Thanks for all of the help!

I ended up removing the ne module and replaceing it with the io=0x300 irq=3 
specified in
the options.

I can now telnet to my system, so I think its fixed!  I will check it out the 
rest of
the way in the morning,

Doug

THANK YOU!

Doug

Jim wrote:

> The easiest way for us to fix this would be by running modconf.  Hopefully
> nothing else is broken (which we'll find out soon).
>
> As root, run:
> modconf
>
> Then go to "net" and then "ne" and enable the module for your card.  The
> reason you aren't detecting the card?  modprobe will generally only detect
> PCI cards, unless you tell it the address to search.  In your case, your
> card's address is 0x300 and you will need to specify this as one of the
> options in modconf.  You will need to use:
>
> io=0x300
>
> as a command-line option for the module.
>
> That will probably take care of everything.  If not, let us know what
> troubles you run into and we'll go from there.  :)
>
> On Sat, 17 Jul 1999, Doug Thistlethwaite wrote:
>
> > Thanks for the reply.
> >
> > I am not sure if I was using module or kernel for the network card.  I have 
> > had
> > this system for awhile (potato is the third debian distrubution I have 
> > used, and
> > the network settings were setup at the very beginning.  How would I tell?  
> > The
> > current kernel version seems to be 2.0.36
> >
> > The /etc/init.d/network files is the same as it was before the upgrade,  
> > what
> > should I be looking for?  For me to post it, I would have to type it in on 
> > this
> > windoze machine.
> >
> > Doug
> >
> > Mark Wagnon wrote:
> >
> > > On 07/17/99 10:48 PM, Doug Thistlethwaite wrote:
> > > > Hello,  I hope someone can help me with this.  It seems like it should
> > > > not to hard to fix, but without any knowledge of how or where the
> > > > network services are started / initialized, I don't think I will figure
> > > > it out without help.
> > > >
> > >
> > > Hmm. I;m not how much assistance I'm going to be but here goes. Do you 
> > > have
> > > support for you NIC either compiled into your kernel or as modules?
> > >
> > > What does your /etc/init.d/network file look like? This file is where you 
> > > set
> > > up your network devices.
> > >
> > > I hope this gets this thread started, because I'veonly had my computers
> > > networked for a couple weeks and I'm still figuring things out.
> > >
> > > late
> > > --
> > >                                          __   _
> > > Mark Wagnon             Debian GNU/ -o) / /  (_)__  __ ____  __
> > > Chula Vista, CA                     /\\/ /__/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ /
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]                  _\_v____/_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\
> > >                                            http://www.debian.org
> >
> >
> > --
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> >
>
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