Intel 82557/8 Ethernet network driver (QNX)
Net.ether82557 [-F] [-f tx_forget_time]
[-i irq] [-l log_net_id] [-M]
[-n tx_num_retries] [-I pci_index]
[-P] [-p io_port] [-r media_rate]
[-s speed] [-t tx_retry_ticks]
[-v] &
- -a io_port
- This option is no longer valid in QNX 4.25 and later.
Use -p instead.
- -f tx_forget_time
- After a driver-level NACK is received from
a remote node, Net.ether82557 will assume that
because packets were dropped, throttling the
transmit output on that connection would be
a good idea. So, the output will be reduced
to approximately 400K/sec for 2 seconds, after
which the eternally optimistic Net.ether82557
stops throttling its output. The -f option allows you
to change the default 2 seconds above.
- -F
- Force full-duplex operation of the card. The
default is half-duplex unless the PHY
auto-negotiates full-duplex.
- -I pci_index
- Have the driver look at this specific PCI Index
for an 82557 compatible card. You should only have to
specify -I if you have more than one 82557 compatible
card installed. (e.g. -I0, -I1, -I2).
- -i irq
- Program the card to use the specified
hardware interrupt. This option overrides
the default autodetect. If the autodetect
does not work on an ISA card, you have a
hardware conflict. This option should rarely be used.
- -l log_net_id
- ("el") Connect to the specified logical network. The default is 1.
- -M
- Program the NIC for multicast rx mode. All
packets with multicast destination addresses
will be buffered.
- -n tx_num_retries
- After failing to transmit to a remote node,
retry transmission no more than this number
of times. Default is 7.
- -P
- Program the NIC for promiscuous receive mode. All
packets will be buffered, regardless of the
packet's destination address. The default
is non-promiscuous mode.
You may use this option in conjunction with
netsniff
to monitor other traffic on the network.
- -p io_port
- Use the given I/O port base, specified as a hexadecimal number
without a leading 0x.
This option
overrides the default auto-detect, which uses
the PCI BIOS to return a port address. In earlier versions of
QNX, the -p option was used to specify the PCI index.
Use the -I option to specify the PCI Index of the
card being used.
- -r media_rate
- Advertise the specified bit-transmission
rate. The default is 100000000. This
information is used by the Network Manager
(Net)
only when multiple network drivers are running.
- -s speed
- Set the speed at which the card should run. Only
possible with 100Mbit cards. (e.g. -s10 or -s100)
This disables the auto-negotiation capability of
ethernet card.
- -t tx_retry_ticks
- The number of 50 millisecond intervals
between transmit retries. The default is 6.
- -v
- Be verbose; print out hardware configuration
info on the screen when starting up.
The Net.ether82557 network driver communicates with
Intel 82557/82558, and compatible PCI ethernet adapters
to provide the Network Manager with
reliable data transfer over an Ethernet network. The driver
supports PHY auto-negotiation with auto-negotiating partners.
Auto-negotiation can be disabled by using the -s (speed)
command line option. Full-duplex operation can also be forced,
using the -F command line option.
Most of the time, you should not need to specify the I/O port
or the hardware interrupt to Net.ether82557 -- it should autodetect
these parameters from the PCI BIOS.
Before installing your card, you should read the technote
contained in the /etc/readme/technotes/Net.ether82557 file.
If you install more than one network card, you must specify
a unique network ID (-l option) to every network driver.
If you install more than one 82557 compatible PCI network
card, you must also specify the -I option for every invocation
of Net.ether82557. (Use -I0 for the first card, -I1
for the second, etc.)
Start the Net.ether82557 driver with default parameters:
Net.ether82557 &
Start the Net.ether82557 driver and force the speed to 100Mbit:
Net.ether82557 -s100 &
Start two copies of the driver running on separate cards; one
on logical network 1, the other on logical network 2:
Net.ether82557 -I0 -l1 &
Net.ether82557 -I1 -l2 &
Net.ether82557 closes its standard input, standard output and
standard error immediately after initialization.
Error messages are displayed via the qnx_display_*()
functions, not through standard error.
The Net.ether82557 driver ignores SIGPWR.
Net.ether82557 terminates only upon encountering errors during
initialization or upon getting a signal (i.e. being killed).
- 0
- Net.ether82557 has shut down successfully and cleanly
deregistered from Net.
- >0
- An error occurred during initialization.
Net,
Net.*,
netinfo,
netmap
Installation & Configuration