Comment 10 for bug 135316

Revision history for this message
Jose De la Rosa (jose-de-la-rosa) wrote :

...getting there, I can now see the NIC. Below is output in /var/log/messages when I rmmod and modprobe sky2:

Aug 31 11:30:43 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4401.068000] sky2 eth1: disabling interface
Aug 31 11:30:43 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4401.096000] ACPI: PCI interrupt for device 0000:09:00.0 disabled
Aug 31 11:30:47 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4405.880000] ACPI: PCI Interrupt 0000:09:00.0[A] -> GSI 16 (level, low) -> IRQ 16
Aug 31 11:30:47 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4405.880000] sky2 0000:09:00.0: v1.14 addr 0xfe8fc000 irq 16 Yukon-FE+ (0xb8) rev 0
Aug 31 11:30:47 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4405.884000] sky2 eth0: addr 00:15:c5:7d:41:4c
Aug 31 11:30:47 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4405.900000] sky2 eth1: enabling interface
Aug 31 11:30:47 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4405.904000] sky2 eth1: ram buffer 0K
Aug 31 11:30:47 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4405.904000] ADDRCONF(NETDEV_UP): eth1: link is not ready
Aug 31 11:30:49 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4407.440000] sky2 eth1: Link is up at 100 Mbps, half duplex, flow control none
Aug 31 11:30:49 dell-laptop kernel: [ 4407.444000] ADDRCONF(NETDEV_CHANGE): eth1: link becomes ready

However, I can't get an IP address (DHCP). Even when using a static IP, I still could not reach the network (pretty sure network cable is fine). I'm attaching /var/log/syslog, where I see a bunch of messages:

..no IPv6 routers present..

when I restart the networking service. Not sure if its trying to get an IPv6 address? Also, not sure why it's assigning eth1 and not eth0 to it.