Dear Debian Team!

I encountered a vital problem with my network card while installing debian 
4.0r1 (kernel 2.6.18-5-486) from CD-ROM on an old Pentium system. As I believe, 
this might be a bug, but I'm not sure.

I tried to install the system in expert mode while being physically connected 
to my LAN. All steps until "Detect network hardware" went OK. On "Configure the 
network" the installation stopped unexpectedly. When I selected "no DHCP" I was 
left with a blue screen after confirming the summary of IP, DNS, and so on. 
This bluesceen wouldn't disappear for hours and there was no other way then 
pushing the power button. Next try of installation I selected "use DHCP", and 
the status bar of "Configuring using DHCP" would run until 6% and then stop 
there (for at least 15 minutes). Again, I quit the installation with the power 
button.

Next I tried to install the system with no LAN cable connected to the PC. This 
time the installation went all right (no GUI installed). The system boots from 
hard disk as long as no LAN cable is connected. The NIC seems to be loaded ok, 
as ifconfig outputs the interface as eth0.

However, if a cable is connected at boot, the boot process gets stuck filling 
up the screen with the error message: "eth0: PCI Bus error 2280." If I boot 
with no cable, and plug in the cable when being prompted for login, the message 
"eth0: link up, 100Mbps, full duplex, lpa 0x45E1" appears immediately. After 
approx 15 seconds the screen will be filled up with "eth0: PCI bus error 2280" 
again and there is no way to bring the system down safely. Not even 
"Ctrl+Alt+Print+ R E I S U B" helps.

To exclude the opportunity that neither the NIC itself, nor the PCI interface 
is faulty, I did the following:
- I tested the NIC in another system, running Ubuntu 7.10 (kernel 
  2.6.22-14-generic) and it worked no worries.
- I tried a different PCI slot for the NIC with the same result as before.
- I tried a different NIC in the same slot with the same result.
- I tried a different PCI card (graphics adapter) in the same PCI slot as
  the NIC is connected to now. The graphic adapter worked as it should.

I would be very thankful, if one of you could give me a hint on how to solve 
this problem. Please let me know how to produce more output that could be 
helpful to you.

Sincerely yours,
Holger Schmithüsen, Germany
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