Re: where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-09 Thread Riccardo Mottola
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

Re: where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-09 Thread Riccardo Mottola
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

Re: where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-09 Thread Michael van Elst
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

Re: where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-08 Thread Martin Husemann
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

Re: where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-08 Thread ryan
> 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

Re: where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-08 Thread Christos Zoulas
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 >

Re: where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-08 Thread Greg Troxel
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

where did my eth. interface go? (PCMCIA)

2017-01-08 Thread Riccardo Mottola
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