On Sunday 22 May 2005 00:54, askar ... wrote:
> On 5/21/05, Jason Stubbs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Saturday 21 May 2005 17:36, askar ... wrote:
> > > In the kernel I enables option for 'CardBus yenta-compatible' - this
> > > seems the one I was looking for. After recompilation the kernel I
> > > rebooted the system.
> > > 3 lamps of the PCMCIA card was on: 1) Power 2) Act and 2) Link
> > > The pcmcia card I use is Planex ENW-3503-TX. This is the 10Base-T card.
> > > The cardbus seems working - lights of power and act are on. When I
> > > connect LAN cable the light for Link also switches on.
> > > In /etc/conf.d/net I set IP address for eth0.
> > > When I did # /etc/init.d/net.eth0 start, it complains 'no such device
> > > ...unknown interface'. I think the driver need to be installed. In the
> > > kernel settings I don't see the driver for Planex ENW-3503-TX.
> > > Could anybody help me?
> >
> > Google can. ;)
> >
> > Searching for "Planex ENW-3503-TX linux" gave a list of card types and
> > what chipsets they contain on the first result.
>
> Thanks. But when I searched with the above keyword, the search results in 2
> pages, and all sites in japanese...

I noticed that. I figured you'd probably be able to read seeing I thought 
Planex was a domestic-only brand. Luckily I can read Japanese. ;)

> > Your card has a "Winbond W89C926". I then searched for "Winbond W89C926 
> > linux" and got mostly similar results to the first search, but there was 
> > one that indicates that the card is NE2000 compatible. One of the PCMCIA 
> > network drivers in the kernel is "NE2000 compatible PCMCIA support", so 
> > I'd suggest you give that one a try.   
>
> I use gentoo 2005.0, kernel 2.6.11. In my kernel I have only NE2100 in:
> Device drivers->Networking support->Network device support->Ethernet (10 or
> 100Mb)-->AMD Lance and PCnet (AT1500 and NE2100) support.
> Is this the right place?

Device Drivers  --->
  Networking support  --->
    PCMCIA network device support  --->
      NE2000 compatible PCMCIA support

> One question more - usually we can know about connected devices with
> command lspci. But in the result from lspci no information about my
> pcmcia-card.

As far as I know, lspci only shows you what's on the PCI bus. PCMCIA is a 
different bus which is generally connected to the PCI bus.

Regards,
Jason Stubbs

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