On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 1:28 AM, Damien Fleuriot <[email protected]> wrote: > On 10/21/11 5:00 PM, [email protected] wrote: > > I have an 8.1-RELEASE system with an xl on the mainboard: > > > > xl0: <3Com 3c905C-TX Fast Etherlink XL> port 0xdc80-0xdcff mem > 0xf8fffc00-0xf8fffc7f irq 16 at device 4.0 on pci2 > > miibus0: <MII bus> on xl0 > > xlphy0: <3c905C 10/100 internal PHY> PHY 24 on miibus0 > > xlphy0: 10baseT, 10baseT-FDX, 100baseTX, 100baseTX-FDX, auto > > xl0: Ethernet address: 00:b0:d0:22:5a:14 > > xl0: [ITHREAD] > > > > It has been working properly while connected to an old 10-BaseT hub, > > but when I moved it to a (not as old) Netgear 10/100 dual-speed hub > > the link started to yo-yo: > > > > Pray tell, what's a "dual-speed hub" , marketing mumbo-jumbo ? > If that's a hub that supports negotiation of different speeds (10 vs > 100), then yes, I call that marketing mumbo-jumbo ;) > > Go back to the days of hubs, and the first 10/100 Mbps hubs from just about every manufacturer was labelled "dual-speed". Meaning, it supported 10 Mbps connections and 100 Mbps connection (dual meaning two). ;)
3Com OfficeConnect hubs are all labelled "dual-speed". With the advent of switches, the "dual-speed" moniker was pretty much universally dropped in favour of just listing the speeds it supported (10/100, 10/100/1000, etc). Maybe it's "marketing mumbo jumbo", but it was pretty universal for the time. -- Freddie Cash [email protected] _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"
