.
Paul Haddad wrote:
Hi All,
I've got the be
Hi All,
I've got the below system setup that has so far been very stable when
running with 2GB of RAM. I've recently been attempting to upgrade it to 4GB
of ram (using 4 DIMMs vs the current 2). The problem is that within a few
hours of running with the 4GB config I start getting odd network erro