Hi,
On 01/09/17 05:07, r...@brack.xyz wrote:
AFAIK, CardBus (and PCMCIA) on NetBSD don't yet support hotplug. Noticed the
issue myself
on my ancient Dell Lattitude. Unforunately, it's only insert-then-boot.
AS other wrote, it usually works, it works on my other laptop.
Do you have a cards
Hi
On 01/09/17 00:08, Greg Troxel wrote:
Note that PCMCIA and CARDBUS are not the same thing. One is ISAish, the
second PCIish.
True. The card is a CardBus, it is stamped on it :)
Look at the kernel and the various FIXUP options. Try a kernel with
those. It may be that the card fails
r...@brack.xyz writes:
>> If I remove and reinsert the
>> card, the kernel crashes. If I boot without card and
>> insert it later, it crashes.
>>
>AFAIK, CardBus (and PCMCIA) on NetBSD don't yet support hotplug. Noticed t
On Sun, Jan 08, 2017 at 11:07:20PM -0500, r...@brack.xyz wrote:
> AFAIK, CardBus (and PCMCIA) on NetBSD don't yet support hotplug. Noticed the
> issue myself
> on my ancient Dell Lattitude. Unforunately, it's only insert-then-boot.
This is not true, it usually works on both cardbus and pcmcia.
M
> If I remove and reinsert the
> card, the kernel crashes. If I boot without card and
> insert it later, it crashes.
>
AFAIK, CardBus (and PCMCIA) on NetBSD don't yet support hotplug. Noticed the
issue myself
on my ancien
In article ,
Riccardo Mottola wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I have an old x86 laptop which has all network stuff in PCMCIA cardbus
>slots. It was running 7.0 just fine, I decided to upgrade to 7.0.2, by
>using the RAMDISK kernel.
>
>The 10/100 card intel (rebranded IBM) card worked fine, recognized as tlp0
>
Note that PCMCIA and CARDBUS are not the same thing. One is ISAish, the
second PCIish.
Look at the kernel and the various FIXUP options. Try a kernel with
those. It may be that the card fails to map after the system has been
up and memory addresses move around.
Also, you might post the detai
Hi,
I have an old x86 laptop which has all network stuff in PCMCIA cardbus
slots. It was running 7.0 just fine, I decided to upgrade to 7.0.2, by
using the RAMDISK kernel.
The 10/100 card intel (rebranded IBM) card worked fine, recognized as tlp0
I was able to download the packages and upgra