Marc Auslander wrote:
is
http://www.debian.org/releases/stable/i386/release-notes/ch-information.en.html#s-asynchronous-network-start
relevant?
I also believe there is information in the wiki or release notes about
workarounds.
I have had a somewhat similar problem with some servers at work
Marty wrote:
Because of the intermittency of the problem, I would first suspect
autonegotiation. Try a different device on the opposite end, or if you
roll your own kernel, just manually force the mode. (If this works,
please report it as a potential bug in the NIC driver.)
Thank you all
is
http://www.debian.org/releases/stable/i386/release-notes/ch-information.en.html#s-asynchronous-network-start
relevant?
I also believe there is information in the wiki or release notes about
workarounds.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble?
Joris Van Herzele wrote:
Hi,
I installed Debian 4.0r1 on a test-box with known to be working
hardware. Unfortunately there seems to be a problem with the NIC's when
running Debian.
I have around a 50% chance that after a reboot I have no network
connectivity. The box has 3 NIC's : 1 onboard
* Joris Van Herzele <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2007-11-20
> I have around a 50% chance that after a reboot I have no network
> connectivity. The box has 3 NIC's : 1 onboard Intel NIC and 2 seperate
> GBit Realtek RTL8169sb/8110sb NIC's.
I have a similar problem on my home computer, which runs 4.0r0. In
Hi,
I installed Debian 4.0r1 on a test-box with known to be working
hardware. Unfortunately there seems to be a problem with the NIC's when
running Debian.
I have around a 50% chance that after a reboot I have no network
connectivity. The box has 3 NIC's : 1 onboard Intel NIC and 2 seperate
6 matches
Mail list logo