(A little out of order)
> When it restarts i get a bunch of these:
> eepro100: wait_for_cmd_done timeout!

How does it restart?  Does it just black out for a few minutes and come back, or
do you have to ifdown or rmmod it?

> The problem is my machine keeps dying after a day or so of fairly heavy net 
> traffic.  using 2.2.15.  It was rock solid until i put network load on it. 

How much is "heavy"?  I'm guessing the low 20Mbit range.

Anyway, I'm on revision 1.20.2.5 (2000/03/28) right now.  It's the only version
of this driver that has been stable for me under high load.

        -- Brian

On Wed, 07 Jun 2000, Scott R. Every wrote:
> I have a machine using this card and driver:
> eepro100.c:v1.09j-t 9/29/99 Donald Becker 
> http://cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov/linux/driv
> ers/eepro100.html
> eepro100.c: $Revision: 1.20.2.10 $ 2000/05/31 Modified by Andrey V. 
> Savochkin <s
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]> and others
> eth0: Intel PCI EtherExpress Pro100 82557, 00:90:27:8D:36:FA, IRQ 21.
>   Board assembly 000000-000, Physical connectors present: RJ45
>   Primary interface chip i82555 PHY #1.
>   General self-test: passed.
>   Serial sub-system self-test: passed.
>   Internal registers self-test: passed.
>   ROM checksum self-test: passed (0x04f4518b).
>   Receiver lock-up workaround activated.
> 
> 
> it was doing HEAVY processing before, but light net load with no trouble. 
> It seems the card is locking up, but there are no errors in messages or 
> syslog.
> Is there any way to put this card into debug mode?
> do you have any idea why its dying?
> 
> 
> 
> then this:
> eth0: Transmit timed out: status 0000  0c90 at 0/31 command 0001a000.
> eth0: Tx ring dump,  Tx queue 31 / 0:
> eth0:  *  0 0001a000.
> eth0:     1 00020000.
> eth0:     2 00030000.
> eth0:     3 00030000.
> eth0:     4 00030000.
> eth0:     5 00030000.
> eth0:     6 00030000.
> eth0:     7 00030000.
> eth0:     8 200c0000.
> eth0:     9 000c0000.
> eth0:    10 00030000.
> eth0:    11 000c0000.
> eth0:    12 00030000.
> eth0:    13 000c0000.
> eth0:    14 00030000.
> eth0:    15 000c0000.
> eth0:    16 200c0000.
> eth0:    17 00030000.
> eth0:    18 00030000.
> eth0:    19 000c0000.
> eth0:    20 000c0000.
> eth0:    21 00030000.
> eth0:    22 000c0000.
> eth0:    23 00030000.
> eth0:    24 200c0000.
> eth0:    25 00030000.
> eth0:    26 000c0000.
> eth0:    27 000c0000.
> eth0:    28 00030000.
> eth0:    29 00030000.
> eth0:    30 40030000.
> eth0:   =31 00000000.
> eth0: Printing Rx ring (next to receive into 0, dirty index 0).
> eth0:  *= 0 00000001.
> eth0:     1 00000001.
> eth0:     2 00000001.
> eth0:     3 00000001.
> eth0:     4 00000001.
> eth0:     5 00000001.
> eth0:     6 00000001.
> eth0:     7 00000001.
> eth0:     8 00000001.
> eth0:     9 00000001.
> eth0:    10 00000001.
> eth0:    11 00000001.
> eth0:    12 00000001.
> eth0:    13 00000001.
> eth0:    14 00000001.
> eth0:    15 00000001.
> eth0:    16 00000001.
> eth0:    17 00000001.
> eth0:    18 00000001.
> eth0:    19 00000001.
> eth0:    20 00000001.
> eth0:    21 00000001.
> eth0:    22 00000001.
> eth0:    23 00000001.
> eth0:    24 00000001.
> eth0:    25 00000001.
> eth0:    26 00000001.
> eth0:    27 00000001.
> eth0:    28 00000001.
> eth0:    29 00000001.
> eth0:    30 00000001.
> eth0: l  31 c0000002.
> 
> any idea what this means?  i am starting to use intel cards for all my 
> servers and i am now very wary as this is causing huge problems on the 
> first server I've tried.
> 
> Any help would be appreciated.
> 
> thanx
> 
> s
> 
> --
> Scott R. Every - mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> EMJ Internet - http://www.emji.net
> voice : 1-888-258-8959  fax : 1-919-363-4425
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-net" in
> the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-net" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to