On 5/8/06, Josenildo Marques <josenildo.marques@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Monday 08 May 2006 16:21, Filippos Klironomos escreveu o seguinte: > Same thing happened to my Dell XPS dual core system, and I first I thought > it was > the ethernet card (due to increased traffic) but it turned out was > something completely different (related to APIC). Have you gone through the > logs? Do you see anything in /var/log/messages? What type of ethernet card > to you have? > > Filippos Hi, Filippos Here's what I've got in the log messages May 8 04:47:00 localhost kernel: eth0: PCI Bus error 2200. May 8 04:47:00 localhost kernel: eth0: PCI Bus error 0200. May 8 14:51:55 localhost kernel: ACPI: PCI Interrupt Link [LNKH] (IRQs 3 4 5 6 7 10 11 12 14 15) *9 May 8 14:51:59 localhost kernel: ACPI: PCI Interrupt 0000:00:0c.0[A] -> GSI 19 (level, low) -> IRQ 16 This is my ethernet card May 8 14:51:59 localhost kernel: eth0: RealTek RTL8139 at 0xd0834000, 00:08:54:25:9d:b2, IRQ 16 May 8 14:52:01 localhost kernel: ACPI: PCI Interrupt 0000:00:09.0[A] -> GSI 17 (level, low) -> IRQ 18 May 8 14:52:02 localhost kernel: eth0: link up, 10Mbps, half-duplex, lpa 0x0000 May 8 14:52:03 localhost avahi-daemon[1906]: WARNING: No NSS support for mDNS detected, consider installing nss-mdns!
Are you really on a 10M/half duplex network? -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ L. Friedman netllama@xxxxxxxxx LlamaLand http://netllama.linux-sxs.org -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list