Re: good nic for server??? 3com 3C2000-T driver support in freebsd 5.4 ????

2005-12-16 Thread Nathan Vidican

kyr wrote:
I want to ask if 3com 3C2000-T network adapter is suported by freebsd 
5.4 (i know that it is suported by release 6 but our server has 5.4).
Anyway does anybody have any suggestion for a good network card for a 
server?

We DONT need gigabit but if it worth the money ... ok

thanks
Kyriakos
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As someone as already replied: HANDS-DOWN, best 100mbit card I've ever used 
(regardless of O/S) and best supported by various O/S's for that matter is the 
Intel EtherExpress Pro 100 cards, specifically the older Pro 100/B's if you can 
get them - used to buy them in bulk lots on ebay for like $5-$10 / each, 
retail/new they run about $45/each but are worth every cent.


Stability and performance from these cards are rock solid. They make use of the 
fxp driver, and a few versions back (quite a few actually) FreeBSD moved over 
from an fxp driver that ran 'standalone', to a newer fxp driver which now 
requires the mIIbus driver too - I don't know what ramifications if any this has 
had on performance - but as far as the hardware goes I still trust these cards 
explicitly. Not know the differences in the code well enough to tell you 
what/why and can't even remember when that changed actually... but I've been 
using these intel boards and the fxp driver on FreeBSD since 2.2.1-release 
without a single hitch, including used boards from ebay ;) lol - come to think 
of it, still have a couple little 486 running 2.2.x branch around here with 
these intel cards in them :) - for what it's worth, they're still running (uh, 
not anything critical mind you, the rest of the machine/software's fairly dated 
for that).


I have however had horrible experiences with d-link, nvidia, admtek, and various 
realtek chipsets on 'generic' cheap cards... bottom line, you generally pay for 
what you get - and if you want solid 100mbps performance, you can bank on Intel 
net cards. I don't know about 3Com, some cards I've had great luck with, others 
a pain in the ass... specifically the 3C905 series, rev 'A' was ok, 'C' too - 
but if ya had a revision 'B' - watch out kinda thing... gave up on using 3Com 
cards way back because of that - wait till you know the product's solid and 
complete before you release it, re-releasing stuff or fixing it after you sold 
it is a micrsoft thing, not something I'd expect from my hardware manufacturer.


Just my two cents, but hope it helps.



--
Nathan Vidican
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Windsor Match Plate  Tool Ltd.
http://www.wmptl.com/
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good nic for server??? 3com 3C2000-T driver support in freebsd 5.4 ????

2005-12-15 Thread kyr
I want to ask if 3com 3C2000-T network adapter is suported by freebsd 
5.4 (i know that it is suported by release 6 but our server has 5.4).
Anyway does anybody have any suggestion for a good network card for a 
server?

We DONT need gigabit but if it worth the money ... ok

thanks
Kyriakos
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Re: good nic for server??? 3com 3C2000-T driver support in freebsd 5.4 ????

2005-12-15 Thread David Kelly


On Dec 15, 2005, at 8:46 PM, kyr wrote:

I want to ask if 3com 3C2000-T network adapter is suported by  
freebsd 5.4 (i know that it is suported by release 6 but our server  
has 5.4).
Anyway does anybody have any suggestion for a good network card for  
a server?

We DONT need gigabit but if it worth the money ... ok


My favorite NIC is the Intel Etherexpress products. This 10/100 PCI  
card is often found used for $5. IIRC back in the days when  
ftp.cdrom.com was setting single-machine 24 hour anonymous ftp server  
world records it was using these NICs.


Another nice thing is former FreeBSDers apparently liked it well  
enough when they went to Apple that MacOS X automagically uses this  
non-Mac PC card with no additional drivers or nothing.


And if one *must* use Windows the download-from-Intel drivers add  
significantly more function than the default Microsoft driver, such  
as VLAN support.


--
David Kelly N4HHE, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Whom computers would destroy, they must first drive mad.

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