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Using Intel(R) Network Adapters with Linux* --
Information for Specific Linux Distributions
==============================================
June 3, 2002
Contents
========
- Caldera OpenLinux* 3.1
- Installing Intel ANS
- Compiling Intel Drivers on Itanium(TM)-Based Systems
- Red Hat* 7.0
- Compiling Intel Drivers
- Compiling Intel ANS on the 2.2.16 Kernel and Higher
- Red Hat 7.0 Enterprise* Edition
- Matching the Kernel Source
- Red Hat 7.2
- Driver Installation on Itanium-Based Systems
- SuSE* 7.1
- Compiling Intel ANS or PROCfg on the 2.4.0 Kernel
- SuSE 8.0 Personal
- Compiling Intel Drivers on the 2.4.18 Kernel
- Support
Caldera* OpenLinux 3.1
======================
Installing Intel ANS
--------------------
In Caldera OpenLinux* 3.1, the super-user's executable path does not include
/usr/sbin/, which is the default location selected by the makefile for Intel
ANS installation. This causes problems later during the configuration stage.
To solve this, either permanently add /usr/sbin to root's executable path,
or modify the makefile to set BIN_DIR to a preferred directory that is
super-user specific and that appears in $PATH.
Compiling Intel Drivers on Itanium(TM)-Based Systems
----------------------------------------------------
When compiling the e100 and e1000 drivers, various unresolved symbol errors
may appear. These messages may be disregarded as the drivers will install
and function properly on Caldera OpenLinux 3.1 Itanium(TM)-based systems.
Red Hat* 7.0
============
Compiling Intel Drivers
-----------------------
To install Intel's e100, e1000, and iANS drivers on systems running Red Hat*
Linux 7.0, you MUST have the kernel source package and kgcc. Without kgcc,
the modules compiled for the stock kernel are compiled with gcc and may be
unstable.
You can check for the required packages by typing:
rpm -q kernel-source
rpm -q kgcc
If you are missing a package, install it with the following commands:
mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom (or copy from the web)
cd /mnt/cdrom/RedHat/RPMS/ (or directory copied from the web)
rpm -i kernel-source-2.2.16-22.i386.rpm
rpm -i kgcc-1.1.2-40.i386.rpm
Then, you MUST reboot. This ensures that version.h is updated. You may then
install the Intel driver(s) as indicated in the driver's readme file.
Compiling Intel ANS on the 2.2.16 Kernel and Higher
---------------------------------------------------
In single-processor systems, the default kernel source tree configuration
does not match the kernel. This causes errors when compiling the ANS module
and might lead to a faulty module.
As a workaround, make the kernel configuration match the running kernel:
1. Change to the kernel source directory. Generally, this is /usr/src/linux.
2. Enter:
make mrproper
3. Enter:
make menuconfig
CAUTION: When entering the above command, you need to be sure to turn
the versioning on or off as required by the kernel you are
planning to run. If you are running a UP kernel, set SMP and
versioning to off. If you are running a SMP kernel, set SMP and
versioning to on.
4. Deselect SMP, save, and exit.
5. Enter:
make dep
6. If error messages still appear after performing the above operations,
enter:
make bzImage
make modules
Red Hat 7.0 Enterprise* Edition
==============================
Matching the Kernel Source
--------------------------
The 7.0 Enterprise* kernel version was built using extra patches and does
not match the kernel-RPM installed source. You must install and apply the
patches from the kernel SRPM to recreate the proper source tree.
NOTE: The Enterprise kernel was developed to allow the 2.2.16 kernel large
memory access and other Enterprise features. If you require Enterprise
capability, we strongly suggest using the 2.4.X series of kernels,
which have native large memory support.
Use the following instructions to recreate the 2.2.16-22 Enterprise kernel
source:
1) Install kernel-2.2.16-22.src.rpm and kernel-source-2.2.16-22.i386.rpm.
2) Make a copy of the source tree installed from
kernel-source-2.2.16-22.i386.rpm.
3) Apply the following patches from the kernel SRPM to the new kernel source
tree:
/usr/src/RedHat/SOURCES/linux-2.2.16-lfs.patch
/usr/src/RedHat/SOURCES/linux-2.2.16-lfs-bigmem.patch
NOTE: Unresolved failure message have been observed on some systems.
These message may be ignored as the patches do install cleanly.
4) Clean out the kernel source tree and reconfigure for the Enterprise
kernel:
make mrproper
cp configs/kernel-2.2.16-i686-enterprise.config .config
make oldconfig
make dep
5) Ensure /usr/src/linux is a symlink pointing to the new Enterprise kernel
source.
6) Build the driver.
Red Hat 7.2
===========
Driver Installation on Itanium-Based Systems with Red Hat 7.2 or Higher
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When compiling the e100 and e1000 drivers with 'make install', the binary is
installed as:
For e100: /lib/modules/[KERNEL_VERSION]/kernel/drivers/addon/e100.o
For e1000: /lib/modules/[KERNEL_VERSION]/kernel/drivers/addon/e1000.o
SuSE* 7.1
=========
Compiling Intel ANS or PROCfg on the 2.4.0 Kernel
-------------------------------------------------
When trying to compile Intel ANS on the 2.4.0 kernel on SuSE* 7.1 systems, a
compilation failure occurs, and a message regarding a missing config.h file
is displayed. This failure occurs because the kernel source trees supplied,
Linux-2.4.0.SuSE and Linux-2.4.0-4GB, are both empty and do not contain the
necessary config.h and version.h files. A possible solution is to install
either a new kernel from http://www.kernel.org or a new kernel tree package
supplied by SuSE.
When installing and compiling openssl, a prerequisite for PROCfg, a
compilation failure occurs, and a message regarding a missing errno.h file
is displayed. This is another instance of the missing kernel source tree
described above for ANS. Use the solution above to restore the missing
file.
SuSE 8.0 Personal
=================
Compiling Intel Drivers on the 2.4.18 Kernel
--------------------------------------------
When trying to compile Intel e100, e1000, and ANS drivers on the 2.4.18
kernel on SuSE 8.0 systems a compilation failure occurs, and a message
regarding a mismatch between the running kernel and the kernel source tree
configuration appears. By default, SuSE installs the 2.4.18-64GB-SMP kernel
while the kernel source tree is configured for 2.4.18-4GB. A possible
solution is to issue the following commands:
cd /usr/src/linux/include/linux/
mv version.h version.h.old
cp /boot/vmlinuz.version.h version.h
mv autoconf.h autoconf.h.old
cp /boot/vmlinuz.autoconf.h autoconf.h
Support
=======
For general information and support, go to the Intel support website at:
http://support.intel.com
If an issue is identified with the released source code on the supported
kernel with a supported adapter, email the specific information related to the
issue to linux.nics@intel.com.
Copyright and Legal Disclaimers
===============================
Copyright(c) 2002 Intel Corporation. All rights reserved.
Intel Corporation, 5200 N.E. Elam Young Parkway, Hillsboro, OR 97124-6497
Intel Corporation assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions in this
document. Nor does Intel make any commitment to update the information
contained herein.
Intel, Itanium, and Pentium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel
Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.
*Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
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