On Sun, Feb 15, 2009 at 5:40 PM, Dirk Heinrichs <dirk.heinri...@online.de> wrote: > Am Sonntag, 15. Februar 2009 22:31:40 schrieb Guillermo Garron: > >> Here you can find the config file for my current kernel. > > This has CONFIG_E1000=y > >> And the used to generate the new kernel (where NIC is not detected) > > This has both CONFIG_E1000=y and CONFIG_E1000E=y, maybe that's the problem. > > What does lspci -v tell about the used driver? Anything useful in the dmesg > output?
Hi, Thanks for your prompt response. Here is the output of this command sudo lspci -v | grep Ether 00:19.0 Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82566DC Gigabit Network Connection (rev 02) > > BTW: There are also some other NICs enabled in both your configs. Yes, that is because I am not good a compiling kernels and did not know how to discover what NIC I have to enable only that driver or module. :( > > HTH... > > Dirk > -- Guillermo Garron "Linux IS user friendly... It's just selective about who its friends are." (Using Ubuntu, Debian, Gentoo) http://feeds.feedburner.com/go2linux http://www.go2linux.org