Date: Tue, 28 Mar 2000 04:03:53 -0800 (PST) From: jay.krell@cornell.edu To: freebsd-gnats-submit@FreeBSD.org Subject: kern/17636: FreeBSD 4 uses network card driver dc where de is needed Message-ID: <200003281203.EAA15091@freefall.freebsd.org>
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>Number: 17636
>Category: kern
>Synopsis: FreeBSD 4 uses network card driver dc where de is needed
>Confidential: no
>Severity: serious
>Priority: medium
>Responsible: freebsd-bugs
>State: open
>Quarter:
>Keywords:
>Date-Required:
>Class: sw-bug
>Submitter-Id: current-users
>Arrival-Date: Tue Mar 28 04:10:00 PST 2000
>Closed-Date:
>Last-Modified:
>Originator: Jay Krell
>Release: FreeBSD 4.0-Stable
>Organization:
Jay Krell
>Environment:
This is the kernel with the fix, Generic didn't work, where it had in 3.x.
FreeBSD jayk-bsd1 4.0-STABLE FreeBSD 4.0-STABLE #0: Tue Mar 28 03:10:11 PST 2000
jayk@jayk-bsd1:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/JAYK1 i386
>Description:
I was using FreeBDS 3.x (3.3-RELEASE and 3.4-RELEASE worked, not sure I got 3.2-RELEASE configured, 3.4-STABLE panicced often. These were all GENERIC kernels, once the panics started I gave up on building my own kernel). My network card was de0, and it worked. I think it is a Digital 21143, in a Compaq Presario 5600i.
Upon upgrading to 4.0-Stable, the network card stopped working.
Upon investigation I found that the driver now claiming it (in still a GENERIC kernel) was dc, not de, which has the same description in the config file, except that it uses the mii shared bus or somesuch.
>How-To-Repeat:
Get an Intel 21143 or whatever it is I have. Install FreeBSD 4.0 and/or upgrade to 4.0-Stable.
>Fix:
Don't use GENERIC kernel, where 3.x GENERIC worked fine. Configure the dc driver out of the kernel, and de ends up taking it fine.
>Release-Note:
>Audit-Trail:
>Unformatted:
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