There is a common issue on these I219-V systems which usually manifests
when used in a dual-boot scenario with Windows.

In that case the Windows driver enables various power-management
settings which, when rebooting into Linux without a cold-off, results in
network problems. Most usually the Ethernet device brings the link up
and can transmit packets but never receives packets.

My investigations showed this was caused by the receive side of the chip
not having been woken up by the Linux driver in some way.

In those circumstances even ethtool didn't seem able to solve it
(presumably the mainline e1000e driver doesn't do the correct thing).

The solution was always to disable the power-management options via
Windows. There's an Arch Linux thread with a good discussion and
screenshots of that issue at

https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=191981

See especially comment #8.

Whilst this may not be your issue it might give you some lead(s) to
identify what is going on.

I'd also use "ethtool -k" to check the features enabled and
investigation disabling all the "offload" functions one-by-one to see if
those are to blame. I'd be especially suspicious of tcp-segmentation-
offload (tso).

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1785171

Title:
  Intel I219-V Ethernet Interface on Ubuntu Linux Using e1000e Driver
  keeps Dropping Internet Connection

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