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Realtek 8168b linux driver download.
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02-09-2008, 07:23 PM # 1.
Hi. I've got a brand-new system with a Gigabyte P35-DS4 motherboard, which has an embedded Realtek RTL8111/8168B gigabit network controller. I'm running Linux 2.6.23.14, freshly fetched from kernel.org a couple of weeks ago.
The system was running perfectly . until I decided to start using the network. With both the Linux kernel's r8169 module and the r8168 driver from realtek.com.tw - separately loaded, one at a time - I have the same problem - the driver loads properly, the eth0 interface configures properly, all the networking functions operate correctly . but when I receive packets at the full 100Mbit/s rate from another machine (both my eth0 and the other machine auto-negotiated to 100Mb/sec full duplex) I see various errors suddenly pop up in the syslog:
sshd[4685]: error: channel 0: chan_read_failed for istate 1 sshd[4685]: error: channel 0: chan_read_failed for istate 3 last message repeated 20 times kernel: hda: cdrom_pc_intr: The drive appears confused (ireason = 0x01). Trying to recover by ending request. last message repeated 3 times kernel: ide: failed opcode was: unknown kernel: hda: drive not ready for command kernel: hda: status error: status=0x58.
When either of the r8169/r8168 modules are loaded they report as follows in the log (this example is the regular Linux (kernel.org) r8169 module):
kernel: 8169 Gigabit Ethernet driver 2.2LK loaded kernel: ACPI: PCI Interrupt 0000:04:00.0[A] -> GSI 17 (level, low) -> IRQ 17 kernel: eth0: RTL8168b/8111b at 0xf8d1c000, 00:1a:4d:58:a3:54, XID 38000000 IRQ 17.
A look at the IRQ 17 line in /proc/interrupts shows that the IDE driver and the Realtek driver are both sharing IRQ 17:
# fgrep eth /proc/interrupts 17: 58077 4 98999 129160 IO-APIC-fasteoi ide0, eth0.
Given the kernel messages about 'hda' - which is my sole IDE disk device on the system, the DVD-ROM drive (all my hard disk drives are SATA/AHCI) - it seems to me that the realtek driver is losing interrupts, or the IDE driver is picking up the interrupts destined for the ethernet device. But it's been a loooong time since I had to play with PC hardware and interrupts . I don't have a clue how IRQs are (automatically?) assigned on a PCI bus these days, nor how to change things.
Output of 'lspci' for just those two devices is:
03:00.1 IDE interface: JMicron Technologies, Inc. JMicron 20360/20363 AHCI Controller (rev 02) 04:00.0 Ethernet controller: Realtek Semiconductor co., Ltd. RTL8111/8168B PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet controller (rev 01)
How can I 'move' the Realtek device to another interrupt? Is there a general 'what to do with messy interrupt conflicts on PCI busses' HOWTO out there for a hardware novice?
My Award Bios on this new machine (version F7, BIOS date 09/07/2007) doesn't seem to have any 'plug and play' or 'IRQ' options that might help. In a 'PnP/PCI Configuration' menu there are just two options to set/unset:
PCI1 IRQ assignment PCI2 IRQ assignment.
Both are set to 'auto'. Changing them to specific different values - in a desperate/naive attempt to do something 'new' - didn't change any of the kernel's IRQ assignments at all.
I've tried a few kernel boot options - 'pci=routeirq', 'pci=noacpi' - in trying to get the s a way to tell the Realtek controller - when I modprobe r8169.ko - to just go and use something else. Things have changed a lot since I had to manually go and change ISA IRQ values in the old days!
Can anyone point me to how I can bootstrap myself into understanding what part of the Linux kernel assigns IRQ values? Whether they can be changed? How I can get the 'ide0' driver to use a different IRQ than the Realtek r8169 module?

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