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Diffstat (limited to 'nl/hardware/network-cards.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | nl/hardware/network-cards.xml | 243 |
1 files changed, 116 insertions, 127 deletions
diff --git a/nl/hardware/network-cards.xml b/nl/hardware/network-cards.xml index cfd5714cd..87dff40bc 100644 --- a/nl/hardware/network-cards.xml +++ b/nl/hardware/network-cards.xml @@ -1,121 +1,53 @@ <!-- retain these comments for translator revision tracking --> -<!-- original version: 39614 untranslated --> +<!-- original version: 43693 untranslated --> <sect1 id="network-cards"> <title>Network Connectivity Hardware</title> +<para> -<para arch="x86"> +Almost any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel +should also be supported by the installation system; modular drivers +should normally be loaded automatically. -<!-- last updated for kernel-image_2.0.36-2 --> +<phrase arch="x86">This includes most PCI and PCMCIA cards.</phrase> +<phrase arch="i386">Many older ISA cards are supported as well.</phrase> -Most PCI and many older ISA network cards are supported. -Some network interface cards are not supported by most Debian -installation disks, such as AX.25 cards and protocols; -NI16510 EtherBlaster cards; Schneider & Koch G16 cards; -and the Zenith Z-Note built-in network card. Microchannel (MCA) network -cards are not supported by the standard installation system, but see -<ulink url="&url-linux-mca;">Linux on MCA</ulink> for some (old) -instructions. -FDDI networks are also not supported by the installation disks, both -cards and protocols. +<phrase arch="m68k">Again, see <ulink url="&url-m68k-faq;"></ulink> +for complete details.</phrase> -<!-- missing-doc FIXME You can create a custom kernel which supports an -otherwise unsupported card and then substitute in the installer (see -<xref linkend="rescue-replace-kernel"/>). --> - -</para><para arch="x86"> - -As for ISDN, the D-channel protocol for the (old) German 1TR6 is not -supported; Spellcaster BRI ISDN boards are also not supported by the -&d-i;. - -</para> - -<para arch="m68k"> - -Any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel should -also be supported by the boot disks. You may need to load your -network driver as a module. Again, see -<ulink url="&url-m68k-faq;"></ulink> for complete details. - -</para> - -<para arch="sparc"> +</para><para arch="sparc"> -The following network interface cards (NICs) are supported from the bootable -kernel directly: +This includes a lot of generic PCI cards (for systems that have PCI) and +the following NICs from Sun: <itemizedlist> - <listitem><para> +<listitem><para> Sun LANCE - </para></listitem> - <listitem><para> +<listitem><para> Sun Happy Meal - </para></listitem> -</itemizedlist> - -</para><para arch="sparc"> - -The following network interface cards are supported as modules. They -can be enabled once the drivers are installed during the setup. -However, due to the magic of OpenPROM, you still should be able to -boot from these devices: - -<itemizedlist> - <listitem><para> +<listitem><para> Sun BigMAC - </para></listitem> - <listitem><para> +<listitem><para> Sun QuadEthernet </para></listitem> - <listitem><para> +<listitem><para> MyriCOM Gigabit Ethernet </para></listitem> </itemizedlist> -</para><para arch="alpha"> - -Any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel should -also be supported by the boot disks. You may need to load your -network driver as a module. - -</para><para arch="powerpc"> - -Any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel should -also be supported by the boot disks. You may need to load your -network driver as a module. - -</para><para arch="hppa"> - -Any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel should -also be supported by the boot disks. You may need to load your -network driver as a module. - -</para><para arch="ia64"> - -Any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel should -also be supported by the boot disks. You may need to load your -network driver as a module. - -</para><para arch="mips"> - -Any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel should -also be supported by the boot disks. You may need to load your -network driver as a module. - </para><para arch="mipsel"> Due to kernel limitations only the onboard network interfaces on @@ -124,10 +56,7 @@ do not work. </para><para arch="s390"> -Any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel is -also be supported by the boot disks. All network drivers are compiled -as modules so you need to load one first during the initial network -setup. The list of supported network devices is: +The list of supported network devices is: <itemizedlist> <listitem><para> @@ -142,11 +71,6 @@ OSA-2 Token Ring/Ethernet and OSA-Express Fast Ethernet (non-QDIO) </para></listitem> <listitem><para> -Inter-User Communication Vehicle (IUCV) — available for VM guests only - -</para></listitem> -<listitem><para> - OSA-Express in QDIO mode, HiperSockets and Guest-LANs </para></listitem> @@ -156,59 +80,124 @@ OSA-Express in QDIO mode, HiperSockets and Guest-LANs <para arch="arm"> -The following network interface cards are supported directly by the -boot disks on Netwinder and CATS machines: +On &arch-title;, most built-in Ethernet devices are supported and modules +for additional PCI and USB devices are provided. The major exception is +the IXP4xx platform (featuring devices such as the Linksys NSLU2) which +needs a proprietary microcode for the operation of its built-in Ethernet +device. Unofficial images for Linksys NSLU2 with this proprietary +microcode can be obtained from the <ulink +url="&url-slug-firmware;">Slug-Firmware site</ulink>. -<itemizedlist> - <listitem><para> +</para><para arch="x86"> - PCI-based NE2000 +As for ISDN, the D-channel protocol for the (old) German 1TR6 is not +supported; Spellcaster BRI ISDN boards are also not supported by the +&d-i;. Using ISDN during the installation is not supported. +</para> -</para></listitem> - <listitem><para> + <sect2 arch="not-s390" id="nics-firmware"> + <title>Drivers Requiring Firmware</title> +<para> - DECchip Tulip +The installation system currently does not support retrieving firmware. +This means that any network cards that use a driver that requires firmware +to be loaded, is not supported by default. -</para></listitem> -</itemizedlist> +</para><para> -</para><para arch="arm"> +If there is no other NIC you can use during the installation, it is still +possible to install &debian; using a full CD-ROM or DVD image. Select the +option to not configure a network and install using only the packages +available from the CD/DVD. You can then install the driver and firmware you +need after the installation is completed (after the reboot) and configure +your network manually. Note that the firmware may be packaged separately +from the driver and may not be available in the <quote>main</quote> section +of the &debian; archive. -The following network interface cards are supported directly by the -boot disks on RiscPCs: +</para><para> -<itemizedlist> - <listitem><para> +If the driver itself <emphasis>is</emphasis> supported, you may also be +able to use the NIC during installation by copying the firmware from some +medium to <filename>/usr/lib/hotplug/firmware</filename>. Don't forget to +also copy the firmware to that location for the installed system before +the reboot at the end of the installation. - Ether1 +</para> + </sect2> -</para></listitem> - <listitem><para> + <sect2 condition="supports-wireless" id="nics-wireless"> + <title>Wireless Network Cards</title> +<para> - Ether3 +Wireless NICs are in general supported as well, with one big proviso. +A lot of wireless adapters require drivers that are either non-free or have +not been accepted into the official Linux kernel. These NICs can generally +be made to work under &debian;, but are not supported during the installation. -</para></listitem> - <listitem><para> +</para><para> - EtherH +If there is no other NIC you can use during the installation, it is still +possible to install &debian; using a full CD-ROM or DVD image. Use the same +procedure as described above for NICs that require firmware. -</para></listitem> -</itemizedlist> +</para><para> -</para><para arch="arm"> +In some cases the driver you need may not be available as a Debian package. +You will then have to look if there is source code available in the internet +and compile the driver yourself. How to do this is outside the scope of this +manual. +<phrase arch="x86">If no Linux driver is available, your last resort is to +use the <classname>ndiswrapper</classname> package, which allows you to use +a Windows driver.</phrase> -If your card is mentioned in the lists above, the complete installation -can be carried out from the network with no need for CD-ROMs or floppy -disks. +</para> + </sect2> -</para><para arch="arm"> + <sect2 arch="sparc" id="nics-sparc-trouble"> + <title>Known Issues for &arch-title;</title> +<para> -Any other network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel -should also be supported by the boot disks. You may need to load your -network driver as a module; this means that you will have to install -the operating system kernel and modules using some other media. +There are a couple of issues with specific network cards that are worth +mentioning here. </para> + <sect3><title>Conflict between tulip and dfme drivers</title> +<!-- BTS: #334104; may also affect other arches, but most common on sparc --> +<para> + +<!-- BTS: #334104; may also affect other arches, but most common on sparc --> +There are various PCI network cards that have the same PCI identification, +but are supported by related, but different drivers. Some cards work with +the <literal>tulip</literal> driver, others with the <literal>dfme</literal> +driver. Because they have the same identification, the kernel cannot +distinguish between them and it is not certain which driver will be loaded. +If this happens to be the wrong one, the NIC may not work, or work badly. + +</para><para> + +This is a common problem on Netra systems with a Davicom (DEC-Tulip +compatible) NIC. In that case the <literal>tulip</literal> driver is +probably the correct one. + +During the installation the solution is to switch to a shell and unload the +wrong driver module using +<userinput>modprobe -r <replaceable>module</replaceable></userinput> (or +both, if they are both loaded). After that you can load the correct module +using <userinput>modprobe <replaceable>module</replaceable></userinput>. + +</para> + </sect3> + + <sect3><title>Sun B100 blade</title> +<!-- BTS: #384549; should be checked for kernels >2.6.18 --> +<para> + +The <literal>cassini</literal> network driver does not work with Sun B100 +blade systems. + +</para> + </sect3> + </sect2> </sect1> |