Subject: RE: device setup
To: None <port-hpcmips@NetBSD.org>
From: S Dobson <sd20@york.ac.uk>
List: port-hpcmips
Date: 08/06/2004 12:00:57
Many thanks to everyone who answered so quickly - your reference to the
GENERIC kernel is what prompted me to find out what was causing the
problem. Basically I was using the old trackpoint kernel
(http://www.netbsd.org/%7Egreg/hpcmips/) which seems to not fully
support my the xircom card. I swapped to using the GENERIC kernel and
it finds it perfectly (as xi0) - just for info it also supports the
Toshiba wirless lan pc card pa3064u-1pcc gold
Another interesting aspect of this kernel change is that gregs
trackpoint kernel did not allow the z50 to fully reboot - and I had to
hard reboot each time (ie physically take the batteries out etc etc) so
this is a very convenient bonus for me!!!
Many thanks guys
steve
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Steve Dobson Tel: +44 01904 433953
Experimental Officer Fax: +44 01904 433902
Department of Archaeology Email: sd20@york.ac.uk
The King's Manor
University of York
York, YO1 7EP, UK
---------------------------------------------------------------------
-----Original Message-----
From: port-hpcmips-owner@NetBSD.org
[mailto:port-hpcmips-owner@NetBSD.org] On Behalf Of Miles Nordin
Sent: 05 August 2004 19:08
To: port-hpcmips@NetBSD.org
Subject: Re: device setup
>>>>> "sd" == S Dobson <sd20@york.ac.uk> writes:
sd> in the /dev directory there are no network devices
There shouldn't be, but you should see the interface listed in 'ifconfig
-a'. If you don't, the card's driver isn't working right. This could be
because the card isn't supported, because there's a bug in the driver,
or because the driver isn't compiled into your kernel.
Often the GENERIC config files for non-i386 are out-of-sync accidentally
or on purpose, and they don't include all the drivers, so if your card
indeed doesn't show up in 'ifconfig -a' you should cross your fingers
and hope that's the case. Then post your boot output and tell us what
kernel you're using.
sd> Netbsd detects it but doesn't give it a device name (such as
sd> xi0 or eth0).
you should post the boot messages. you can get them back with something
like
$ dmesg | less
To get them into an email, maybe you can copy them onto a CF disk and
then stick the disk into another laptop with network?
--
Le fascisme est la dictature ouverte de la bourgeoisie.
-- Georg Dimitrov