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Date:      Fri, 16 Jan 1998 08:33:06 -0600 (CST)
From:      lrkn@anet-dfw.com
To:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: NE2000 clone ISA card
Message-ID:  <199801161433.IAA16305@k5qwb.lonestar.org>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.3.95q.980115234619.8056A-100000@barnowl.roost.net> from John Kenagy at "Jan 15, 98 11:49:23 pm"

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  I have one like that which is optionally hardwired, set with software,
or plug-and-play. The plug-and-play will always set the interrupt to 
something other than what I set with the software. Then it looks like
the lights flash properly but no actual communication is possible.

  I set it for plug-and-play and it worked. So I swapped it with the
non-PnP one that was in the W95 box. I suspect putting the hardware
jumpers in (solder only) would fix it as well but haven't tried that yet.

> 
> Also make sure the port address (mine is 0x300) matches what the
> card thinks it is. I've had similar things happen when the IRQ is
> right and port isn't.
> 
> John
> 
> On Wed, 14 Jan 1998, Doug White wrote:
> 
> > On Wed, 14 Jan 1998, Aaron D. Gifford wrote:
> > 
> > > Not terribly long ago I installed FreeBSD 2.2.2-RELEASE on an old 486
> > > DX2/66 16MB RAM VESA/ISA PC with a small 400 MB HD belonging to a local
> > > high school.  Everything seemed to work normally, so I took the box back to
> > > the school to try it on their ethernet.  On boot, the machine correctly
> > > detects the NE2000 clone card as device ed1 (never ed0 - weird), printing
> > > the hardware ethernet address.  The lights on the card show that it is
> > > plugged into the hub and happy, and I can even see the traffic light
> > > blinking.  Then the weirdness comes along.  I see a "ed1: device timeout"
> > > message as the boot begins starting network services.
> > 
> > Hm.  it'll come up ed1 if ed0 is disabled or if the card is PCI (which it
> > doesn't sound like).  Also, make sure the IRQ you are assigning to the
> > card isn't in use by another device and that the cable is in good shape
> > (bad cabling and line noise have been known to send ethernet cards into
> > tail spins).
> 


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