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Bugzilla – Full Text Bug Listing |
| Summary: | Wifi pc card detected but YaST thinks it is wired ethernet | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Product: | [openSUSE] SUSE LINUX 10.0 | Reporter: | Vince Negri <vnegri> |
| Component: | Network | Assignee: | Steffen Winterfeldt <snwint> |
| Status: | RESOLVED FIXED | QA Contact: | E-mail List <qa-bugs> |
| Severity: | Normal | ||
| Priority: | P5 - None | CC: | snwint |
| Version: | Final | ||
| Target Milestone: | --- | ||
| Hardware: | i586 | ||
| OS: | SUSE Other | ||
| Whiteboard: | |||
| Found By: | Other | Services Priority: | |
| Business Priority: | Blocker: | --- | |
| Marketing QA Status: | --- | IT Deployment: | --- |
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Description
Vince Negri
2005-09-05 08:53:51 UTC
hwinfo doesn't know about rtl8180 up to beta4. Should be fixed in rc1. Unfortunately did not get to retest until 10.0 final.
Installed with the same generic (not belkin) RTL8180 chipset PCMCIA card in
the laptop throughout the install.
Same behaviour as before - Yast reported the card as "ethernet" and not
"wireless." had to manually change the card type in order to access the ESSID
settings.
Relevant lspci info for card is:
01:00.0 Ethernet controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8180L 802.11b
MAC (rev 20)
Subsystem: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8180L 802.11b MAC
Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 64, IRQ 9
I/O ports at 2000 [size=256]
Memory at 0a000000 (32-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=512]
Capabilities: [50] Power Management version 2
Once the card type wart has been fixed, card works excellently!
Ugh, I've meant to reassign, hwinfo has to report the correct hardware type to yast. Joe? Indeed, 'rtl8180' is not in the wlan module list of hwinfo. I could swear I've added it within a hwinfo patch regarding WLAN detection. Maybe it didn't apply cleanly and got lost or something. Steffen, could you add it? Btw, the module file name is rtl8180.ko, but the kernel name is r8180, so I'm not sure which name is the right one to add. btw Additional piece of info, just in case you aren't aware: the RTL8180 chipset is used in both PCMCIA cards and some PCI cards. I do have an RTL8180-based PCI card for future testing on desktops. You mean r8180.ko? |