I discovred on some BIOSes undocumented features:
Some options can be enabled when set UEFI active, or also when setting a boot
password and a
BIOS password.
Sometimes even new settings appear, when passwords are set. I know, this sounds
weired, but
as I said: this ware undocumented.
Also t
On Tue, Jan 09, 2024 at 04:50:28AM +, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 1/6/24, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> > I may not even have an NVMe card in my computer as the manufacturer
> > claims.
>
> My DELL Inspiron 5593 actually does have a M.2 512GB KIOXIA NVMe SSD,
> which I need to use! The problem
On 1/6/24, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> I may not even have an NVMe card in my computer as the manufacturer
> claims.
My DELL Inspiron 5593 actually does have a M.2 512GB KIOXIA NVMe SSD,
which I need to use! The problem, as I described here without getting
a solution for it:
// __ I cannot chang
Sorry, but I don't think I am making much sense out those reported errors.
I may not even have an NVMe card in my computer as the manufacturer claims.
lbrtchx
reporting-lots-of-errors-apparently-relating-to-my-nvidia-card-and-realtek-rtl810xe-pci-express-fast-ethernet-controller/278001
I will let you know how it went.
lbrtchx
] error
> status/mask=0001/6000
> [290569.588491] r8169 :01:00.0:[ 0] RxErr (First)
>
> I found out it was the Realtek RTL810xE PCI Express Fast Ethernet controller:
>
> $ lspci -nn | grep PCIe
> 00:1d.1 PCI bridge [0604]: Intel Corporation
3] r8169 :01:00.0 enp1s0: Link is Down
Then I install the ath10 drivers to be able to connect to the
Internet and dmesg is still fine, but I can't use the NVRAM.
$ sudo lspci -nn | grep PCIe
$
$ sudo lspci -nn | grep PCI
00:1d.0 PCI bridge [0604]: Intel Corporation Ice Lake-LP PCI Express
was the Realtek RTL810xE PCI Express Fast Ethernet controller:
$ lspci -nn | grep PCIe
00:1d.1 PCI bridge [0604]: Intel Corporation Ice Lake-LP PCIe Port
[8086:34b1] (rev 30)
$ sudo hwinfo --pci
...
14: PCI 100.0: 0200 Ethernet controller
[Created at pci.386]
Unique ID: lkKU.j9EpqGNz
On Sun, Nov 08, 2020 at 05:54:14PM +0100, Marc SCHAEFER wrote:
> What could I try to do?
Thanks to some people around here (private replies), I tried:
- finding an option in the BIOS about 64 bit PCI addresses,
none found
- setpci -s 01:00.0 COMMAND=0x02
- removing all cards, shuffli
Hello,
I have a Mellanox card, which is detected, however on one machine:
01:00.0 Network controller: Mellanox Technologies MT27500 Family [ConnectX-3]
Subsystem: Mellanox Technologies MT27500 Family [ConnectX-3]
Flags: fast devsel, IRQ 16
Memory at dfb0 (64-bit, non-p
Hi.
On Sun, Jul 05, 2020 at 11:44:03PM +1000, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> Is the pciehp / pci express hot plug kernel module to longer included with
> Debian, or is it meant to be compiled in as static?
It's compiled in:
# grep -i HOTPLUG_PCI_PCIE /boot/config-4.1
On Du, 05 iul 20, 23:44:03, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> Is the pciehp / pci express hot plug kernel module to longer included
> with Debian, or is it meant to be compiled in as static?
>
> Debian sid here on an X220, trying to connect a "Transcend USB 3.0
> ExpressCard Adapter
Is the pciehp / pci express hot plug kernel module to longer included with
Debian, or is it meant to be compiled in as static?
Debian sid here on an X220, trying to connect a "Transcend USB 3.0 ExpressCard
Adapter" to get a USB3 port (2 ports actually).
There are possible hints tha
On 01/05/2016 03:03 PM, Anthony DeRobertis wrote:
On Mon, Jan 04, 2016 at 10:17:27PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
My goal is to use a current SATA 3.0 (6 Gbps) SSD as the system drive in
older computers that have SATA 2.0 (3 Gbps) ports and PCIe 2.0 x1 expansion
slot(s).
SATA 3.0 is backwa
On Mon, Jan 04, 2016 at 10:17:27PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
> My goal is to use a current SATA 3.0 (6 Gbps) SSD as the system drive in
> older computers that have SATA 2.0 (3 Gbps) ports and PCIe 2.0 x1 expansion
> slot(s).
SATA 3.0 is backwards-compatible; you can just use the SATA 2.0 po
the system drive
> in older computers that have SATA 2.0 (3 Gbps) ports and PCIe 2.0 x1
> expansion slot(s).
>
>
> How about the StarTech PEXSAT32?
>
>
> http://www.startech.com/Cards-Adapters/HDD-Controllers/SATA-Cards/2-Port-PCI-Express-SATA-6-Gbps-Controller-Card~PEXS
On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 11:17 PM, David Christensen
wrote:
> How about the StarTech PEXSAT32?
Should work without a problem. That particular chipset is very widely
used and has been for a while.
Brandon Vincent
On 01/04/2016 10:08 PM, John Mok wrote:
LSI MegaRAID SAS9260
That's PCIe 2.0 x8. I need x1.
David
http://www.startech.com/Cards-Adapters/HDD-Controllers/SATA-Cards/2-Port-PCI-Express-SATA-6-Gbps-Controller-Card~PEXSAT32
David
On 01/04/2016 09:24 PM, John Mok wrote:
LSI HBA is my friend.
What is model number?
David
On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 10:09 PM, David Christensen
wrote:
> I'm looking for a Linux-friendly PCI Express 2.0 x1 host bus adapter with 2
> (or more) internal SATA 6 Gbps ports. Does anybody have any comments or
> recommendations for currently available products?
If you want a hig
LSI HBA is my friend.
On Jan 5, 2016 1:10 PM, "David Christensen"
wrote:
> debian-user:
>
> I'm looking for a Linux-friendly PCI Express 2.0 x1 host bus adapter with
> 2 (or more) internal SATA 6 Gbps ports. Does anybody have any comments or
> recommendations fo
debian-user:
I'm looking for a Linux-friendly PCI Express 2.0 x1 host bus adapter
with 2 (or more) internal SATA 6 Gbps ports. Does anybody have any
comments or recommendations for currently available products?
David
On 07/12/13 03:10, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
Stan - I assume you mean the Adaptec 6405E:
It's the best little SOHO RAID card for the money IMO, and the most
flexible WRT PCIe slots,
Okay.
eats a $50 port that can be part of a RAID set. You can attach that SSD
to a free mobo SATA port and use cl
On 7/11/2013 11:23 PM, David Christensen wrote:
> On 07/10/13 23:12, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>
> On 07/11/13 09:25, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
>
> Thank you both for your insights. :-)
>
>
> Stan - I assume you mean the Adaptec 6405E:
>
> https://www.adaptec.com/en-us/products/series/
On 7/11/2013 10:03 PM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>>> 1. If you're buying enterprise RAID arrays, you should have matching disks
>>> and firmware, and they must be in the vendor approved list. Best to get
>>> them all from the same vendor.
>>
>>
On 07/10/13 23:12, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 07/11/13 09:25, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
Thank you both for your insights. :-)
Stan - I assume you mean the Adaptec 6405E:
https://www.adaptec.com/en-us/products/series/6e/
That looks like a nice card, and Adaptec is a name I respect.
On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> > 1. If you're buying enterprise RAID arrays, you should have matching disks
> > and firmware, and they must be in the vendor approved list. Best to get
> > them all from the same vendor.
>
> This is also true of quality PCIe RAID HBAs. LSI and Adaptec
On 7/11/2013 8:17 PM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> Anyway, I will make a summary that actually separates the apples from the
> oranges, because we were clearly talking about different things:
No, we are talking about the exact same things.
> 1. If you're buying enterprise RAID arrays, yo
On 7/11/2013 4:44 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
...
> So please, do [NOT] tell people that they should use drives from different
> vendors with mismatched firmware on a real RAID controller
...
Correction inserted in brackets above. The statement should be in the
negative, not the affirmative.
--
St
On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> On 7/11/2013 11:25 AM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> >>> At some point in the future, I may buy one or two additional HDD and use
> >>> hardware RAID.
> >>
> >> It's best to use identical drives with id
Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> On 7/11/2013 3:43 AM, Chris Davies wrote:
>> Can you help clarify, please?
> Se my detailed response to Henrique.
Thank you
Chris
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On 7/11/2013 3:43 AM, Chris Davies wrote:
> Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>> It's best to use identical drives with identical firmware, which means
>> buying all your drives up front from the same lot.
>
> I had always understood that best practice was the opposite of this
> recommendation, so as to help
On 7/11/2013 11:25 AM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>>> At some point in the future, I may buy one or two additional HDD and use
>>> hardware RAID.
>>
>> It's best to use identical drives with identical firmware, which means
>> buying all your drive
On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> > At some point in the future, I may buy one or two additional HDD and use
> > hardware RAID.
>
> It's best to use identical drives with identical firmware, which means
> buying all your drives up front from the same lot. You also need to
That is a fas
Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> It's best to use identical drives with identical firmware, which means
> buying all your drives up front from the same lot.
I had always understood that best practice was the opposite of this
recommendation, so as to help protect against a single point of failure
such as ba
On 7/10/2013 11:03 PM, David Christensen wrote:
> On 07/10/13 17:04, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>> LSI HBAs are acknowledged as the most Linux compatible/friendly and
>> highest performance HBAs/RAID cards available. The 9211-4i is the least
>> expensive HBA in their lineup, a PCIe 2.0 x4 card w/4 ports
On 07/10/13 17:04, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
LSI HBAs are acknowledged as the most Linux compatible/friendly and
highest performance HBAs/RAID cards available. The 9211-4i is the least
expensive HBA in their lineup, a PCIe 2.0 x4 card w/4 ports.
Thanks for the reply. I see you still favor LSI prod
On 7/9/2013 9:45 PM, David Christensen wrote:
> On 07/09/13 07:21, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
>> x1, x4, or x8 slot width?
>
> x1 or x4.
>
>> Price range?
>
> Under $50 per SATA3 port, including cables, whatever.
>
>> Expected performance level?
>
> Comparable to current/ recent Intel desktop chipse
On 07/09/13 07:34, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
Also, keep clear of anything that has straps (jumper blocks) to select
internal/external ports (*even if said jumper blocks are not installed in
the printed circuit board*). They cause violations of SATA3 phy (electrical
signaling) parameters
On 07/09/13 07:21, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
x1, x4, or x8 slot width?
x1 or x4.
Price range?
Under $50 per SATA3 port, including cables, whatever.
Expected performance level?
Comparable to current/ recent Intel desktop chipsets/ motherboards.
Workstation or dedicated server?
Workstat
On Tue, 09 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> On 7/7/2013 12:55 PM, David Christensen wrote:
> > Can anyone recommend a PCI Express 2.0 SATA 3 host bus adapter with good
> > FOSS licensing/ documentation/ support? I'm looking for at least two
> > SATA 3 ports; four port
On 7/7/2013 12:55 PM, David Christensen wrote:
> Can anyone recommend a PCI Express 2.0 SATA 3 host bus adapter with good
> FOSS licensing/ documentation/ support? I'm looking for at least two
> SATA 3 ports; four ports would be ideal. I don't need RAID.
x1, x4, or x8 slot
debian-user:
Can anyone recommend a PCI Express 2.0 SATA 3 host bus adapter with good
FOSS licensing/ documentation/ support? I'm looking for at least two
SATA 3 ports; four ports would be ideal. I don't need RAID.
TIA,
David
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On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 20:57:13 +0100
Klistvud wrote:
> Dne, 31. 12. 2010 20:19:14 je bri...@aracnet.com napisal(a):
> > Hi all,
> >
> > the card is an Intel 3945ABG.
> >
> > not seeing it in the lspci listing.
> >
> > the PCI express port IS showi
Dne, 31. 12. 2010 20:19:14 je bri...@aracnet.com napisal(a):
Hi all,
the card is an Intel 3945ABG.
not seeing it in the lspci listing.
the PCI express port IS showing up.
The card could be bad, but it seems extremely unlikely as it's brand
new.
MB is an Intel Atom D945GSEJT.
I haven
the output of "lspci -nn | grep -i network" and
> "dmesg | grep -i network".
>
> Also:
>
> http://wiki.debian.org/iwlwifi
>
> Greetings,
>
Good idea on the dmesg, I forgot about that !
Sadly the results are blank.
My guess is broken bios. I'm wor
On Fri, 31 Dec 2010 11:19:14 -0800, briand wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> the card is an Intel 3945ABG.
>
> not seeing it in the lspci listing.
(...)
Just in case, put the output of "lspci -nn | grep -i network" and
"dmesg | grep -i network".
Also:
http://wiki.debian.org/iwlwifi
Greetings,
--
Cama
Hi all,
the card is an Intel 3945ABG.
not seeing it in the lspci listing.
the PCI express port IS showing up.
The card could be bad, but it seems extremely unlikely as it's brand
new.
MB is an Intel Atom D945GSEJT.
I haven't done anything with PCI express card before, just want to
Tried LaCie once but not again, no thanks
On 12 Jun 2008, at 23:43, Alex Samad wrote:
Hi
I am looking at expanding my disk space on my box. I have turned my
eye
to these little external boxes.
I was wondering has any one else on the list used one of these.
I was hoping to connect to it wi
Hi
I am looking at expanding my disk space on my box. I have turned my eye
to these little external boxes.
I was wondering has any one else on the list used one of these.
I was hoping to connect to it with esata (the reason for the lacie esata
controller). A quick google brings me lots of adds t
I am inquiring about the suitability of NVIDIA PCI
Express graphics card for a Debian Sarge system.
Can anyone please tell me whether the NVIDIA Geforce
6200 series (in particular the Geforce 6200 and the
Geforce 6200TC) of PCI Express graphics cards are
completely okay for use in a Debian
Hi,
I am about to buy a workstation with:
1) motherboard: Supermicro H8DCE
2) CPU's: 2 AMD Opteron 246 cpu's
This motherboard seems to support a PCI Express slot and thus I would
like, if possible, to take advantage of this resource, when acquiring a
graphics board. Specificall
Jacob wrote:
>
> Need driver or advice for getting the X-server and/or X-windows working with
> this hardware list:
>
> Diamond Stealth Express - ATI Radeon X300SE (haven't got this working yet...
> Linux driver on their site is an rpm and Debian doesn't recognize on O/S
> install)
> AMD64 3200+
Jacob wrote:
Need driver or advice for getting the X-server and/or X-windows working
with this hardware list:
Diamond Stealth Express - ATI Radeon X300SE (haven't got this working
yet... Linux driver on their site is an rpm and Debian doesn't recognize
on O/S install)
AMD64 3200+ (seems
On Thu, 2006-01-19 at 23:39 -0800, Jacob wrote:
> Marvell Yukon 88E8053 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet Controller (not able to
> get this working yet under AMD64 Debian Sarge... Linux driver on their
> site is also an rpm...)
>
>
> Any solutions out there people? Please take a second to help me out,
> it
Need driver or advice for getting the X-server and/or X-windows working with this hardware list:Diamond Stealth Express - ATI Radeon X300SE (haven't got this working yet... Linux driver on their site is an rpm and Debian doesn't recognize on O/S install)
AMD64 3200+ (seems to work with AMD64 -
On Tue October 25 2005 12:37 pm, Matan Nassau wrote:
> Anyone can approximate the minimum age of a computer one can expect to
> find pci-express in?
This is very new stuff, I wouldn't look back for it.
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Anyone can approximate the minimum age of a computer one can expect to
find pci-express in?
--
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