Robert,

NIC-chipset is located on mother board but I could not find any off-load
settings in BIOS, I do not think it is implemented at hardware level.
No errors/drops at NIC.
Regarding your Note2... are you talking about Microsoft's boxes that use
OF's iSCSI-volumes? Well... drivers are updated, off-load functions are
turned off.
What is your setup when you have the same issue? Can you reproduce this
error???

Thanks,
Eugene

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Robert
Neuschul
Sent: September 30, 2008 1:56 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [OF-users] Error message

Eugene

There are known problems with the Broadcom implementation of the TCP 
Offload Engine; if the chipset is on the motherboard and the bios has 
TCP/OE support, disable it, and then also disable the OE in your driver 
configuration [see note below]. If the chipset is on a plugin card then 
you may need to investigate the settings on the card setup instead of 
the system bios.

Essentially, for both 100mb and gigabit networking via modern 
auto-sensing gigabit L2/L3 switches OE shouldn't be required.

Note also that there are known incompatabilities between various makes 
of NIC and other makes of switches; some pairings work flawlessly, 
others work more or less well in most situations, whilst yet others are 
marginal at best, however firmware revisions and models of NIC can also 
affect things, as can driver versions. 
I'm currently investigating an issue of this type with a set of Dell 
workstations most of which have Broadcom NICs, talking to an exchange 
server via a Netgear L2 switch, some of the workstations are generating 
lots of inbound errors [1 in 5 packets failing]: yet avg. network 
utilisation is <12%. Changing the NICs removes the problem; turning off 
TOE on the original NICs also cures the problem. But many of those 
workstations which don't generate errors /also/ have Broadcom NICs - 
but with different models and driver versions.

Note2: to disable offload engine in Windows, go to Start, Settings, LAN 
Connections, select your connection's properties, Configure NIC, 
Advanced, disable TOE. If the server is multihomed or 2 or more NICs 
are teamed then all NICs must be set the same way.

Robert


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