On 5/29/06, Kenneth Hopping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks for pointing me in the right direction. I finally got eth0
working, but it was a struggle.
Glad you got it working.
I selected the 3COM options like you suggested and recompiled the
kernel. Unfortunately, during reboot I got "inva
Monday 29 May 2006 09:19 skrev Kenneth Hopping:
> I selected the 3COM options like you suggested and recompiled the
> kernel. Unfortunately, during reboot I got "invalid compressed format
> (err=1)". I tried "make clean" to flush everything and compiled again
> but it still wouldn't boot. My drasti
On Mon, 2006-05-29 at 00:19 -0700, Kenneth Hopping wrote:
> I
> also learned to always keep the last working kernel as a backup when you
> reconfigure.
And you can add another piece of self-taught knowledge to your
toolkit :) This is one that I do without thinking now.
--
Iain Buchanan
You
Richard Fish wrote:
Ok, when you go to configure your kernel, go under "Device
Drivers->Network device support->Ethernet (10 or 100Mbit)". Select
the option "3COM cards", and then the "3c590/3c900 series..." with an
'M'.
Assuming that you already configured and installed a kernel, so that
/usr
Sunday 28 May 2006 20:28 skrev Daniel da Veiga:
> Maybe he already have the driver compiled as a module but its not
> loading it?!
If that was the case it would have shown up when he ran:
# find /lib/modules/2.6.16-gentoo-r7/kernel -type f -iname '*.ko'
Look in his previous mail. It didn't. This
On 5/28/06, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 5/28/06, Kenneth Hopping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Richard Fish wrote:
> >
> > What do lspci and lsmod report?
>
> 01:08.0 Ethernet controller: 3Com Corporation 3c905C-TX/TX-M [Tornado]
> (rev 74)
Ok, when you go to configure your kernel,
On 5/28/06, Kenneth Hopping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Richard Fish wrote:
>
> What do lspci and lsmod report?
01:08.0 Ethernet controller: 3Com Corporation 3c905C-TX/TX-M [Tornado]
(rev 74)
Ok, when you go to configure your kernel, go under "Device
Drivers->Network device support->Ethernet (1
Richard Fish wrote:
On 5/27/06, Kenneth Hopping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The problem appears to be that /sys/class/net/eth0 does not exist.
This is a pseudo-filesystem like proc that I cannot manipulate.
Is there some configuration file that needs initialization or a package
that I need to
On 5/27/06, Kenneth Hopping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The problem appears to be that /sys/class/net/eth0 does not exist.
This is a pseudo-filesystem like proc that I cannot manipulate.
Is there some configuration file that needs initialization or a package
that I need to install?
No, you just
I'm installing linux-2.6.16-gentoo-r7.
Network initialization fails during startup:
* Starting eth0
* Loading networking modules for eth0
* modules: iptunnel ifconfig dhcpcd apipa
* ifconfig provides interface
* dhcpcd provides dhcp
* Bringing up eth0
* dhcp
* eth0
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >Reply-To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> >To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> >Subject: [gentoo-user] eth0 does not exist
> >Date: Thu, 02 Mar 2006 16:27:48 +
> >
> >Hi Folks,
> >
> >Very new to Gentoo, although not to Lin
_FaNtAsTiK
From: Tom Haddon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: [gentoo-user] eth0 does not exist
Date: Thu, 02 Mar 2006 16:27:48 +
Hi Folks,
Very new to Gentoo, although not to Linux. I'm trying it out in QEMU,
and ha
On 3/2/06, Tom Haddon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Folks,
>
> Very new to Gentoo, although not to Linux. I'm trying it out in QEMU,
> and have just completed the installation. Only problem is I can't seem
> to connect to the internet. QEMU is basically meant to provide an
> emulated network card
Hi Folks,
Very new to Gentoo, although not to Linux. I'm trying it out in QEMU,
and have just completed the installation. Only problem is I can't seem
to connect to the internet. QEMU is basically meant to provide an
emulated network card to the OS it's hosting. Works fine for the install
CD. Anyw
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