Use the setup utility shipped with the NIC to disable plug-n-play and
set the I/O and IRQ manually.
Make sure FreeBSD is configured the to match.
I've used this NIC with FreeBSD 2.6, 2.7, 3.1, and 3.2.
-- Scott
Jimmy Zongos wrote:
i
got a computer with a sn2000 nic card and it says its ne2000
I use the SN2000. They're available at Fry's (CA) for about $11.00.
-- Scott
Jimmy Zongos wrote:
Anyone
know were to buy a NE2000 compatible card for pretty cheap that will work
in freebsd
Iain Templeton wrote:
>
> On Sun, 10 Oct 1999, Jimmy Zongos wrote:
>
> > i got a computer with a sn2000 nic card and it says its ne2000
> > compatible but when i try to run it in slackware it doesnt work and i
> > was wondering if it would work in freebsd 3.3-stable please email me
> > if it can
If it is NE2000 compatible, it should work with Linux or FreeBSD
no problem. In Linux, you want to use the "ne" kernel module if it is an
ISA card, or the "ne2k-pci" module if it is a PCI card. Slackware comes
with these modules and all you should have to do is run "modprobe
".
The
Hello [EMAIL PROTECTED],
#/usr/src/make world:
===> share/man/man4/man4.i386
...
gzip -cn /usr/src/share/man/man4/man4.i386/tl.4 > tl.4.gz
gzip -cn /usr/src/share/man/man4/man4.i386/tw.4 > tw.4.gz
*** Error code 2