Folks, I'm trying to install one of the new quad fxo cards remotely. I know the existing machine was too old to have a PCI 2.2 bus, so I had my helper at the other end try a few boxes that were sitting on a shelf with the new card and a Knoppix cd. He found one that reported the card as the Tiger Jet. Good. Now, we moved the HD from the existing machine, loaded with Debian, and the card is just seen as the generic communications device, like the bus is wrong. Any pointers on this? The machine is ~500 miles away at the moment, and off the network, so most of this is done by phone. :( Thanks, Tim -->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< >> Tim Sailer >< Coastal Internet, Inc. << >> Network and Systems Operations >< PO Box 726 << >> http://www.buoy.com >< Moriches, NY 11955 << >> tps@buoy.com >< (631) 399-2910 (888) 924-3728 << >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
On Mon, 2004-05-03 at 12:26, Tim Sailer wrote:> Folks, > I'm trying to install one of the new quad fxo cards remotely. I know > the existing machine was too old to have a PCI 2.2 bus, so I had my > helper at the other end try a few boxes that were sitting on a shelf > with the new card and a Knoppix cd. He found one that reported the > card as the Tiger Jet. Good. Now, we moved the HD from the existing > machine, loaded with Debian, and the card is just seen as the generic > communications device, like the bus is wrong. Any pointers on this? > The machine is ~500 miles away at the moment, and off the network, > so most of this is done by phone. :(Maybe you should start by getting your helper to recompile the kernel so it can be on the network and you can then do some real debugging of the bus. I'm guessing that the kernel you have on that drive isn't sufficiently smart enough to handle the newer hardware. Knoppix CDs seem pretty decent at running the hardware fast since they are at such a disadvantage booting and running from the CD. -- Steven Critchfield <critch@basesys.com>