Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?

2000-07-21 Thread James Polson
Hi,

Many thanks again to the several people who offered their advice
to help me solve my configuation problem with  my
ethernet card (Simon Hales, John (?), Bolan Meek, Esko Lehtonen,
and John Pearson)! The method described below (by John Pearson)
was the first that I tried, and it worked perfectly. (Note: the card
did turn out to be a PnP card).

James Polson


 Date:  Wed, 19 Jul 2000 10:47:35 +0930
 From:  John Pearson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:   Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?
 To:debian-user@lists.debian.org

 On Tue, Jul 18, 2000 at 12:00:46PM -0300, James Polson wrote
  Hi,
  
  Thanks to all who answered my call for help! This message here is in
  response to the one from John Pearson.
   
  
   Date:  Tue, 18 Jul 2000 13:15:56 +0930
   From:  John Pearson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject:   Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?
   To:debian-user@lists.debian.org
  
  
   The correct way to proceed depends on which version of Debian you are
   using (slink (2.1), potato (2.2), etc.); which is it?
  
  It is slink (2.1)
  
   
   You can check if things are going to work out for you by trying the
   following commands as root:
   
   # lsmod
   
   This lists the driver modules currently loaded.  
   If the ne or ne2k-pcidriver is loaded then you 
   should see it listed in the output to this command,
   like so:
   ne2k-pci4136   1
  
  It was not loaded!
  
   
   Assuming it isn't loaded, try loading it by hand.
   If your NIC is a PCI card you should use the ne2k-pci
   driver, like so:
   # modprobe ne2k-pci
   
   PCI cards shouldn't need any extra parameters.
   
   If it's an ISA card you will need to use the ne module,
   and will need to pass at least the IO port as a parameter,
   with a command like this:
   # modprobe ne io=0x300 irq=10
   
   You can skip the IRQ parameter, but if you know what it is
   then it makes things a little more bullet-proof.  If you don't
   know what IO address the card is using, the Windows Device Manager
   (under System in Control Panels) will probably tell you.
   
   If the card is a bona-fide ISA/PNP card (as opposed to a
   traditional ISA card) then this will fail after a cold boot, and
   you will need to set the card up using isapnp before you can
   use it under Linux.
   
  
  The full name of the card is D-Link DE220 ISA PnP -- is this
  a bona-fide ISA/PNP adaptor?
  
  I tried using the command
  
  # modprobe ne io=0x300 irq=03(these are the proper settings)
  
  and it didn't complain. However, I infer from your remarks that
  I will have to use 'isapnp'. I guess that this means I will have to
  edit (properly!) the /etc/isapnp.conf file. I looked at the website
  
  http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools
  
  and it looks like I will need a line in the file like:
  
  (CONFIGURE EDI0119/236861364 ( ...  etc.
  
  The code 'EDI0119' identifies the ethernet card -- but how can
  I find what code to use for my card?
  
  Please let me know if there is anything else I have to know about
  'isapnp'.
  
 
 OK.
 
 Firstly, some ISA/PnP cards have a Software Configuration
 mode that allows you to specify a configuration using their
 setup disk, rather than doing PnP configuration at run time.
 Ignore all of the ISA/PNP stuff below if your card has that
 option and you're using it; skip to the line 
 (If it isn't a PNP card, start here) in that case.
 
 isapnp is the utility you use to set up ISA/PNP cards; there is a
 companion utility, pnpdump, that will interrogate your ISA/PNP cards
 for you.
 
 First, make asure that the card isn't in use by running
 # lsmod
 
 to list the currently loaded modules, and use
 # rmmod ne
 # rmmod 8390
 
 to unload the ne and 8390 modules if necessary (8390 is a
 low-level module that is used by the ne module to talk to
 ne-compatible NICs).  Changing the ocnfiguration while the card
 is in use is officially Naughty, and may hang your machine.
 
 Run 
 # pnpdump  /etc/isapnp.conf.try
 
 This should produce a template isapnp configuration file listing
 your card, but with all of the lines that would actually specify
 a configuration commented out.
 
 Pnpdump is in the isapnptools package; install that package if
 it isn't already on your system.
 
 Here's an excerpt, showing a single device:
 
  START of pnpdump output fragment
 #
 # Logical device id @[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 # Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x39
 # Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3a
 # Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3c
 # Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3d
 #
 # Edit the entries below to uncomment out the configuration required.
 # Note that only the first value of any range is given, this may be changed 
 if required
 # Don't forget to uncomment the activate (ACT Y) when happy
 (CONFIGURE CMI0001/16777472 (LD 3
 # Multiple choice time, choose one only !
 # Start

Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?

2000-07-18 Thread John Pearson
On Mon, Jul 17, 2000 at 02:55:54PM -0300, James Polson wrote
 Hi,
 
 I'm completely new to Linux, so the solution to my problem
 may be trivial to all of you experienced Debian Linux users
 (so I hope!). 
 
 I'm trying to install Debian Linux (mostly with success), but
 I think that I'm having problems connecting with the ethernet
 card in my computer.
 
 The symptoms are:
 
 (1) A message during booting that is something like network is
   unreachable (I don't know what log file to look for to get the
   exact wording).
 
 (2) When I type ifconfig -a, I should see listings for two 
   interfaces, lo and eth0, but the second one (the ethernet
   one) is not there.
 
 (3) Not surprisingly, telnet, ftp, etc. can't be used.
 
 (4) In the /var/log/syslog file, there is a message:
 
   cardmgr[189]: starting, version is 3.0.5
   cardmgr[189]: no sockets found!
   cardmgr[189]: exiting
 
   I think that this problem reported is related.
 

These lines relate to the PCMCIA support software; if you have
no PCMCIA slots (which is what the card manager seems to believe)
then it isn't a problem; you can ignore these messages, or be rid
of them by removing the pcmcia-* packages.

 Information about my system:
 
 (1) I have a D-Link DE 220 card.
 
 (2) I have the NC2000 driver in /lib/modules/2.0.36/net
   This is the appropriate driver for the card, according
to the D-Link website.
 

The correct way to proceed depends on which version of Debian you are
using (slink (2.1), potato (2.2), etc.); which is it?

You can check if things are going to work out for you by trying the
following commands as root:

# lsmod

This lists the driver modules currently loaded.  
If the ne or ne2k-pcidriver is loaded then you 
should see it listed in the output to this command,
like so:
ne2k-pci4136   1

Assuming it isn't loaded, try loading it by hand.
If your NIC is a PCI card you should use the ne2k-pci
driver, like so:
# modprobe ne2k-pci

PCI cards shouldn't need any extra parameters.

If it's an ISA card you will need to use the ne module,
and will need to pass at least the IO port as a parameter,
with a command like this:
# modprobe ne io=0x300 irq=10

You can skip the IRQ parameter, but if you know what it is
then it makes things a little more bullet-proof.  If you don't
know what IO address the card is using, the Windows Device Manager
(under System in Control Panels) will probably tell you.

If the card is a bona-fide ISA/PNP card (as opposed to a
traditional ISA card) then this will fail after a cold boot, and
you will need to set the card up using isapnp before you can
use it under Linux.

The way modules are handled changed a couple of times in older
(pre-2.1) Debian releases; you should check if the following files
exist:
 /etc/modules.conf
 /etc/conf.modules
 /etc/modutils/  (a directory)
 /etc/modules

This won't get you on the network, but it will tell you what you
need to go further.

Get back to us when you've tried this and let us know what Debian
release you're using, and you should get some better-targeted
help.


John P.
-- 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.mdt.net.au/~john Debian Linux admin  support:technical services



Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?

2000-07-18 Thread James Polson
Hi,

Thanks to all who answered my call for help! This message here is in
response to the one from John Pearson.
 

 Date:  Tue, 18 Jul 2000 13:15:56 +0930
 From:  John Pearson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:   Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?
 To:debian-user@lists.debian.org


 The correct way to proceed depends on which version of Debian you are
 using (slink (2.1), potato (2.2), etc.); which is it?

It is slink (2.1)

 
 You can check if things are going to work out for you by trying the
 following commands as root:
 
 # lsmod
 
 This lists the driver modules currently loaded.  
 If the ne or ne2k-pcidriver is loaded then you 
 should see it listed in the output to this command,
 like so:
 ne2k-pci4136   1

It was not loaded!

 
 Assuming it isn't loaded, try loading it by hand.
 If your NIC is a PCI card you should use the ne2k-pci
 driver, like so:
 # modprobe ne2k-pci
 
 PCI cards shouldn't need any extra parameters.
 
 If it's an ISA card you will need to use the ne module,
 and will need to pass at least the IO port as a parameter,
 with a command like this:
 # modprobe ne io=0x300 irq=10
 
 You can skip the IRQ parameter, but if you know what it is
 then it makes things a little more bullet-proof.  If you don't
 know what IO address the card is using, the Windows Device Manager
 (under System in Control Panels) will probably tell you.
 
 If the card is a bona-fide ISA/PNP card (as opposed to a
 traditional ISA card) then this will fail after a cold boot, and
 you will need to set the card up using isapnp before you can
 use it under Linux.
 

The full name of the card is D-Link DE220 ISA PnP -- is this
a bona-fide ISA/PNP adaptor?

I tried using the command

# modprobe ne io=0x300 irq=03(these are the proper settings)

and it didn't complain. However, I infer from your remarks that
I will have to use 'isapnp'. I guess that this means I will have to
edit (properly!) the /etc/isapnp.conf file. I looked at the website

http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools

and it looks like I will need a line in the file like:

(CONFIGURE EDI0119/236861364 ( ...  etc.

The code 'EDI0119' identifies the ethernet card -- but how can
I find what code to use for my card?

Please let me know if there is anything else I have to know about
'isapnp'.

 The way modules are handled changed a couple of times in older
 (pre-2.1) Debian releases; you should check if the following files
 exist:
  /etc/modules.conf
This one wasn't there!
  /etc/conf.modules
Present.
  /etc/modutils/  (a directory)
Present.
  /etc/modules
Present.
 
 Get back to us when you've tried this and let us know what Debian
 release you're using, and you should get some better-targeted
 help.
 

Looking forward to it!


James Polson



Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?

2000-07-18 Thread John Pearson
On Tue, Jul 18, 2000 at 12:00:46PM -0300, James Polson wrote
 Hi,
 
 Thanks to all who answered my call for help! This message here is in
 response to the one from John Pearson.
  
 
  Date:  Tue, 18 Jul 2000 13:15:56 +0930
  From:  John Pearson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject:   Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?
  To:debian-user@lists.debian.org
 
 
  The correct way to proceed depends on which version of Debian you are
  using (slink (2.1), potato (2.2), etc.); which is it?
 
 It is slink (2.1)
 
  
  You can check if things are going to work out for you by trying the
  following commands as root:
  
  # lsmod
  
  This lists the driver modules currently loaded.  
  If the ne or ne2k-pcidriver is loaded then you 
  should see it listed in the output to this command,
  like so:
  ne2k-pci4136   1
 
 It was not loaded!
 
  
  Assuming it isn't loaded, try loading it by hand.
  If your NIC is a PCI card you should use the ne2k-pci
  driver, like so:
  # modprobe ne2k-pci
  
  PCI cards shouldn't need any extra parameters.
  
  If it's an ISA card you will need to use the ne module,
  and will need to pass at least the IO port as a parameter,
  with a command like this:
  # modprobe ne io=0x300 irq=10
  
  You can skip the IRQ parameter, but if you know what it is
  then it makes things a little more bullet-proof.  If you don't
  know what IO address the card is using, the Windows Device Manager
  (under System in Control Panels) will probably tell you.
  
  If the card is a bona-fide ISA/PNP card (as opposed to a
  traditional ISA card) then this will fail after a cold boot, and
  you will need to set the card up using isapnp before you can
  use it under Linux.
  
 
 The full name of the card is D-Link DE220 ISA PnP -- is this
 a bona-fide ISA/PNP adaptor?
 
 I tried using the command
 
 # modprobe ne io=0x300 irq=03(these are the proper settings)
 
 and it didn't complain. However, I infer from your remarks that
 I will have to use 'isapnp'. I guess that this means I will have to
 edit (properly!) the /etc/isapnp.conf file. I looked at the website
 
 http://www.roestock.demon.co.uk/isapnptools
 
 and it looks like I will need a line in the file like:
 
 (CONFIGURE EDI0119/236861364 ( ...  etc.
 
 The code 'EDI0119' identifies the ethernet card -- but how can
 I find what code to use for my card?
 
 Please let me know if there is anything else I have to know about
 'isapnp'.
 

OK.

Firstly, some ISA/PnP cards have a Software Configuration
mode that allows you to specify a configuration using their
setup disk, rather than doing PnP configuration at run time.
Ignore all of the ISA/PNP stuff below if your card has that
option and you're using it; skip to the line 
(If it isn't a PNP card, start here) in that case.

isapnp is the utility you use to set up ISA/PNP cards; there is a
companion utility, pnpdump, that will interrogate your ISA/PNP cards
for you.

First, make asure that the card isn't in use by running
# lsmod

to list the currently loaded modules, and use
# rmmod ne
# rmmod 8390

to unload the ne and 8390 modules if necessary (8390 is a
low-level module that is used by the ne module to talk to
ne-compatible NICs).  Changing the ocnfiguration while the card
is in use is officially Naughty, and may hang your machine.

Run 
# pnpdump  /etc/isapnp.conf.try

This should produce a template isapnp configuration file listing
your card, but with all of the lines that would actually specify
a configuration commented out.

Pnpdump is in the isapnptools package; install that package if
it isn't already on your system.

Here's an excerpt, showing a single device:

 START of pnpdump output fragment
#
# Logical device id @[EMAIL PROTECTED]
# Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x39
# Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3a
# Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3c
# Device supports vendor reserved register @ 0x3d
#
# Edit the entries below to uncomment out the configuration required.
# Note that only the first value of any range is given, this may be changed if 
required
# Don't forget to uncomment the activate (ACT Y) when happy
(CONFIGURE CMI0001/16777472 (LD 3
# Multiple choice time, choose one only !
# Start dependent functions: priority preferred
#   Logical device decodes 16 bit IO address lines
# Minimum IO base address 0x0220
# Maximum IO base address 0x0220
# IO base alignment 1 bytes
# Number of IO addresses required: 16
# (IO 0 (SIZE 16) (BASE 0x0220))
#   IRQ 5.
# High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
# (INT 0 (IRQ 5 (MODE +E)))
#   First DMA channel 1.
# 8 bit DMA only
# Logical device is not a bus master
# DMA may execute in count by byte mode
# DMA may not execute in count by word mode
# DMA channel speed in compatible mode
# (DMA 0 (CHANNEL 1

network/ethernet card configuration problem?

2000-07-17 Thread James Polson
Hi,

I'm completely new to Linux, so the solution to my problem
may be trivial to all of you experienced Debian Linux users
(so I hope!). 

I'm trying to install Debian Linux (mostly with success), but
I think that I'm having problems connecting with the ethernet
card in my computer.

The symptoms are:

(1) A message during booting that is something like network is
  unreachable (I don't know what log file to look for to get the
  exact wording).

(2) When I type ifconfig -a, I should see listings for two 
  interfaces, lo and eth0, but the second one (the ethernet
  one) is not there.

(3) Not surprisingly, telnet, ftp, etc. can't be used.

(4) In the /var/log/syslog file, there is a message:

  cardmgr[189]: starting, version is 3.0.5
  cardmgr[189]: no sockets found!
  cardmgr[189]: exiting

  I think that this problem reported is related.

Information about my system:

(1) I have a D-Link DE 220 card.

(2) I have the NC2000 driver in /lib/modules/2.0.36/net
  This is the appropriate driver for the card, according
   to the D-Link website.

I would really appreciate it if anyone could help me with
this problem. Until it's fixed, I have to rely on Windows 95
:(  to connect to the internet.

Thanks,

James Polson



Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?

2000-07-17 Thread Esko Lehtonen
James Polson wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 I'm completely new to Linux, so the solution to my problem
 may be trivial to all of you experienced Debian Linux users
 (so I hope!).
 
 I'm trying to install Debian Linux (mostly with success), but
 I think that I'm having problems connecting with the ethernet
 card in my computer.

 The symptoms are:
 
 (1) A message during booting that is something like network is
   unreachable (I don't know what log file to look for to get the
   exact wording).
 
 (2) When I type ifconfig -a, I should see listings for two
   interfaces, lo and eth0, but the second one (the ethernet
   one) is not there.
 
 (3) Not surprisingly, telnet, ftp, etc. can't be used.
 
 (4) In the /var/log/syslog file, there is a message:
 
   cardmgr[189]: starting, version is 3.0.5
   cardmgr[189]: no sockets found!
   cardmgr[189]: exiting
 
   I think that this problem reported is related.
 
 Information about my system:
 
 (1) I have a D-Link DE 220 card.
 
 (2) I have the NC2000 driver in /lib/modules/2.0.36/net
   This is the appropriate driver for the card, according
to the D-Link website.
 
 I would really appreciate it if anyone could help me with
 this problem. Until it's fixed, I have to rely on Windows 95
 :(  to connect to the internet.
 

You need to configure eth0 and your cards kernel module (driver). 

From Ethernet-HOWTO may find correct settings for the module. Then you
have to put these setting to a file to /etc/modutils/some-file and run
update-modules. 

You need to configure eth0 before. I am not an expert here, but
configuration depends much on what you are trying to do. (For my cable
modem I had to just install a debian package dhcpcd. If you are
connecting to LAN or something, that's different.) Take a good look to
Linux Networking-HOWTO (aka  NET3-HOWTO):
http://www.linux.com/howto/NET3-4-HOWTO.html 

Probably you can find this HOWTO from you Linux machine's /usr/doc/HOWTO
directory too.

NOTE: If you are completely new to Linux you should consider purhasing a
good book, something like Running Linux from O'Reilly. Also read
HOWTOs.
 


 WYSINWYG - What You See Is Never What You Get

 Esko Lehtonen
 esko dot lehtonen (a) pp dot htv dot fi



Re: network/ethernet card configuration problem?

2000-07-17 Thread Bolan Meek
James Polson wrote:
 
 ...problems connecting with the ethernet card in my computer.
 
 The symptoms are:
 
 (1) ...network is unreachable ...
 
 (2) ...ifconfig -a, ...eth0, ...not there.
 
 ...
 
 Information about my system:
 
 (1) I have a D-Link DE 220 card.
 
 (2) I have the NC2000 driver in /lib/modules/2.0.36/net
   This is the appropriate driver for the card, according
to the D-Link website.
 
 I would really appreciate it if anyone could help me with
 this problem. Until it's fixed, I have to rely on Windows 95
 :(  to connect to the internet.

Let's see:  does it look like the driver module is being loaded?
Use `dmesg | more` to find out.

If so, are you using a static IP, and have an entry in 
/etc/network/interface, such as
iface eth0 inet static
address LL.MM.NN.OO
netmask 255.255.255.0
network LL.MM.NN.0
broadcast LL.MM.NN.255
gateway LL.MM.NN.PP 
?

 
 Thanks,
 
 James Polson
 
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