Well, I tried these images and they don't work with the versions of the cards I have.
Here's what's written on the board of my NetGear card : "NetGear FA310TX REV-D2". I 
tried the "dc21x4" and "dp83815" drivers with no luck.
Here's what's on my D-Link card : "D-Link DEF-530TX REV-C1". The "fetnd" driver won't 
work with it.
The drivers I got to work are : DLKFET.DOS for the D-Link card, and NGRPCI.DOS for the 
NetGear card.

Here are some strings I found by hex editing the NGRPCI driver :
Build 3.16.03
NETGEAR FA310TX Fast Ethernet PCI Adapter NDIS 2 Mac Driver Version 2.73
Working with DC21140 based 10/100 mbps Ethernet Controller
Working with NGMC169 based 10/100 mbps Ethernet Controller

Well, the chip on my card is labeled "Netgear LC82C169C", which seems pretty similar 
to "NGMC169". So I guess this driver countains in fact 2 drivers : one for the tulip 
chip, and one for the "169" chip.

And here are some strings from the DLKFET driver :
Working with VT86C100A Fast Ethernet Controller
D-Link DFE-530TX PCI Fast Ethernet NDIS2 Driver v2.73

This is strange, because the FETND driver should work with this chip too. I have no 
idea why it fails to recognize the card.

Anyways, thanks for the support. I'm pretty sure that some users have revisions of the 
cards that work with your drivers.

Sylvain.


> -----Message d'origine-----
> De : [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] De la 
> part de Patrick J. LoPresti
> Envoy� : jeudi 30 octobre 2003 22:47
> � : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Objet : [Unattended] Netgear/D-Link testers wanted
> 
> 
> I have added or replaced three new DOS drivers for the next release,
> but I do not have the corresponding network hardware to test them.  If
> you have access to any of the following, could you please test the
> drivers for me?
> 
>   dc21x4   DEC/Intel 2104x/2114x "Tulip" family (e.g., Netgear FA310)
>   dp83815  Natsemi 83815 "MacPHYTER" family (e.g., Netgear 
> FA311/FA312)
>   fetnd    VIA Rhine family (e.g., D-Link DFE-530TX)
> 
> In each case, I downloaded the most recent and generic DOS driver I
> could find from the chipset (not network card) manufacturer.  So
> instead of going to Netgear for the FA311/FA312 driver, for example, I
> went to National Semiconductor.  In theory, this should give us
> support for the broadest possible set of cards.
> 
> To test these images, go to
> <http://unattended.sourceforge.net/testing/> and download the floppy
> .img file or the (compressed) bootdisk.iso.gz file.
> 
> I am especially interested in success/failure stories for the
> particular Netgear and D-Link hardware listed above, since those are
> the ones people in which people have expressed interest on the mailing
> list.  But any feedback would be helpful.
> 
> Thanks!
> 
>  - Pat
> 
> 
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