[Gllug] 8139 driver problem

Jim Bailey jim at lateral.net
Fri Sep 28 09:39:11 UTC 2001


Hi all,

many thanks for the infomation and advice on network cards, I will stay 
with rt8139 for the desktop, I have run everything from Win95 to Win2000 
as well as several flavours of Linux without too much trouble and non 
critical servers and use Intel for our web and mail servers.  Please let 
us know how your card?driver problems work out.

Cheers Jim

"For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert." anon.

On Thursday, September 27, 2001, at 07:45 PM, Ian Northeast wrote:

> William Palfreman wrote:
>>
>> On Wed, 26 Sep 2001, Jonathan Dye wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> I've got a RealTek 8139 Network card and am running RedHat 7.1 with 
>>> updated
>>> rpm's (Including the kernel rpm making it version 2.4.3-12).  My network
>>> connection keeps being dropped (By dropped I mean it doesn't respond to 
>>> any
>>> network traffic even though the link lights are on) for no apparent 
>>> reason
>>> and the only problem I can see in the log files is the following:
>>> media is unconnected, link down, or incompatible connection
>>
>> Many Realtek cards are unreliable.  In fact, with any Realtek Ethernet
>> card my first reaction to this kind of problem is to replace it with
>> something better, like a modern £com 3c59x type thing.  You can get them
>> for about £35 now.
>
> They have that reputation. Probably some are, but I have never had a
> problem and mine are some dodgy-looking things, three of which came
> thrown in with my 100Mb 8 port hub for 64 quid the lot. They've been
> fine in all the Linux systems we've put them in, I had one in 2.4.9 for
> a while (several days at least - I think it was a week) without problem
> (I took that machine back to 2.2.18 because of problems with ISDN in
> 2.4). The only system that's given trouble is Windows 98 and that won't
> bother anyone will it:) Even that can be made to work, about two hours
> of swearing per reinstall which is a lot of swearing when you think
> about it.
>
> Having said that, I wouldn't use one in a commercial environment but I
> think they're fine for home use where reliability isn't such a major
> issue. If I wanted something really reliable I would use an Intel
> EtherExpress Pro (actually I have a couple of these too, I ..er..
> acquired them). These too are around £35 - so our network admin told me
> as he slipped me a couple for the PCs I don't offially have on and under
> my desk. They also have the advantage of being supported in pretty much
> every OS you can think of (OS/2 gave trouble. I responded by deleting
> it).
>
> The Realteks perform fine too, a highly contrived test between two Linux
> machines with an 8139 and an EtherExpress maxed out at 12Mbyte/s which
> is pretty much the theoretical limit of 100Mb. I've had worse results
> with mega expensive IBM and 3Com stuff at work.
>
> Regards, Ian
>
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