devnp-rtl8169.so

Driver for Realtek 8169 Gigabit Ethernet controllers

Syntax:

io-pkt-variant -d rtl8169 [option[,option ...]] ... 

where variant is v4-hc or v6-hc.

Runs on:

QNX Neutrino

Options:

Note: Use commas, not spaces, to separate the options.
did=0xXXXX
The PCI device ID.
duplex=0|1
Half (0) or full (1) duplex mode. The default is automatically detected on supported hardware. If you specify duplex, specify speed as well; if duplex alone is specified, it is ignored and both speed and duplex are autonegotiated.
iftype=num
The interface type (from <net/if_types.h>). The default is IFT_ETHER.
iorange=0xXXXXXXXX
The I/O base address.
irq=num
The IRQ of the interface.
lan=num
The LAN number. The default is 0.
mac=XXXXXXXXXXXX
The interface address of the controller. The default is automatically detected on supported hardware.
media=num
The media type (from <hw/nicinfo.h>). The default is NIC_MEDIA_802_3.
mru=num
The maximum receive unit. The default is 1514.
mtu=num
The maximum transmission unit. The default (1514) is automatically detected on supported hardware.
nomulticast
Disable multicast support. By default, multicast is enabled.
pci=0xXXXX
The PCI index of the controller.
phy=num
The address of the connected PHY device.
priority=N
The priority of the driver's event thread. The default is 21.
receive=num
The number of Rx buffers to internally cache. The default is 5.
speed=10|100|1000
The media data rate in megabits/second.
transmit=num
The number of Tx buffers to internally cache. The default is 10.
uptype=name
The interface name. The default is en.
verbose or verbose=N
Be verbose. Specify num for more verbosity (num can be 1-4; the higher the number, the more detailed the output). The default is 0. The output goes to slogger2; invoke slog2info to view it.
vid=0xXXXX
The PCI vendor ID.

Description:

The devnp-rtl8169.so driver controls Realtek 8169 Gigabit Ethernet controllers. Its interface names are in the form rtX, where X is an integer.

Some devices support hardware checksums, although some might do so in only one direction; to determine if your device does, type:

ifconfig enX

and look for the following in the list of supported options:

You can then use ifconfig to enable or disable whichever of these options your device supports.

Note: The network drivers don't put entries into the /dev namespace, so a waitfor command for such an entry won't work properly in buildfiles or scripts. Use if_up -p instead; for example, if_up -p rt0.

Examples:

Start io-pkt-v4-hc using the Realtek driver:

io-pkt-v4-hc -d rtl8169
ifconfig rt0 10.184