Hi, On Mon, 23 Mar 2020, is%netbsd.org@localhost wrote: > hehe. The reason is, that as far as I can tell, cnet.device doesn't do > any check on anything card-specific. If a card function type is provided > as network card, it believes it. If no card function type is provided, > it believes it is a network card, too. Yeah. No huge surprise there. :) > or add the three line marked with +, without the plusses, after line > 183 in netbsd-current; then recompile the kernel. I tried it with netbsd-7, as that's what I had at hand. Is it a problem and I should try current? Sadly, it didn't work. The card is now bound as ne0, but then it cannot proceed further: pcmcia0 at pccard0 ne0 at pcmcia0 function 0: <PCMCIA, Fast-Ethernet, , > ne0: where did the card go? I can try over the WE with netbsd-current, if necessary. > If this doesn't work, compile a kernel with options PCMCIAVERBOSE > and report what it says about the card, or run cnet.device's program > card_info on AmigaOS and report what that one says. (Pipe into a file > and send the file!) I choose the 2nd option for now, attached both files (card_info.output and the generated card_info.bin). Charlie
Getting PCMCIA card info... ..PCMCIA.Fast-Ethernet... Appears to be a Network card CCR Offset address (16 bit) = $0003C0, Config ID = $07 Interface Type 1, uses: WAIT Getting I/O memory now - remove card if system freezes! Saving data to t:card_info.bin card_info done.
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card_info.bin
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