On Sat, 2008-04-26 at 16:50 +0100, Anne Wilson wrote: > On Saturday 26 April 2008 16:05, Anne Wilson wrote: > > On Saturday 26 April 2008 15:47, Anne Wilson wrote: > > > On Saturday 26 April 2008 15:32, Anne Wilson wrote: > > > > On Saturday 26 April 2008 13:49, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > > > > > Don't see anything relevant (which doesn't mean it's not there). The > > > > > other places to look would be /boot/config* ("grep PCMCIA" and > > > > > compare the results), or maybe 'lspci' and/or 'lsusb'. Also > > > > > /etc/udev/rules.d/* > > > > > > > > They are identical. One possible breakthrough, though. On the Live > > > > system I managed to get the info screen on the connection. It said it > > > > was using pcnet_cs. This isn't the device name, I guess, but probably > > > > a driver or chipset? Either way, that should, surely, be traceable to > > > > our solution. > > > > > > I've just found this - > > > > > > Pcnet_cs is a driver for all NS8390-based PCMCIA ethernet cards. It can > > > use either polled IO or a shared memory window to exchange data with the > > > card. The driver first tests for a shared memory buffer, falling back on > > > polled IO if the memory test fails. When this driver is bound to a card, > > > it allocates the next available ethernet device (eth0..eth#). This device > > > name will be reported in the kernel log file, and passed on to > > > cardmgr(8). > > > > > > So - does anyone know which device from the list belongs to the NS8390 > > > group? > > > > According to > > http://www.mikrotik.com/documentation/manual_2.7/DriverList.html the 3Com > > 3c590 driver should work. Unfortunately I'm still getting 'Device eth0 > > doesn't seem to be present' :-( > > > I tried to modprobe pcnet_cs, since it is listed under the drivers. This is > what I found in messages - > > pcnet_cs: version magic '2.6.25-0.121.rc5.git4.fc9 SMP mod_unload 686 > 4KSTACKS ' should be '2.6.25-0.234.rc9.git1.fc9.i686 SMP mod_unload 686 > 4KSTACKS ' I've no idea if this will work, but: Copy the /boot stuff (vmlinux, initrd, System.map and config) from the Live CD into your installed /boot. Also /lib/modules, same thing. Edit /boot/grub/grub.conf to *add* (not replace) the Live CD version of the kernel as a boot-time option. Cross fingers and reboot, selecting the appropriate version. poc -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list