Sorry, I think my question in my previous post/email was not clear enough. I meant by the question that whether click can use the hardware multi-queuing supported by this driver (igb driver ) or it needs some other patches ? and if those patches are available ?
Ahmed On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 2:14 PM, ahmed A. <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Roman, > > Yes, I was able to port the changes to the our driver and it is working > now. I attached a copy of it for the others who may be interested in this > driver which supports also quad port igb intel cards. I noticed that your > driver does not support hardware multi-queue, please correct me if I am > wrong, so I was wondering if there is any available patch to support > hardware multi-queuing in this driver ? > > Thank you again > > Best regards, > Ahmed > > On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 2:12 PM, ahmed A. <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi Roman, >> >> Yes, I was able to port the changes to the our driver and it is working >> now. I attached a copy of it for the others who may be interested in this >> driver which supports also quad port igb intel cards. I noticed that your >> driver does not support hardware multi-queue, please correct me if I am >> wrong, so I was wondering if there is any available patch to support >> hardware multi-queuing in this driver ? >> >> Thank you again >> >> Best regards, >> Ahmed >> >> >> On Thu, Jul 14, 2011 at 10:50 PM, Roman Chertov <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> If you use lspci you can find out the chipset of the cards that you have. >>> The driver that I gave to you is dated to 2008, so there is a good chance >>> that it does not support the later chipsets. You can grep in the src >>> directory to see if your chipsets are supported or not. You can try to look >>> at the source code and then try to port the necessary changes over to a new >>> driver. >>> >>> Roman >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ click mailing list [email protected] https://amsterdam.lcs.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/click
