>> ...what I found is...the driver is named tg3. It is from Broadcom. >> They have a Linux Driver - its in *.rpm format, the source code >> is for a 2.6 kernel (might not work on 3.1, might... I dunno) but >> rather than fight and fight to figure out how to get this to work (which >> it might not.. > >The tg3 driver is inside the kernel source, you don't need an RPM for that. >
I Saw some Broadcom "drivers" in the Kernel Make Menu config area, and that didn't work. Do you think its a matter of me running some Loadmodule command in a script to make it work then? Note, in the kernel I checked it with the ASTERISK which is supposed to compile it into the kernel versus being a loadable module. Is it possible I need to "load" (turn on?) a module that is compiled into the kernel with a command in a script somewhere? That would be SWELL! --Jason -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page