Activating or deactivating the ec_e1000e (or other device-specific) network 
modules will disconnect and remove all devices with the same chipset/family, 
and then add them all back again (both regular Ethernet and EtherCAT).

The end result is that all ports should be available for use again, but it is 
possible that they may come back with a different name (especially if you're 
using the old ethN names rather than the new hardware-based names) and/or not 
be configured the same way as previously (e.g. they will lose the IP assignment 
and might come back with no address or a different address, although that is 
unlikely if you're using standard DHCP).  It will also disrupt any existing 
connections using those ports, although they should normally be able to 
re-establish afterwards provided that the IP is recovered.

It can be useful to use hardware that has different chipsets for your "main" 
Ethernet port and your EtherCAT ports, to avoid temporary disruption as the 
services are restarted, especially if you're connecting to the machine over a 
remote network connection.  But this is not absolutely required.

It's recommended to use a modern kernel that does not use the legacy ethN names.



Gavin Lambert
Senior Software Developer

 


COMPAC SORTING EQUIPMENT LTD | 4 Henderson Pl | Onehunga | Auckland 1061 | New 
Zealand
Switchboard: +49 2630 96520 | https://www.tomra.com

The information contained in this communication and any attachment is 
confidential and may be legally privileged. It should only be read by the 
person(s) to whom it is addressed. If you have received this communication in 
error, please notify the sender and delete the communication.
From: Douglas Lopez
Sent: Thursday, 22 April 2021 2:51 pm
To: etherlab-users@etherlab.org
Subject: [Etherlab-users] Enable normal Ethernet devices with native e1000e 
driver


Hello IgH Etherlab,

First off, I would like to thank you for your hard work with etherlab.  I found 
the manual very useful and was able to implement IgH ethercat master to run my 
slaves without too many issues, and I am new to plc development in general.  I 
apologize in advance if this is the incorrect place to contact, if so, could 
you please redirect me?

My issue is that while the ec master service is running, the ec_e1000e driver 
disables all other ethernet devices on my machine that are not configured for 
an ethercat master in the etc/sysconfig/ethercat file.  While the etherCAT 
master service is running, ifconfig lists only the network device configured 
for the master.

After rereading the v1.5.2 manual Section 4: Dedicated Hardware, I am unsure if 
the native e1000e driver will be able to use one device (ex:  eth2) for 
etherCAT master while using  others (ex: eth0, eth1) as "normal" ethernet 
devices.  However, Section 4.2:  Ethernet and EtherCAT Devices indicates that 
the native driver is "one networking driver for EtherCAT and non-EtherCAT 
devices" which seems contrary to the point made in Dedicated Hardware.  Section 
4.2 does not indicate that the non-EtherCAT devices will be available while the 
service is running, so maybe the fault is in my understanding.

Is it possible to start the master service for one ethernet device (eth2) and 
then use the other ethernet devices to ssh, with the native e1000e driver?  Or 
does activating the master service remove all devices from the network stack so 
that only the master device is operational?

If this is not possible due to "dedicated hardware" for the native driver, 
after reading section 4.3: Device Activation, the generic driver should be able 
to handle this feature?  If I recall correctly, the generic driver will not 
work for RT applications, so I will have to lose Xenomai.

System Specs:
Linux version:  3.2.21
Xenomai:  2.6.21
Distribution:  AntiX 16 (Debian 8.5 Jessie)

Master version: 1.5.2
Ethernet Driver:  e1000e

Thank you very much for your time,
Doug


-- 
Etherlab-users mailing list
Etherlab-users@etherlab.org
https://lists.etherlab.org/mailman/listinfo/etherlab-users

Reply via email to