> David Hollis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > There were some fixes incorporated not too long ago that deal with the > speed negotiation, but those should already be incorporated into the > kernel you are running. It is possible that there are endian issues but > I don't have any non-x86 hardware to test on unfortunately. I'm > currently looking into making use of the PHY abstraction layer that was > recently submitted and that may help with some of these issues. Do you > know if your device ever worked properly? Could you possibly try it > with Windows and see if it works properly? The main issues I've seen > with the speed handling has been going from 100-full to 10-half and that > sort of thing. If you auto to 100-full and stay there, the device works > just fine. > -- > David Hollis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
I just tried the device on Windows XP (driver v1.30 from dlink.com), works like a charm (both in auto-sense and forced modes). My switches did negotiate 100FDX, throughput was about 7-8mb/s. When I connect it to the Mac the switch goes to HDX, as indictated by the switch FDX led and port info. So this is definately a bug, possibly only on PPC (Don't have any x86 to test on). Any way I can help to get it resolved? I would supply a patch if I could, but unfortunately kernel & drivers are a bit out of my knowledge base. Are there any other adapters you know that are 100% working on PPC? Maybe: Linksys USB200M NetGear FA120 /Magnus ------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net email is Sponsored by the Better Software Conference & EXPO September 19-22, 2005 * San Francisco, CA * Development Lifecycle Practices Agile & Plan-Driven Development * Managing Projects & Teams * Testing & QA Security * Process Improvement & Measurement * http://www.sqe.com/bsce5sf _______________________________________________ [email protected] To unsubscribe, use the last form field at: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-usb-devel
