"Jason Lim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Please... ANY suggestions and help would be greatly appreciated.
If you wanted to eliminate all possibilities, put one of your potato boxes on the same cable as the "bad" box. That would make sure you don't have some odd cabling/bad port on the switch. Assuming that comes back OK, do a diff on the /etc/init.d directories of your "bad" box and your "good" box. Also note that your explaination of why it wasn't a kernel issue is a little weak. It seems link the kernel just detecting the device wouldn't cause a re-negotiation. However, activating it might. The card isn't activated until the networking script calls "ifup". BTW, I assume you are talking about the rtl8139? My cheap D-Link cards use the same chipset. However, the dirver supplied with the 2.2.x kernel didn't work with it. Oddly enough, D-Link shipped an updated version of the rtl8139 on a floppy with their NIC. I'm running version 1.08. Here's the link to Donald Becker's site for the driver: http://www.scyld.com/network/rtl8139.html. Looks like the latest version is 1.13. -- (__) Doug Alcorn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.lathi.net chat:[EMAIL PROTECTED]|aol oo / PGP 02B3 1E26 BCF2 9AAF 93F1 61D7 450C B264 3E63 D543 |_/ If you're a capitalist and you have the best goods and they're free, you don't have to proselytize, you just have to wait.